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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  June 19, 2022 4:00pm-5:01pm AST

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able to enjoy, to find this cup of tea in the world. the more wonderful herb in the world cheney fi it these that mix of the goddess problems with nathan claims that are being sold for the scott barely to quad region one. going to most of going back to quality when that happens to on to be the born pre p with the same enjoyment dead respectability. the need about 3 to 5 years of all people see launch b grown back and ship old from ah,
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this is al jazeera. ah, hello there. i'm nick clog. this is a news our life from dough coming up the next 60 minutes. final round of parliamentary elections in france, president of man or microns coalition hopes to hold off a challenge from a new left. this blog choosing between a former rebel or millionaire colombians vote for a new president and made rising anger about inflation and inequality. ah anger on the street said she nicea protested, keep up the pressure on the president as it tries to change the constitution. bangladesh, his face is worth flooding in more than 100 years affecting millions. troops have been called up to help with the rescue. in sport, defending champion general missing contention to retain is u. s. hyphen title is
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funded. it's just one shot behind the leaders, despite a disastrous final round. ah . so voting is underway in france in the 2nd round of parliamentary elections which could decide the future of president a man or macros reform agenda. the 1st round showed that micron centrist coalition was just ahead in a tight race with a newly formed left wing alliance. let's have this report now from gentle in parse . it is a parliamentary election that will define the limits of a manual macros power to enact reforms in his 2nd term as president, amid economic crisis at home, and on the international stage. just switch the volume with my hope is to have a large majority for the presidential party. so bills and reforms that are needed can be voted through calmly. it's something that would be very difficult in a divided assembly. but microns centrist majority is at risk after
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a strong challenge by a left wing coalition, under jean luc, manage on that look set to become the country's main opposition. at a time of economic and social crisis, people want decisive government. they want answers. what happens if they don't get more people on the street more demonstrations, more he, these are like, crisis. i will say it's probably a legitimacy crisis that can lead to more social movements, for example. so that will be the real crisis on the streets. the outcome of the vote them may signal the return of z. les joan or yellow vest type protest, the blighted microns 1st term. what also seems clear is that the excitement of re manual macros, centrist political movement, neither of the left nor of the right has fizzled out in 5 years. there is real voter, disillusionment and apathy low turn out both the presidential election in april and also that these parliamentary ones now with a majority of registered french vote is not even bothering to turn up to vote in
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the 1st round last weekend to share national this is a neighborhood of elderly people. young voters are not interested, they don't vote yes. they're worth nothing, not one of them as any value. they are all con auto and bandits and france is not what it used to be. it raises questions about the legitimacy of a government endorsed by only a thin slice of the electorate. and it points to a political landscape in which fewer and fewer french people feel they have a stake, or even much interest. jonah whole al jazeera paris, well microns closest allies in the cabinets are all hoping for reelection. 12 of the 15 members of frances council of ministers had favorable results in the 1st run of voting lightly to pass through to the 2nd 3 ministers. they're facing a tougher challenge of the ballot box, and if they lose their seats in the national assembly, they will also lose that cabinet posts let speak now to james shields, who's a professor of french politics at the university of work, joins us from bristol,
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via skype at st. james, it shows how important this is in the macro could lose allies and ministers and a lot more besides. oh, these elections are absolutely critical for macros presidency. on the big question, the big question is, con his party. when a note great majority, as it did in 2017, i think not. i think it won't cost therefore, with its interest allies piece together the majority. possibly. but even there may be not. and that would mean that having to go out more widely to other parties, notably the center, right? republicans, maybe even on a policy by policy, by vote basis, that would be very difficult. the 90 scenario i have to see is that the union of the left on those on the mean on shall wins most seats. when the majority of forces,
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michael entered the french called cohabitation called governing when a hostile left wing majority from whom he would be obliged to select his next prey minutes. but no, i don't think that milan strong union of the land has the electoral mileage to do this. much more likely they will win between a quarter on the front of the seats, but they will form a very powerful block of opposition against a president who may struggle to hold together governing coalition in the center. right. it's funny, isn't it? because there was fighting the threat of the far right in the general election. and it's the other end of the political spectrum, isn't it? that could determine the countries politics? absolutely, this is the, this is the paradox of these 2 closely aligned elections in the presidential election. michael was on the ramparts,
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seeing that the french will just had to tom note to, to, to, to, to block the extreme. right? know he's on the rampart, saying that french voters must note to block the extreme left. what thoughts a reflection of is the pick the 5 years of microphone power has hard on the political landscape. we know have a central block far right. block far left block and almost nothing in between. the thing is they stayed away from the voting booth and in large numbers in the 1st run. and so what does that say about the president's legitimacy? well, more people you are right, more people stay the way. last week in the foster and been voted, there was an abstention. rita rick of extension read the over 52 percent 52.5 percent. there are varying reasons for this. one is the electro colander, these elections follow hot on the heels of the presidential elections?
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and there is some view that the relations of confirmation, the rubber stamping the election of micro so to that extent the, the could be seen as reaffirming, has legitimacy as president. i'm not convinced by this argument because the electro calendar has been the same to the last 20 years. and it's only now that we are seeing these records levels of abstention, 2017. and again, today, i think the deeper reason is that we're in a prolonged period and trans of widespread disenchantment with politics, with politicians, with political parties of all stripes. and there's a bigger question even hanging over what you could call the democratic process. a growing public feeling that elections up pointless. there's no point voting because it changes nothing for the better. this was the reason most cited by abstention
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is last weekend. so i think we need to pete to that. and it's a sentiment that particularly affects younger, modestly educated walking class voters who are the most numerous and disaster, the pulling goods. yeah. ok, james, i will leave it very interesting to see what happens. we'll observe it with great interest at gen shields. professor a french politics invest report. thanks a lot. my pleasure. colombians are also voting in what seen as the most fiercely contested presidential election in recent memory. it is the 2nd round of voting a former grille. if i take herself, petro is running to become the country's 1st left, this president, he's up against millionaire businessman rodolfo hernandez, a political outsider who has been compared to former u. s. president donald trump, under ram. yet he joins us live from outside to polling station. and because of manga and alexandro, judging by the, the movie q, behind you,
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the polling stations in our hi. yes, nick welling stations opened at 8 am shy per here in boca, i'm going across columbia long lines here in the home town of rodolfo. and this one of the 2 contenders in what is promising to be one of the most divisive, inconsequential elections in recent memory. as you were saying, on one side is gustavo fatal. a former rebel fighter and a long time my senator here in columbia, who if indeed will become the next president, could be the 1st left, the president in the history of the country. the other contains a foot and this he is a billionaire and to a printer who turned in to, in this election into a social media star. thanks to
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a square key. be those the in particular on that graham and, and take talk that surprisingly, put them in 2nd place in the 1st round of the elections. a many ways he has become the most surprising and this, this raptor of political phenomenon in recent years in the country. these are 2 very different divisions. they offer 2 very different visions for the future of columbia. up to this brought my seeing a major change in the economic structure at 9 disease status from my seeing total al serra, etc. and at to a rid completely, he says of corruption, the political class in the country, and that major division at a time in which a most colombians once change and are worried by the rise in equality and poverty in the country. right. so divisive, consequential, just how close will this recipe?
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well, the expectation is that this will be extremely closed. the last official polls came, came out 7 days ago. that's because it's against the law to publish new poles in the country a week before the actual day of the elections. but the feeling here and also all the polls that we've seen reaching that point that show that the 2 candidates with a different the of less than one percent to now columbus, a country that is used to getting result results quite quickly. they have a quick account that they utilize every, every elections to get the numbers out the 1st hour or 2 after the polls close. but the expectation in this case is that things could take quite a while and that maybe we will not know today who the next president of columbia
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will be. if that is the case, the call here, i'm part of many politicians as for the people to remain calm and give the institutions the electorate allowed to reduce time to do their work. be it as it may since the government here fears the possibility of demonstrations and, and protest 94000 policemen have been deployed. the 2 polling stations in more than $200000.00 soldiers also been deployed to rural areas that have seen an increase of violence. and where in many ways the countries internal conflict continues, are done as under appreciate that. so i was under a rump. yeti reporting plenty more still ahead on these are including islands premier. so warns of british government against plans to scrap a post bricks at deal. i'll climate change in human activity or forcing change at mount everest space we got spoke. i'm up to top commissions for drivers of the
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canadian formula. one grand prix here to tell you who qualified and polish ah no protest as engine is your a back on the streets to oppose the president's plans for constitutional referendum . next month, the opposition says that i saw you is trying to tightened his grip on power. and opposition is threatened to boycott the vote. restore again b as this report. o position politicians, li protests against president clay side in the capital, tunis they que, side of corrupting democratic institutions and wanting absolute power and control over to nicea in these years known as the black decade of the years during which to nicea wrote its greatest constitution and established institutions, including the supreme judiciary council and the independent natural $34.00
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elections. the institutions built by the revolution and built by the martyrs uttered a threatened by chi side and his group sides suspended parliament and assumed executive powers last year and dissolved it in march. his also sacked dozens of judges. he wants the referendum next month to change tennessee as constitution. a draft version is due to be published on monday. charla mon bad garden lesson god willing on the 20th of the month i will. according to the law, submit the draft constitution to the president. this being the maximum date for the submitting of this draft site has banned polls and political advertising and told international election observers. they're not welcome financing. the referendum is expected to be less. oh, these protest is say they won't give up. they don't believe debate in july with free. oh, fair. they say say aid has too much power and democracy is in danger. victoria gate
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and be al jazeera islands, prime minister, me hell martin has worn the u. k. that unilateral changes to a post bricks, it agreement would be very serious. the british government says it will introduce a law to ditch parts of the northern island protocol. the agreement governs checks on goods being shipped to the region. european union says that breaks international law and has taken legal action. ireland says britain needs to negotiate a solution with the e. u. so what is the north not a protocol a why is it controversial? well, when the u. k. left of the e. u. a new system was needed to regulate trade from outside the europe in single market. and that meant potentially creating a hard border between northern island, which is part of the u. k. and the republic of ireland an e u country that would rip apart the peace deal that ended decades of violence between pro irish nationalists and pro british unionists. to avoid that the protocol put the custom border between northern ireland and the rest of the u. k. as some goods arriving from birth and are checked at northern irish ports,
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the regions main unit party says that undermines their place in the united kingdom . it's refusing to form a power sharing government until forest johnson scraps the protocol. and let's be now to deny, go by corner who's a professor of politics at dublin city university joins live from vice, got from is dumble and do not get a book of the program at said to what degree will the u. k. government plans, damage and northern ireland economy they for sure damage north martin's economy because the protocol was established to mitigate the worst forms. and worse results of brag, search essentially breaks it was passed quite united kingdom electorate. but it was done against the wishes of the people in northern ireland and did need in the republic of arms. and the essentially protocol was negotiated so that northern ireland could remain within the european union, single market and cost to students. that would be freedom of trade between northern ireland and republic. and that is given or not the best of both worlds. they have
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access to the u. k. market and unfettered access to the market. so that, for example, as we come out of the pandemic, the only 2 parts of united kingdom that have shown any signs of economic growth are london, which is very much the engine of united kingdom economy and northern irons. because north america has this special place, de nicholas started, for example, stockton said they would love to have the same arrangements as north martin where they had unfettered access to the, to the me, you single market. so this unilateral action jeopardizes all of that and of course is going to and is leading to a breakdown of trust between you know, him and european the british government says that doing this to protect the good friday agreement. that true not at all. no indeed, i would imagine that most members of the conservative party never read that good friday grievance dominic wrath who was breakfast secretary and foreign secretary for some time admitted, requesting that he hadn't read the good friday agreement. now in the fight
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agreement is not like all stories, war and peace. it's 30 pages and it's, it has many aspects to it. but there's nothing in the good friday agreement that says that the d p which represents what 21 percent of the operation door arnold have to consent to anything in a brakes that agreement are worth such consent necessary by every single minority in law that aren't then breaks it itself would never have been brought into force because as i mentioned, the vast majority of people in north maryland voted against french than we had in the election and north maryland just a few weeks ago. and the vast majority of people for out of the 5 major parties essentially came out with the position that the one, the ascent of the more times you established. and indeed the majority of people is, is that, nor are in favor of the protocol. so this is not been done for the people nor guard leads to the next question, i guess of why isn't being done. it's been done to assuage that the brakes it here, fundamentalists within the tory party disease, as it has always been the breadth of an internal battle within the conservative party with north american city collateral damage. but the all legitimate issues that mailed martin, it's accepted that as me yes, there are. i mean these are,
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this is a divorce and there's always going to be problems be, are down. but i think that, you know, all sides recognize, except the british government seems to this case that what problems are they are should be ironed out through negotiation into agreement. or if you have to use again, the divorce analogy, if you have a divorce agreement and one sides says that i'm not going to pay the out of money. i promise you are not going to deliver the kids on the weekend. i promise, unilaterally that's going to only deepen hostilities and it's not, it's going to lead to a worst case scenario for everybody. and that's how essentially the british government has done that was the brakes agreement. all these issues were trashed out as a result of tortures. negotiations and he bars johnson so does break that agreement to the british electors which 19 as the basis of why you should be elected. so now the unilaterally, you know, jettisoning the very agreement that he negotiated. and it also sends a signal, of course, all the parkers like united states were in the process of negotiating trade agreements with united states. as we can have the kingdom,
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if he seems united kingdom is not adhering to the agreements, it's already entered into why would any other country. 3 engage in a trade agreement with united think. okay, a great perspective. appreciate that to the curb icon. thanks. look wrong or let's bring you more in those protests into his ear against the president there, the democratic transition since the 2011 revolution has been tumultuous and matters came to head last year. last july and fights of presence. i sacked his government and froze parliament. he went on to award himself powers to rule by decree in september, and this allowed him to appoint cabinet members, set policy and put aside part to the constitution. then in february, this year president, so he dissolved an independent judiciary council, but he insists his actions are meant to preserve the state and its institutions. and then it may, so you'd announced a committee to organize a national dialogue. now for more misled speak to you about my new joint is from
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the capital genesis. so they say the demonstrations are continuing. where are we thinking as my lead? well, we're seeing a series of demonstrations in 3 days and things like there is some of them can a building about activists against kind sides proposed referenda or announcing the 1st draft of the new constitution tomorrow. so this is why they've been not seen today now. so yesterday me, some of the story policy has been excluded from the national job. they were protesting. they were also saying that they're going to boil the referendum. and generally they say in hopefully there's a lack of enthusiasm for this referendum. you know, people are not clear exactly what they don't seem to be at the question. sort of being put always is this part of what they do you approve the new constitutional project? yes or no. until people see something actually on paper. they don't really know
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what the writing so way, we've also seen the judge. it sounds on strike a bad week strike after the 57 judges who are such my side act on june 1st. and also least a general strike thursday, which is a rare occurrence. say they, the main labor union came out, which meant that all the public surfaces on stock or at least a thanks very much for that, lisa vocal reporting the from to, to thank you by your dash and india, a suffering, it's worse flooding and more than a century as monsoon rains sweep across the region, dozens of people have died. ne, bangladesh and the indian state of a sam have been worse, hit officials in the district of c hit say it see most severe flooding record. millions of people have been effective. both countries of called in the army to help with rescue efforts their affairs,
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the situation could get worse with more heavy rain forecast time. her child re has more from the corner in bangladesh. many people, especially in the remote villages, are still maryland. they're desperately trying to rescue this people. many of the homes actually totally washed away, even within the cities centers are flawed. many of the hospitals got inundated with flood water, which is complicating celebration for the rescue people, at least those who are harmed or hard during the flood. as far as the military and navy goes there right now, very much concentrating and rescuing people who are in my room. but people are also in desperate need for fresh water and food. i mean there is really a major challenge right now, particularly when you go into the sure and i'm going to valley of the division. it is basically a lake area. a lot of the village are very remote just to reach them itself. the challenge, whether many of the houses are still there is a question you get understanding contacted zillow, just select an indian,
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not just us experience, a major flood, just end of last month somewhere and may. so they're just recovered. when we have the 2nd wave of flood units i've had warned in last may, during the flood that at least 1500000 children in this lot affected areas are prone to water, bone disease as malnutrition and even drowning. so obviously every much challenging environment, the forecast says that it could possibly rain. it's a monsoon season. if it rains again and if there is a torrential rain, things could again get worse. while it's get more in those heavy rains with all weather present. a rope mckelly there's, you know, the flooding in the northeast, vinny antiquity bangladesh. this year though seasonal, seems to be a lot worse than normal, possibly consequences, changing climate. there is variability. this, after all, and we do in this part of the will have the wittiest places in the world so unsurprising when it rains upstream in the northeast of india in our sam. for
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example, this runs into the brom petra particular and then spreads out through bangladesh. some of the worst lot, exactly in northern bangladesh at the moment, looking like this, and i'm sure you seen other pictures. now, as i said, this is an annual event, but may be worse and is usually experienced. and to give you an idea of how, what it normally is, as i say, we just over the border and so that, so in india, wettest in the world, these 2 places, they're both about 12 meters of rain. if that means anything to you, it give you a comparison in calcutta, not that far away. 1.8 meters is the entire rainfall for the year. now it might be using a year, but it will be wet for this year, right? cox's bizarre gets 3 half meters. again, a long way from these figures. there is some good news in the forecast for both monday and tuesday, though, or a little bit. it's nothing like as wet as the last 3 or 4 days. a memorial ceremony has been held in honor of alger, gen, latrina,
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who is most 40 days since she was killed. israeli forces shot serene in the head while she was on assignment and jeanine in the occupied westbank. members of the international community have condemned to murder and continued to call for an independent investigation. serene was without us or for 25 years covering the story of the israeli occupation. it abraham has more from the moral service in ramallah are coming to the events inside the whole is passing through this place. it is a petition that people can get to sign and it says that shitty and blood will not go in vain. and people here are writing their names, demanding accountability for what they call a cold blooded murder. hundreds of people have gathered. i came here to this rama la cultural palace to commemorate the 40th day since
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shitty and was killed. we hear a lot of words of condemnation. people are angry, frustrated, they want the world to see what is happening to those who tell the truth. we're carrying the people's voices to the world, sharing with someone who was very well known, very much respected. so loved and we see that when we see people coming here in signing, writing her words, i was just scrolling through this book and i so a lot of heartfelt messages had a colleague and friend devoted with it. he says, they never expected you to be the news. you are the one who told me how to write the news. i never expected that this would happen. people here are saying words of condolences of remembrance. people say that she was someone who is not also strong,
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but also empowered women in the palestinian society to know that they can be on the front lines, respected and appreciated for within 2 to lead hearing out 0. ah, the calls for justice in brazil through defend of indigenous rights and the british journalist found murdered in the mc. evans bolton avalanche of golden day. you too . if he stanley cup final ah, what is that they've been doing with the money that it's boring. we bring you the stories and developments that are rapidly changing the world we live in. argentina's. congress is debating and bill seeking to raise billions of dollars. the super rich poor families hit hard by and then counting the coast on al jazeera
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. what's most important to me is talking to people understanding what they're going through here. it al jazeera. we believe everyone has a story worth hearing, frank assessments, it sounds like you don't expect anything to change the problem in lebanon. it's actually structural lebanon needs. and you also contract in order for it to solve this problem. informed opinions, international communities on the goal is my security, and that creates a government has no legitimacy in depth analysis of the data global headlines. this is going to be very hard for people to explain to the public that instead of pushing back, no, it's actually got 2 members inside story on al jazeera. ah ah, ah.
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and again, you're watching al jazeera reminder on top stories this hour, and a people in cross a voting in the 2nd, rob, on mature elections. president manuel macro need some majority to push through his plans to raise the retirement age and taxes colombians of ot and the fiercely contested 2nd round of a presidential vote. leftist and former gorilla fight. gustavo petro, it's running against millionaire businessman rodolfo and unders protest as inch in his ear back on the strength to oppose the president's plans for constitutional referendum. next month, the opposition says that co site is trying to tighten his grip on power and is threatening to boycott. vote not rescue operations are underway in china. web severe storms and flooding have killed at least 5 people. rainfall in some areas has been the heaviest and 60 years. this triggered series flooding in cities and mudslides in rural areas of the downpour is expected to continued to early next
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week. and nepal is preparing to move everest base camp because global warming and increase human activities make it unsafe our heart as his report. every year people arrive at base camp in nepal to fulfill a long life dream to climb the highest peak in the world. mount everest, what was once only achievable by leet mountain is, has now become accessible to thousands of tourists and climbers from around the world. and that's part of the problem. human activity, coupled with global warming, is having a detrimental effects on every ecosystem making near cent unsafe at an altitude of 5364 meters above sea level base camp lies on the kimball glazier sciences of warning. the lacy is melting and alarming rates by as much as one me to every year. especially issue. busy melting glass year and the car basses as
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a big warning that maybe in 10 years, you know, we don't need no glass, you just climb isn't sharp. his say cracks and crevices appear over nights and it's putting their lives at risk. melted ice. so causing rock falls and can trigger avalanches in the himalayas in an attempt to protect the natural environment, necessities government has decided to move every space cap to a new location and that's roughly 200 to 400 meters low. where there's no you round dice. said kennedy, this is the right time to advocate and raise the boys together and not only talk the boys we need to so so yeah, they have been very consistent. and every year, but definitely more than $1500.00 people shows the human ways has been polluted around $4000.00 lead to the urine is dumped at base camp every day. and because climb is spend weeks on the peak adjusting to the altitude, they generate several kilos of waste,
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most of which is left on the mountain from fuel use for cooking and heating to empty oxygen cylinders and the bands and camping equipment. all this has created a moral and an environmental debate on the human obsession to scale the tallest mountain in the world. thought a height of i'll just era so extreme floods melting, glasses, extreme heat, all symptoms of a warm world according to climate scientists, danesh mustafah is a professor in the critical geography college london. and he can take the phone with us danesh, say this situation in every single, everything else that we've been report in this last hour and also to the broader problem of global warming and its impacts effective glasses and change the climate around the world. i think that these are certainly wanting some sentence and i think a big problem is maladjustment to the symptoms. and i think that the public has
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a bit of fee problematic understanding of science. science almost never can give you certainties. what it can give you is on us and climate science can tell us that we are 95 percent confidence, 99 percent confidence. that all the averages that were in the past. all the normal conditions that we used to in the past are not going to hold in the future. so if you're getting unprecedented floods in the dish or in china, or if you're getting a glacial melt in the human lives, i think it is basically symptomatic or whatever we're used to in the past is not going to continue into the future. right. doubly yeah, i was just going to say the trend is the thing and the trend is gaining momentum and the trend is, is looking quite frightening. trend is frightening, but equally i would caution about that we, we need longer term trends, longer term data if we certainly the data for the past 15 years is certainly
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wanting. and coupled with that understanding of deployment dynamics, we, we can certainly be fairly confident that in fact we're seeing symptoms of that. but the bigger issue is what to do. but right morning is there. and what to do about it is, at the moment what we see in the shore in india, in china, or in many of the parts of the world is as it falling is certain developmental trajectory of building infrastructure, occupational zones, floodplains, promotion of, of freebird, engineering, fighting against the rivers, those are sort of the 1900 century early 20th century european tropes which are being replicated at the moment and with potentially get stronger consequences. you say we need longer term data. we need to focus on the adaptation. nothing is what you're saying, given everything else. absolutely. well, you know, the political polarization, the war and crate is that all we just taking off,
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perhaps the biggest threat of all we're absolutely digging that i off the ball and i don't even know if he'd mentioned that he had an eye on. it just seems like it to the whole set of political, economic compulsions, or the ologies which are, which are driving the driving societies. for example, china, china, we're more countries the 1st 20 uses the 21st century in the united states did in the entire, for the century following a certain developmental model. equally building of dams, building of roads, trying to build levies trying to him in rivers. the size of the drug is going to have the kind of consequences that the senior floods are not bad in themselves. i mean, after all, humans of decision emerged and developed. most instances ations emerged in developing a non flood things. the point is that when we stop living with science and for the past 100150 years,
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we have changed our better time of floods from living with science who was fighting science. and when you fight floods, you're going to lose. and this is another example of how we have lost, so is a fundamental but a domestic re evaluation that needs to take place. and i'm afraid that that sort of reevaluation in the face of climate change is simply not ok. i finally demonstrated briefly, if you would, it's not any extreme weather events that we're talking about here. it's also how you know vegetation belts are moving further northwards as far as the northern hemisphere is concerned. and the implications that has on, you know, migrations of animals and so forth and in the production. indeed, i think the evidence is overwhelming and you will basically deny that evidence. it's your own federal but turns out that politicians, governments, businesses and others. and then to have a more sort of a monthly weekly sort of rising where it is climate change demands in more long term time horizon and thinking was strategic. and you, society,
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at present is just not geared towards things more strategically to it keeps thinking actively in short steps. and you can put a mediator with the sorts of consequences that you're observing down his grades, get your perspective an expertise, appreciate that. had done this from suffer talking to welcome the daughter of the philippine president rodriguez, who tirty has been sworn in as the new vice president. will she me office in less than 2 weeks, alongside president elect, on marcus, the son of formally? the footnote bulk of the pair won a landslide victory and last month's presidential elections. rodrigo deterred his presidency as be marked by a violent anti drug campaign with thousands of suspects, killed by security forces. ellis, in brazil, have confirmed that the human remains found in the m as in all those of bruna pereira, an expert on indigenous people. and the british journalist on phillips authorities say they were shot with a farm. used for hunting groups in the arms and region are demanding justice. one
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category of reports now from rio de janeiro. ah. this vigil was held under de brazilian federal police confirmed the 2nd set of human remains found in the amazon or those of indigenous expert boon will bid eda loaners activists work costumes of rain forest animals to remind brazilians that needed a died protecting indigenous territories from the legal fisherman and poachers. they blamed brazil's president april sonata and his administration for turning a blind di, and dismantling organizations created to protect the green forest. and its people. owe me to my zip with a woman after president bowes and narrow took office. our attack as have been emboldened missionaries mine as far as long as an fisherman. they've gained
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strength and they all want to pace about land honey beetle. on it, it went missing on june 5th, while traveling with british journalist don phillips, whose remains were identified on friday. police say amadi de la costa and his brother was in me, have confessed to ambushing the men. please say phillips was killed by a shot to the chest. fietta was shot twice in the chest and in the hand response on a signal could we have detained a 3rd suspect who was in the area of the crime when it happened. mother missy. neither was working with the indigenous people of their job id valley was helping them track down legal fishermen who steal their food. last december, 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,
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3 kilometers away from the river. the murder of dawn phillips and bruno biddy has shocked brazil and the world. another vigil will be held on sunday in the brazilian capital brazilian. meanwhile, the investigations continue, brazilian investigators say the suspect, more people are involved in what seems to be applying the crime monitor and i give all to 0. we have is an arrow. us health officials have approved covered 90 vaccines for children as young as 6 months. it means america's last remaining age group has been approved for the job. millions of doses have been ordered for distribution and will be available from next week. dr. william shar schaffner is a professor of infectious diseases at vanderbilt university medical center. and he says that pediatricians have been eagerly awaiting this moment. you know, if we just look at these children 86 months through 4 years of age, up to their 5th birthday, thinking back just in the united states,
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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 pdf of pediatrics as well as the c. c. and people such as myself, 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 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,
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we think that they'll be about 80 percent effective. it's about as good as we can get with our current generation of 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 doing that. and i hope that that happened soon. the gambler's port was one see preferred destination for cargo heading to many west african countries. but a lack of investment has left it short of space and losing hundreds of millions of dollars every year. i would address reports now from banjo. i go after days of waiting a ship, offloads is cargo or the port up by july. a few kilometers offshore. other vessels are waiting, their turn. as much as 80 percent of the cargo that arrives here is exported to
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other countries including the gum b as far like geneva, seneca, like of modernization and expansion means the tiny country can't handle increased traffic and is targeting to maintain existing volumes. they put up by new law, has a key lent of 400 meters and a 5. but this is a where we bring ships alongside. so the min business is the control shipping lines and access to reserve budget. when little andy terminal, it is ours. so constricted in the sense that there's 63000 square meters of storage unit as available importers. an export to say doing business here is becoming more expensive, officious, as much as 20 percent of the cargo meant for the gambia is being diverted to our, the west african ports. if you ask gum in businessman, they're rather have their containers come through neighboring ports for cost, timeliness and things of that sort. but as i keep seeing, the abilene gumby and customer,
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we lose job opportunities and the taxes that we supposed to pay for the taxman in 2019 the portal, approaching a loss of succeeded $200000000.00. and while no recent figures are publicly available, economy say that amount has only increased the is prashant one to import. the government wants to open another the south of the country to south park. so synagogue and lun locked my label. neither countries not ports development is expected to have cargo delivery times, but that could cause the country up to $500000000.00 money. the country can't afford at the moment. senegal is currently building new ports and upgrading it's transport infrastructure. this analysts say could undermine the gum bias efforts to attract investment. but when your port officials say that despite aggressive expansion in the region, the gambia will continue to maintain its edge because of its strategic location. ahmed edris al jazeera bundle, the gambia. the still ahead here on out 0 called sport coming up, dose. well,
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number one, stay on target mounted title charge at the us open. joe will be here with, ah ah, when the news breaks, still looking through the building trying to see if there's anybody else trapped inside when people need to be heard. and the story told, 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 of not hardly him, but he left her because al jazeera has teens on the ground to bring you more award winning documentaries and lied nice. coveted beyond wells taken without hesitation, fulton died for political power, defines al wild laws. lou babies were dying. i did nothing about. it's neglected
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babies to deck people and power investigates. expose is and questions to the use and abuse of power. around the closing on al jazeera ah ah ah, ah, one of 10 years, most prolific to rubber bands is making a comeback less when he could have reunited off more than 20 years. well, republic, a democratic republic of congo is known as the capital of african rumba kenya, also has a thriving scene. our web reports now from di ruby. ah,
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it was more than 40 years ago when these musicians 1st played together and more than 20 since they were lost on stage. i 19 seventies to the 19 ninety's less one acre. well, one of kenya's most loved room about, oh, some of the original band members have passed away the rest and now back together. that's why you are coming back because of their people. nothing can yellow is stuff like ok. maybe in the world african room, the music began in the democratic republic of congo. nearly a century ago in the seventy's, nairobi became a hub for benz fleeing censorship and seeking a market. and so the scene bloomed in east africa too. as when he co wrote some of the most popular and enduring songs certainly have lost that nice and
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really feeling them with younger my name, with the style known for it poetic lyrics. it sometimes tell stories this songs and owed to a female. so she liked of the time who the singer loved deeply, and then a devastating break up. i required you to go to my job, fred, a battery michoacan owes the scene better the most. he was in the room when less when he came formed in 1978. when i came over the nearly 50 as he's been broadcasting room,
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the records can in pop music become more influenced by foreign sounds from america, nigeria, in jamaica. oh. but his weekly room, the show on kenya's most listened to radio station is still wildly popular. he says, because the songs just don't grow old. when you listen to a song once and you like it, you want to listen to it again. and then when you listen to it, the 3rd time you want to sing it the 4th time you own it. and so those guys were, ah, let's when he can say they're here to stay and to keep the original canyon remember alive. malcolm web al jazeera nairobi, kenya. let's get on to this point, his ger, nick. thank you very much. defending champion john rom is in contention to retain his us open title, heading into sundays final 18 holes was funny. just just one shot behind the leaders, despite
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a disastrous finish to his 3rd round and the richardson reports defending champion, john rome had a day typical of this us open. at times he appeared to obtain the brooklyn calls only fritz, a bite back on the final hole. the spaniard watched his overall lead, disappear in a cloud of sand. he finished upon 3 and upon one shot of the pace. it's infuriating in a sense to finish that way with how good i played those holes, but like i kept myself on the 14th day, you told me you can post one over par. do now play the last 5 holes. i would have ran to the club house because of how difficult to explain. i would have taken it. no questions asked. right. so i think i got to consider that, you know, i got 800 holes and i'm only one shot back. roy mac really have to work hard to stay in contention. having dropped 3 shots in his for 6 holes. the nova nourishment still has
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a title shot at one and upon i certainly thought i was going to be a few shot further back than i was at the end of the day, but john struggled, they're coming in and you know, i'm, i, you know, even though it was such a tough day and feel like, you know, i bottled well whatever to still only be 3 back on and tomorrow i feel is a, is a good thing for me. will number one, scotty scheffler is just 2 shots behind the leaders. he's aiming to become just the 6 player to win the masters and the us open in the same year. american wills our tourist, in england's maps. it's patrick. are in a share of the lead on for on the part. yeah. so a tourist finished 2nd at the recent pga championship, but neither he nor fitzpatrick have ever won. a major title,
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myself included in people in the outside maybe think it's easier than, than it is. i mean, you just go look at tiger, it knocked off so many and such a quick spawn. i think that's probably why room things i piece of cake is just like a regular tour of em. but, but it's not bring, brings a lot more to the mental aspect of the game than, than other regular events. to time made you champion, colon more co have been the half way leader, 7 overpower round of 77. saw him slide out of the running. and the richardson al jazeera, defending 70 champions, the tampa bay lightning have been completely buried by the colorado avalanche and gave to the finals kale mccall and valerie need to skin scored 2 goals each. as the avalanche pulled off a 7 nothing round. it was the biggest just out in the final school. 1991. colorado lead the best of 7. series to nothing. again 3 on monday in tampa.
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yeah, i feel like we, we played to our identity to to you tonight. i mean, obviously we some with some goals and stuff like that, but at the end of the day, we know next games going to bring their and it's always an axiom. the hardest is a fine line between respect your opponent and too much respect. group needs to realize that we got here for a reasonable to get back to our game, understand they have a legal team under their great skill at every position, but so do we find over the find out that were made up when we get back for a while time he makes the staffing will start from position for sundays. canadian from pre formula, one is making. it's returned to montreal for the 1st time in 3 years following the current of virus pandemic. and the dutchman put his red bull on the front of the grid in a wet qualifying session on saturday. but the biggest surprise came from w. well, jump into an enter alonzo venue to 40 is the oldest man on the grid. can 2nd
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thoughts, our team will be along the 1st front row, some in a decade, rory color science. of course, you know, it's super happy with that, you know, to, to get bull position here. and also, you know, to be back here montreaux. it's been a while and his grade to the fan, i think for the to the from the to today the car was mega, you know, i was so comfortable with with driving this car on. yeah. i think the fans also push me through to make extra, which yeah, i think we're in a good position for the more i think it's going to be a good fight. we the we, the max up front. let's see what, what we can do for, and i know because he's been very quick on all weekend, so yeah, let's see how it goes. 7 time world champion, hamilton also had one of his most successful performances in a while. he qualified a season best horse with his site is my battery was a little bit low and tires and hot. and so i think it's because of the i'm but i'm still grateful for that position. that's the best this year. and it's
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a bit overwhelming at the end of who is in my home about gus's assistant quarterly bought the wet conditions and did so. jim harris, his qualifying session prematurely, the mexican who sits 2nd in the drive standings, crushed his red bull and faced long walk back to the pits. through some bushes, you'll go from 13th, the 1st time he started lower than face. oh, my g p. well, champion fabia quite that out or has won the german grown prey to extend his lead in the drive. his standings, the frenchman started 2nd on the great but took the lead from pull position, a post city francesco, back ne. as soon as the lights went out to ride his battle, it out over the next 3 laps before back now slipped and crashed. even quarter aurora took clinch the when i miles international teammate, rodrigo says the brazil star could retire from the national side. after this. he has woke up in cattle, the rail madrid player says naima has already promised to give him his number 10 shirt. the p s g stock currently sits on 74 international goals. 3 behind the
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legendary pele. and this month, we're focusing on the south american teams and the 1st of all, well, count down programs you can watch it on monday on al jazeera, at $313.00 gmc, and as a spectacular backdrop for the latest stop on the cliff diving, weld series, the eiffel tower in paris provided the setting for manias, catherine playdoh to post the highest ever total event school is victory has also given him the lead in the overall well championship standing. all right, that is all useful for now more later. j printed thanks. i will see you later. that's it for this news, i will be back in a couple of minutes with another half hour of news. ah, the shot is good, so i la la la la,
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nationwide is one on one. the how do you to visit with counsel the philistine bitten the from the special for yeah. that in the back of his say yeah, that kind of little sob. is it done? well, i can dish out in the car there, topics you called that a person thought valuable camella coffee. and like in the past on my gun a on, in that a fee. alida is like a month to help audi. i mean, for the shuttle in the cool, shy, so i can prove why did i can't even before the book informed opinion. there was a need fabiola federal government to take action to really facilitate aid. right. in depth analysis of the dates, global headlines inside story on al jazeera for 4 weeks. america in gold didn't protest every day,
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all over the u. s. even as the country faces the continued threat of a deadly pandemic. and it morphed into a movement calling for police reforms. sometimes it was violent, but mostly it was peaceful. we asked people to describe what america is now feeling . i think people want change and i think people are willing to do whatever it takes to get there. one friday, millions of people in america are expected to celebrate what's called u. t, and unofficial holiday. commemorating the end of slavery in the united states. this year in the wake of the nationwide protests, there is a growing number of calls to make it an official federal holiday. as people see it as a great opportunity to take to the streets to continue to let their message be heard . ah.

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