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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  June 26, 2022 12:00am-1:00am AST

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and these financial pressure on the global economy, the g 7 meeting will be immediately followed by a nato summit in madrid, where expansion of the block and supporting ukraine will dominate, get all the latest developments on al jazeera. and this edition, i've talked to al jazeera will take you on a journey with us to touch ours. diverse wildlife will be joined by a marine environmentalist and also a conservationist. and we'll be discussing the impact the potential uncontrolled development. good have on these diverse wildlife pieces living here. if unprotected i care about how the u. s. engaging with the rough, the world we're really interested in taking you in to a point you might not visit otherwise at feel as if you were there. ah, this is al jazeera ah
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hello, i'm sorry, i'm to my z. welcome to the news, our life from london coming up in the next 60 minutes. ah, protest is that their anger at the u. s. supreme court's abortion ruling. as clinic stock closing around the united states, the mayor severe danielle says, the city is now fully occupied by the russian army off to ukrainian forces, withdrew the taliban, appeals for more. international aid is vital supplies arrive for the many afghans who lost everything in wednesdays of wake and following a massacre. this month became fossil was military give civilians 2 weeks to leave areas in the north and east ahead of an operation against the attackers. and later in school to 15 year old whims, another gold medal of the swimming will championships. thus we're here from serena williams ahead of wimbledon as she pays for singles. come back off the missing for
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the past 12 months. ah, hello, welcome to the news al, it will abortion clinics have started closing around the united states as protest continue against friday. supreme court ruling. removing a woman's constitutional rights to have an abortion. i was a rare and unprecedented ruling by the court with a 6 to 3 conservative majority and it set to vastly change women's rights are as well. joe biden. and all the democrats say the reversal of the 50 year old roe vs wade decision was women's health and lives risk. protests have been continuing in cities around country on saturday. and several protests against supreme court's decision turned violent over night. ah, in arizona,
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please use tear gas to force people off the streets. crowds gathered outside the state's capital in phoenix and were pounding on the doors state. lawmakers had been working inside with n sent to the basement. and then in iowa, a pickup truck drove through a group of protest as a rally in cedar rapids active as tried to stop the trog after the drive was hostile to the crowd, one person was injured. all the court's decision means that for women in more than half the u. s. abortions are now illegal or inaccessible. at least 13 states had trickles in place to ban abortion, 9 of which took effect immediately. and in others, it would be banned or strictly limited. within the next 30 days, in 5 states, courts of blocked or struck down recent laws that banned most or all terminations close laws. now likely to take effect in weeks or months, indiana and west virginia are expected to follow suit,
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while other states could bring in new laws. if republicans take control in november's mid term elections, that means the right to choose could be taken away in up to 26 states altogether. now, on the other side, you have states that have legal protections that are likely to stay in place. of those several are pledging to help women traveling from other places in the country to terminate a pregnancy. the pew research center says 61 percent of americans believe abortion should be legal in all almost cases. but there are other estimates of put it much higher at 85 percent retention to higher to abortion clinics across the country are women are rushing to undergo terminations before facilities shut down. dr. you're very don't care your baby ah. mississippi's early abortion clinic will stop operating in 9 days time. it opened
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at 5 am on saturday morning with escort, trying not to prepare for the arrival of patients. anti abortion protest is heckled women and set up large posters with messages, including abortion is murder. president joe biden has described the ruling from the supreme court as shocking and tragic. he has pledged to protect women's rights and review house states enforced the decision. decision is implemented by state i ministration is going to focus on how they administer and whether or not they violate other laws. i've decided to not allow people across state lines in public health services. and then we're going to take action to protect women's rights and reproductive health. hi to jo castro joins us live from outside the us supreme court in washington. and perhaps you can give us a sense of the mood and the atmosphere of that today. sure, mary. this attitude in the mood here is one of disappointments,
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or even now going on more than 24 hours since the news has sunk in. it's less of shock and more of just read, but we're also hearing these chance saying that this is not the end of the efforts of these pro, abortion access advocates to. and thereby, even though the supreme court in essence is the final word on the subject. but that's something that many here disagree with, and i actually wanted to talk to 2 of these protesters. hi guys. here, maggie, thanks so much. we just spoke a little while ago. can you guys tell me what? what brought us to this point? where years of reproductive rights. so you was just here overnight. i think it was an overnight. i think we've seen the science for quite some time. and unfortunately for a majority of americans that i think we thought it, we wouldn't get here. even lawmakers today. we're seeing that they're surprised and they're shocked. and i just feel like we've seen the signed the lease for the past here from target. and we started seen a conservative supreme court. unfortunately,
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this is probably where we were always back. i realize that, do you think this would, would have been avoidable and more people had voted st. i trump, i've never gone into office. yeah, i think potentially could have been avoidable as we codified ro sometime between the last 50 years. we did more to improve sex education and birth control and we could not be on this. we may not be in this position where we are today. oh yeah, absolutely. if we didn't do my back that vacation, certain places in this country, i think we kind of legislated this a little bit better and not relied on this or bring floor to make our civil rights for i. a lot of i used to be fear that not only abortion right, but now there are other freedoms that may be on the line by the way that the indian was drafted. can you guys tell me what those spheres are? yeah,
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absolutely. i think the way that specially clarence thomas is an opinion was written is really scary. i made basically calls into question all of our civil rights from gay. right. so birth the right to access the birth control, the right to gay marriage. and so it wasn't mentioned, even our civil rights down to the brown vs board of education, which allowed us to have integrated schools in the 60, it's like it's scary. it's a scary sentiment that we've seen the court shift. you know, and do you think this is the right word shift? that's many people have been saying i could pretend more freedom clean, removing the future. yeah, i think, i think it's a real possibility. i think this may be only the start, you know, 1st things further down the line. i don't think it's going to stop here. if we don't take more action, i think it needs to be a wake up call. yeah, thank you both so much. a wake up paul, that is a common phrase we've been hearing here from many people who showed up to protest area. and just to make clear what the legal language is, this is wade,
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essentially the argument is that any freedom that was not explicitly in the us constitution or that was not understood to exist before the year? 18. 68 is not. is it potentially at risk of being struck down with the same legal reasoning, thus the panic here among some of these protesters saying that the slippery slope and many more freedoms may be removed to cough. all right, thank you very much. by jo castro, following scenes there in washington dc. and is you just hearing the longest serving justice at the u. s. supreme court says a number of all the past rulings should also be reviewed. justice clarence thomas, image 3 judgements to reconsider. rights to contraception access. same sex relations and same sex marriage. but of course majority opinion repeatedly insist the decision on roe the wade does not threaten any other rulings. now it says that the case concerns the constitutional rights to abortion and no other right. but
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this comes is little relief to the courts liberal wing. it's dissenting opinion, one that no one should be confident that this majority is done with its work. samuel is an anti abortion lobbyist and director of campaign life, missouri, or a band immediately came into effect. he says his state has offered women alternatives to abortion. for years in missouri, we fat 1st passed a pro life law in 1825. so for post 150 years of abortions were prohibited except to say the life the mother. now, with that ruling overturning role, missouri has once again prohibited abortions except for very serious physical health reasons for the life of the mother. and but our goal, missouri has it not only to make a portion a lot, but also make it unthinkable. and we believe we can help me think of all by continuing to provide alternative to morphine that we've been doing for decades
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here. you don't, the jury has over 75 pregnancy resource centers whose doors are open to help any woman who is at risk for abortion but, but needs help. women who are threatened with being kicked out of their homes because they refuse to get an abortion can't pay rent or pay utilities need help with pregnancy care. getting driven through their doctors appointment. we have over 75 pregnancy resource centers in both 20 maternity homes that provide helping women and we've been doing it for decades. that's why the worship numbers have kept going down and down and down in jury over the years. and that work is not going to continue, but it's going to increase. in addition, the misery legislator has appropriated over $8600000.00 in funding for direct services to women who are at risk or abortions. or they are green, foster as director of the turn away study, which looks at the effects of unwanted pregnancy on women's lives. she joins us now
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from oakland, california, and was, will 24 hours after this historic ruling from the supreme court. what's it like to be in a post ro america? it's pretty devastating. i'm right now trying to set up a study to look at the consequences for people who had their abortion scheduled. when this decision came down and now their appointments were being canceled compared their outcomes to the last people served in their state. who did get an abortion when it was still legal in their state. because for many people, they're going to have to travel hundreds of miles or find a way to order pills online in order to get their worst that they feel is best for their lives. so what are the options then? tell us a bit more about the options for people that will not be able to travel to a place where they can have an abortion that might not have the means to be able to travel. their appointments have now been cancelled right now. we
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know who will be able to access information about medication abortion pills online . there are a few websites including 18 access which is based out of the country where people will send pills to someone's home or to an address. and but for people without an address for people without a credit card for people who just don't have access to that information, i think many people will carry unwanted pregnancies to term this. we've seen this before, when abortion has been so restricted, it's not that people magically managed to get abortions elsewhere. many people will carry on wanna pregnancy to term. and we see that there are long term physical health and economic consequences for those people. and tell us about the implications of that. if women have to continue with the pregnancy, how does it affect their life? i think it's very widely unappreciated. how big of physical health sacrifice it is to create another person to be pregnant for 9 months and deliver,
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and what we see in our data. it's consistent with the medical literature that giving birth is much more dangerous than having an abortion. people have 14 times higher risk of death from a, from birth than they do from abortion. and we had 2 people in this study that i had previously conducted to people died of childbirth. no people died of abortion. and this is just a small window into the physical health risks that don't just end at birth. they actually continue for years. we see higher chronic pain, higher hypertension for people who are denied abortions compared to those who receive abortions. what are your studies and research shown about the effect of unwanted pregnancies on the children? so when people seek abortions, often their reason is to take care of the children they already have. and when we follow people who received abortions and those were denied their existing children
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do worse, if they are denied an abortion, we see that in existing children being more likely to be raised in poverty and less likely to hit developmental milestones. and for the child born of the pregnancy where the woman who preferred to have an abortion, we see worse outcomes for that child too. in comparison to women who got their wanted abortion and went on to have a more intended pregnancy later. so when women are able to control the circumstances of their births, they are more likely to not have short birth intervals between their births. they have the children are less likely to be raised in poverty. and the woman report better maternal bonding with a child born from a pregnancy where she hadn't previously sought to have an abortion. you've spoken about access to abortion pills as being one possible option for women that unable to carry out the procedure itself. what are your thoughts on the possibility of the
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supreme court looking at other rights for example, access to contraception. as well as other things are there for the legal implications for this? it's really hard. not hard to imagine that they could do this, but it's ending 50 years of precedence on abortion. also being done thinkable. so i don't know what the supreme court is capable of doing. i do know that with the abortion decision, it's going to return to the states and it's really incumbent on state politicians to start making policy based on ideology and religion. and to look at the science to look at the well being of the people in their state. to look at the economic consequences in the health consequences to make laws that actually serve the people . all right, thank you for joining us on the program. dana green, foster director of the tunnel way study think well in other development us
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president joe biden to find the most significant gun violence spill in decades. the house of representatives gave final approval on friday and fighting signed into law just before leaving washington for 2 summits in europe. the bipartisan bill came together, weeks after mass shootings at a school in volley, texas, and a supermarket in buffalo. new york killed more than 30 people 19 of them children. well, the bill includes provisions that help states remove guns from people deemed a danger to themselves or others. it ensures young people undergo enhance background checks, allowing access to information on significant crimes committed by juveniles. it also closes the so called boyfriend loophole by blocking gun cells to those convicted of abusing unmarried intimate partners. but it does not ban sales of assault style rifles or high capacity magazines and gun control campaign as and president biden had wanted. all this bill doesn't do everything i want does include actions i have long call for that are going to save lives. it's funny,
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crisis intervention, including red flag laws. it keeps guns out of the hands of people who are a danger to themselves and to others. it was the news, our life from london more still ahead on the program. oh, is indigenous protests in ecuador grove. we see the president vowing to crush the unrest. spain's prime minister blames mafia people. traffic is up to 23. people die trying to storm the border from rural coin to a spanish enclave. later, his support will tell you about the very confusing victory at the well. some in championships. ah, now in ukraine, eastern city of savannah on the ask is under russian control of ukrainian forces completed that withdrawal. it's mayor says invading troops fully occupy the area,
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falling weeks of some of the was bloodiest fighting is the biggest set back for ukraine in more than a month. well, me. the city has been fully occupied by the russian federation. they are trying to impose their rules and appoint some sorts of commandant who is organizing some activity. for us, as our danny ask was, which was one time to more than a 100000 people is rush as big as victory since capturing the port city of mary poll. ukrainian officials say the retreat from the city was a tactical withdrawal to fight from higher ground, unless the chance which sits on the opposite bank of these averse kicked on its river. but pro russians that were to say, moscow's forces have surrounded and are attacking us a chance, prompting more residence to flee lucy chance lucy chance it was a horror at the last week yesterday. we could not take it any more. thank you to the soldiers who evacuated us from there. otherwise, this would have been is i already told my husband, if i die, please bury me behind the house. you need to understand there was so much shilling,
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so many ruined houses. it's not good to stay there. elsewhere, ukraine says rushes fight. dozens of cruise missiles at targets far from the main front lines in the east. these included at least 6 in the area around living near the border with poland. 20 others hidden in the town of desson or north of the capital, keith aries around azure, tom mer where there's a large military facility. we're also targeted. charles stratford has more now from keith. the significant development seemingly this evening on the eastern front lines here in ukraine. the ukrainian military basically admitting that they have withdrawn from several minutes completely. now they say that they are pulling back to areas which are safer in order to be able to consolidate those positions. to put up some kind of defensive fight, they are according to ukrainian military intelligence, talking about moving back to that city of li, see chance, which is just across the river to the south of sever than at school. she chance go
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a city that is basically situated on higher ground dance ever don't answer. and but what we understand is that there is a scramble to move further south. we know that there are hundreds, if not thousands of civilians in that area. that sam have many of them refused to leave for whatever reason. we know that there are a lot of people in that area that are sympathetic to rushes ambitions in easton ukraine. but we also know there are a lot of civilians there that are literally too terrified to move. also, the big question now though is whether the ukrainians can hold on to la guns. having seemingly lost control of several finance. there is only one more city in the lo gunk region that ukrainian forces still control. we also know though, that russian forces are moving from number of villages that they control south of
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lee. she chance to try and surround it from that direction to pulling from that direction. we also know that russian forces control large areas to the west of lucy chanced and also, and they're trying to cut off a, one of the main supply routes and from the south heading towards there. and this is being the scribe fundamentally as the tension, the biggest defeat for ukrainian forces since sir mariel pal. last month. well, russia's present, write him a person, says he'll soon supply batteries with a scanner and miss all systems capable of carrying nuclear weapons made the announcement in a televised meeting with the bell. russian president, alexander lucas shanker. in st. petersburg. in the coming months we will transfer to bill race, scan to m technical miss health systems which can use both ballistic and cruise missiles, both conventional and nuclear. we go to afghanistan. the taliban is appealing for
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more aid for afghan left with nothing after wednesday's devastating of quake. cargo placement abroad have arrived in the country, bringing vital supplies quite killed at least 1100 people and destroyed entire villages. ali la tiffy has more from the city of costs. the host airport is open once again. but this time it's aid not passengers coming and going wednesdays. magnitude 5.9. earthquake killed, more than 1100 people and destroyed thousands of homes and sun. se, now, several countries and international organizations have been sending 8 flights to this airport. hotter sent a military plane full of food assistance. a group of medical workers from post on has come to provide medical care for those, providing assistance to the people party con horse provinces. it's a moral obligation model shadowy from catholic charities as the people of color
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were devastated by the news reports. and wanted to do something to help. this is our to be here. and to shallow, we are, we going to be supported them from this time and this lab. they need this to support for like the medical and hospital here also need to support. and the charlotte and then next like you're also thinking more thing to have the hospital the taller bon government, which is struggling under sanctions and aid cutbacks welcomes the help. officials here say at least 300 homes are destroyed and hoarse. if they aren't rebuilt by winter, people could face another humanitarian disaster. if i tell you about the age, it would include pakistan, iran, cat, talk and helping with the food, a shelter and clothing, whether the aid is big or small, what matters the most is it support should be coming in to rebuild these people's homes using the swans quite airport as a base for the foreign aid. also either the strain on military planes. previously,
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most of the aid was transported on helicopters that were also being used to fly the injured to eating ambulances. but now larger planes from other countries, the united nations and the world's food program have ethos. the pressure on of, on a sunday already limited military helicopters for months. this airport here and horse lay dormant and empty. but now at a time when i was a son is a greatest need. it's active and bustling again and all day there have been flights from all over the world. dropping aid to people devastated by last week's earthquake, people who lost everything. and it's sending a comforting message to the people of alanis on one of their most trying times that the world has not forgotten about them and is willing to take care of people suffering from natural disasters and other setbacks. alley lead fee caused al jazeera and afghan prisoner held in guantanamo bay for 15 years without trial,
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as returned home to a hero's welcome. a federal court ruled as de la harun was being detained unlawfully he'd been held since 2007 accused of being linked to al qaeda. last year, washington said he'd been tortured while in detention and ordered his release taliban government. his goal was one of the last 2 african prisoners held at guantanamo bay. al protest by indigenous communities in ecuador have again, tongue violent as authorities tried to crack down on descent. security forces in the capitol kito sprayed tear gas at people that demanding cuts to food and fuel prices. 6 people have been killed in these demonstrations over the past 2 weeks. present, good molasses accused. indigenous eat as of attempting to overthrow his government . he faces an confidence hearing in the next couple of hours. a latin america editor, lucy newman, joins us live now from quito. so how serious of political crisis is present here? melissa, now, facing this is
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a very serious crisis on all levels, including institutional and political in about an hour and a half. the legislator will have to decide whether, whether to vote on article $130.00 of the constitution to decide whether it would if the president should be removed on the ground of what they call here, grave internal commotion. in other words, that he is not able to deal with grave internal commotion and unrest. the president at this hour is in the palace, with its closest advisors and ministers. we understand trying to gauge whether or not the opposition has enough numbers to push this article through. but the president does have another card that he can play if he feels that the, that he could be removed. but of, but from our, because of this. so no confidence vote than he can actually dissolve the legislature according to the constitution for one year and rule by decree. and
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after that he would have to call for elections. that is a very, very dangerous move. we don't know yet whether he will go that far, or whether he will need to go that far, that, that we should, will be determined in the coming hours. in the meantime, the head of the confederation of indigenous peoples of ecuador who is leading the national strike here has just announced as a concession, if you like, that they will allow what the calls are. humanitarian corridor to allow food and other supplies to come into the capitol, kito it, none of this has been possible for almost 2 weeks now. food is running out, fuel is running out. and so, but in the meantime, we haven't seen any real signs that there will be negotiations between the government and the strikers. but where we are right now, more and more strikers are gathering down the street, which is where the national assembly is. are they want to be right outside when that vote takes place? did as he say, the say living conditions are continued to deteriorate in the absence of negotiations between these indigenous groups in the government could that be more
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violent clashes than the violence classes have become a not only a daily event, they're happening every 3 or 4 hours this morning at mid day, not just here in quito, but on the outskirts and, and other provinces as well. we've just come back. in fact, from uh, the country side where most of the main roads, including the pen american highway, which is the most important thoroughfare in this country, are completely blocked by the protesters and soldiers and police come sometimes throw tear gas at them, their clashes and they leave it's, it's a cabin mouse game right now, but this is the country is basically paralyzed and everyone seems to agree that this can't go on for much longer. thank you very much. our latin america editor lucien human in quito, ecuador. so hi don. this is al, from london. we tend to no way the government is raised. it's tara, a level after gun and goes on
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a rampage in last night like districts killing 2 and injuring many of the lightning strike stuff. the avalon from clenching. stanley ah, with summer rain is falling in france doesn't look particularly summer. you have to say this swirling thing in for all, and you probably don't think that we need wet. that's probably true for western scotland as well. now that's all moving in slowly, but quite slowly than the eastern side of your really just beyond the shores of europe into turkey. that low mean significant rain again probably for anchor between the 2. it's quite warm hot. in fact, from italy, north was the baltic states, there is rain in probably going to be sundry and significant in france. the light
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extends out through denmark and norway just edging into sweden as well. but didn't make much progress further east or further south. which is telling because 10 to the quite high, and they have been for a long time in italy. and on monday, i've been lucky on the door of records again for florence naples. that hot strip goes down to north africa as well, particularly to new zealand to this shows 44 degrees. but the consequences heat has also meant a lack of rain and the river po has exposed distance deliberately sunk in the 1940s . that's how much the river level has dropped in a drought in italy. there is right now in west africa, quite a long way north in nigeria. ah, oh, oh. oh,
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where ever you go in the world? one airline goes to make it feel exceptional. katara always going places to go. ah, the shake hum 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. ah lou
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ah, welcome back, watching the news, our life from london. the main stories now. protest is a back out in the u. s. a day off, the supreme court overturned the constitutional right to an abortion clinics have started to close it. several states have already been terminations with millions of women affected o u. s. president joe biden, to sign the most sweeping gone safety legislation for 3 decades weeks off to mass shootings at a school in texas. and a supermarket in buffalo and the easton ukrainian city of sierra danielle because fallen to russia invading troops. now footy occupy the area off to weeks of fighting. the biggest setback, few crimes is the fall of the port city of mario pole. now, a palestinian teenager has died after being shot by israeli troops in the occupied
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westbank. it happened during a raid in the town of sir, what east of ramallah? 16 year old mohammed abdulla hammett was throwing stones along a main highway. when is riley soldiers opened fire? he died of his wounds later in his railey custody. more than 60 palestinians have been killed by his ready forces this year, including al jazeera journalist, sharina blankly. now to begin, if i so, the army has given civilians at 14 days to leave, to regions ahead of an offensive against armed groups. local residents have been told to leave the northern soon province and reserves between palmer and the w national park in the east. the army says it needs to be able to distinguish friends from enemies. operation comes after more than a 100 people were killed by a fight in the north. earlier this month. visiting the scene of america, genta leader, left tenant cannot pull only done neighbor assured survivors that he would hit back at the attack. as david auto is director of the geneva center of africa,
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security and strategic studies, he joins us by skype from ya. and in, cameroon. if you had any information about whether people in the area, these residents are responding to that call for them to evacuate. this is very collegial, mariam, as you know, you know, people, you know, do not want to be forcefully displaced. you know, especially when you give them 14 days old to measure it takes more than that. and several people are not willing to leave these areas as you know, can a fossil has been experiencing the attacks by to have these with the tree position . but is a very clear indication that you know, the government has lost the trust, you know, of the local population. hence it wants to establish a strategy of editing the village. i'm calling in piece, you know, he says that he wants to distinguish between friends and enemies. but the problem
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of r m is that you will possibly have enemies moving alongside the trends. this may just be a displacement of the g. how these rather than, you know, some kind of on a bundled mentor that you have is, you know, to then be exposed to any military campaign. it's a very challenging strategy. hasn't worked in many instances. and why would the government is this? why would they want people to evacuate these areas in the north, in the east and delivered pretext of a military operation? of course we're really the, the problem there is that, again, as i mentioned earlier on, it shows that the government no longer has control of governance. and this is a massive area about 772 square miles in the north and over 100. it little 100 kilo kilometers are square in the saudi we bought as we've
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been in my do you are booking a process in landlocked country, but again, you know, the government believes that by if acquitting people from these abilities, it will give them an opportunity to direct cause you know, the enemies and perhaps you know, you know that god is for the thing will happen. but this is a way to all because how look surely they would also leave along with everybody else. why would it make it easier for them to identify the perpetrators? i'm his attacks. i mean those, the college of course, you know, because of course, um this is a symmetric warfare. you cannot determine who is the friend and who is the enemy. so again, the enemy will move alongside trend, but you know, i think you know, that the government believes that. so did you, how these men or one to move and even in did you allow for some liberal peace
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within the area. but it's not a sustainable solution. i have dr. david otto, thank you very much for joining us from an day in cameron. rock and state via saying the number of people who died while trying to storm the border into a spanish enclave has risen to 23. this was there was around 2 hours of violence as people try to get into melia by climbing the fence. about a 130 people were successful around 2000 who made the attempt. dozens of people including many police officers, were injured. space prime ministers, blame the tragedy on my theatre. people traffickers rather every middle missile. he that he say i have expressed my solidarity and vindicated the extraordinary work being done by the state security forces of our country. some of them were injured because of this violent assault. i want to highlight the violent and organized
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assault by mafia's, trafficking, human beings to a city on spanish territory. therefore, it wasn't a tech on the territorial integrity of our country in a violent manner. norway has raised its terror alert level turn. the highest level after shooting in the capital oslo. 2 people were killed in at least 14 out his injured when a man opened fire outside again night. com. on friday. police a. the 42 year old suspect is blitz. b quote, a radicalized islamist with a history of mount mental illness is been charged with murder and terrorist acts. between jason b reports. police officers collect evidence outside the night club were a gunman, open fire during all slaves. pride festival elizabeth does that have been with and saw the suspect is charged with murder, attempted murder, and acts of terrorism. the terror charge is based on the number of wounded and killed the number of crime scenes and our overall assessment that his intention was to spread severe fear among the general population. it was just after one
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a. m on saturday morning when the 1st shots rang out at the london park, a popular gay nightclub in the city center. it was packed with people enjoying a night out. well, lawyer coleman in process of every one started running and there was a lot of screaming to me than i found there was a fight outside. but then i heard that there was a shooting and that there was someone with the sub machine gun officers arrested, a 42 year old man at the scene. they say he acted alone. realistic for the saw. the accused is a norwegian citizen, originally from iran. he's known to the police, but not for big things, minor convictions compared to what he's accused of today. also those pride parade was due to take place on saturday, but organizers have now cancel the event just from sharon wilson. it's tough for the queer movement to experience this. we encourage everyone to stand together,
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take care of each other. we'll be back later. i'm proudest visible so, but right now it's not time for us yet. this is a community in city united in outrage and grief. and while many questions remain about how and why this happened as low as focused on those, he lost their lives and those seriously injured victoria gate and be al jazeera. thousands of people have been demonstrating in munich as late as, as the group has 7 leading economic powers prepared to meet protests as a demanding a phase out of fossil fuels, protection of animals, and plant diversity, as well as greater social justice 3 day. some it starts on sunday, nearly 20000 police officers have been deployed to protect it. while the war in ukraine is repercussions of the top of the gender, along with the climate crisis. our diplomatic editor james phases that with more details. when the g 7 and nato leaders last met, it was just a month after the invasion of ukraine. and just days before russia pulled back from
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its assault on keith, ukraine surprised many points. oh, really days of the war, but now it's over 4 months since as dawn to the conflict, it's become a deadly war of attrition and east, a new crime. it's jamie shay was a senior ne, to official the alliance spokesman during the kosovo war, in 1999. the bombing went on for $78.00 days. the crane was now last longer than that. and he said it's presenting many more challenges when we had the crisis in kosovo. we didn't have an energy crisis, we didn't have inflation. or we didn't have petrol going up at the pomp and the food crisis across the world. and all of these ripple effects that we're seeing now, we didn't have to impose the kind of sanctions on serbia that were imposing on russia and economy of course with which were closely intertwined. so in that way, the economic pie and a ripple effect a much greater than what we saw a then at both the g 7 summit here in the bavarian alps and at the nato meeting in
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madrid. leaders will once again try to ramp up the pressure on russia, but the plan to greenlight, finland, and sweden as new nato members, is still being held up by objections from turkey. president zalinski go to symbolic boost in recent days when the ease said his country could become a candidate for membership, bought from the g 7 a. nate, so he'll want more immediate help in terms of more money and more weapons. james bay's al jazeera in the bavarian house. an unusual phenomenon has caused venice is famed saint mark square to partially flood high water levels known as aqua alta, a very unusual in june. the tide was not high enough to activate flood barrier launched in 2020 to protect the fragile city. it's rising waters of caused by a combination of fact is exacerbated by climate change. they usually occurring autumn and in the winter months in siberia, hundreds of $55.00 is trying to put out. wildfires caused by thunderstorms which
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will find by gusts of wind rushes, emergency ministry released this footed, showing a massive column of smoke across the sky. crews of battling wildfires from the air and land in the southern alti region. neighboring settlements have so far not been affected. all primary and secondary schools in beijing will resume in person classes from monday is covert cases in the city continue to full cut, kindergarden will be allowed to reopen as well. from next month. the chinese capital shot schools in early may help stop the spread of the on the con variance. meanwhile, economic got economic hub. shanghai is reported no new cove infections for the 1st time. in 2 months, the cities lockdown was lifted in early june. he was out there at ly from london, much more still ahead. gonna get an update from raw, had a doll on his foot injury, head at wimbledon, brightening up my dad, how one female artist is changing the van landscape.
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ah. around 3 quarters of sub saharan african cultural heritage is on display in western museums. although it didn't happen overnight, we were rob gilbert time. the 1st episode of a new series reveals how european colonization removed tens of thousands of artifacts and the uphill struggle to reclaim restitution. africa stolen on episode one blunder. oh, now jazeera al jazeera correspondence, bring you the latest developments on the war in ukraine. we had to take cover cases of happening on any basis. the medics. he is a he is incredibly lucky. those coming out across the lines of no, no man's land where one of the few to gain access to this embattled town. they take us to their basement, where we find others sheltering from the shelling these evacuation. now by say,
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3 days journey devastated buildings cornell, a grim reminder that the russians were here, ah ah, ah, now at peter and dar, marian, thank you very much. we'll start with tennis and nova talk, which has confirmed he won't beginning vaccinated against coven 19 in order to play the us open in august. that means wimbledon will be the final grand slam of the year for the serbian joke of ha, is chasing a 4th consecutive wimbledon title. an extra motivation to do well here. so hopefully i can have a very good tournament as i have done in the last 3 additions. and then
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i'll just have to wait and see, you know, i would love to go to states. but as of today that's, that's not possible. and i, there is not much i can do any more. mean it's, it's really up to the u. s. government to make a decision whether or not they, they allow unvaccinated people to go into a country 22 time grand slam champion ref l. the dell will take his place in the main drawer despite a chronic left foot problem at all, played through the french open, which he won, taking regular pain, numbing medications, or injections he has undergone a medical procedure, which he hopes will allow him the chance to win a 3rd wimbledon title. when i wake up, i don't have this so bad that i was having her for the last year and a half. so why happy about that? her and 2nd, think her practice inc. i had been in,
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in, over all her bed honestly. elsewhere, stefan aust, seats, he passes when he's 1st grade school title. the greek achieve this at the new yorker, championship c b traverse about is that a good thin saturday's final 64367650 bus south. he's one of them campaign against alexander richard. serena williams admits her comeback, coinciding with wimbledon, is just by chance. the 40 year old only returned through competitive actions this week of the missing for 12 months, but that was in doubles. she hasn't played a competitive singles match since retiring injured during the 1st round at wimbledon last year. serena hasn't won a grand slam in more than 5 years. i didn't retire to theater hill physically, mentally and. and yeah, i just, i had no plans to be honest. i just didn't know where and i will come back and know
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how i would come back. and i just, you know, obviously wimbledon is such a great place to be and it is kind of worked out. while serena is an outsider to win wimbledon, not so the world number one eager should be on take the polish star claim. the french open early this month, and she's on a winning streak of $35.00 matches. but fiance met, she's still trying to figure out how to play on grass. well, there she did when the wimbledon junior title 4 years ago. it's not a lot. i do have a lot of time to prepare, but i'm just trying to say open minded and kind of take posters from the situation and realize that i can play without any expectations. and i have so much, i don't know a success and says that i don't have to kind of, um, show everybody that i need to play well,
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every tournament because it's tennis we have out now. so i try to play with expectations and just see what this gentleman brings me. meanwhile, to time wimbledon champion pets, this of a is looking in good shape ahead of this is championship. check the fee for the lane or the banker in the final form. it's a doing the job in straight that for her 20 month 3 title. i'm very delighted of course, after the special final you know, i noted the human eyes playing while he are on the grass defending turnbow. and so i was proposed for the 1st aggressive game which shit or played in and yeah, it was a good match from both of us. i think be international olympic him, as he says, it's up to each sport to make its own rules on how to treat transgender athletes. the i a see has been criticized for not showing leadership on the issue just last week, swimming, governing body band, transgender athletes from elite womens events. i mean, this is, as you know,
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a very divisive, very difficult situation. a very difficult topic where we have to try to balance fairness and inclusive, etc. and ultimately it's a very, very difficult situation to deal with. but what we are clear about is that each sport should and does know best. how to look at not only by sport, but also by disciplines where there is or isn't an advantage and we cannot come forward with one rule. one sure rule that, that fits everybody has to be by sport and even by discipline. plenty of drama and confusion that the world swimming championships with american justin ris claiming the 50 meters backstroke been being disqualified and then reinstated his winner confused. well, this is what happened. race won the race, but it was disqualified when officials ruled. most part of his body was above water . when he reached for the wall, for the victory was given to copatrick hum to armstrong and the middle ceremony
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took place. another review was later held and ross was reinstated as the gold medalist and yes, organizes decided to have another middle ceremony and canadians in ages. summer macintosh won her 2nd gold medal of the world championships. the 15 year old when the 400 meters medley, adding to her victory in the 200 butterfly. when was the time when you decided to start conquering the world of swimming? oh, it's always been a dream of mine. i never knew if i would be able to get to the world stage and now i am am so grateful for it. and just to see all my hard work off on to the n h l stanley cup finals where the tampa bay lightning spoiled colorado's chances of clenching the title. and friday, they say the chance of seeing a 3rd straight up i'd be using the avalanche 3 to in game 5. andre pamela scored with just over 6 minutes left. to back to the spirit of the colorado van to hope to
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see the avalon to when they 1st challenge a been 21 years. colorado could still do that. so if they win game 6 on sundays, as they lead the best of 7332, you know, we didn't have a choice, right? this is do or die for us. so sometimes you get caught in looking ahead a little bit and this group did a great job of focusing on the present. and that was to come in here in a very tough place to win and just play a solid game and give ourselves a chance. you know, and that's what we did tonight. we, we won one game. so as good as it feels to extend the series. you know, we realize how hard we had to work to get that to night and we're gonna have to replicate that at home. okay, mary met all the sports needs i have for now more on the way a bit later. that's even lovely. thanks very much. peter want to go to iraq now and the capital baghdad, which is so for decades of neglect, might like much of the country officials admit much needs to be done to improve the
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look of the urban landscape. well now a female artist has taken the initiative to price it out. necessity, ma'am, it up to why it has more was done el mirage. it mixes colors for a new painting but not on her as to you. she's moving her art about that, the streets and covering concrete walls with color and meaning it's part of an initiative to beautify this. it is neighborhoods. but for the award winning university instructor, it's a tough task. sutton, her son in law thought that there were concrete surfaces are hard and uneven. and in some cases that are holes and splits. and like painting on paper does need special have been brushes and different methods. apart from st. noises and stress passes by may disruptive comments and above all as the dust and heat. marla, among the famous people she is painted is the late iraqis sculpt thought of jo, what celine and iraqi british architect his or her had eat. it is also his edi
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human rights activists and noble peace prize, laurie it's nadia rod. picasso and german sociologist max wither security blogs, fences and walls are common in baghdad. the city is choked by traffic jams and a high number of street vendors due to soaring unemployment dust. hays is our frequent were sent by scorching. some are temperatures, but officials say they're trying to erode the monotony of baghdad. a jamalia will be nice at how will it eat out us? i'll say we try to give color to the gray cement which has prevailed in the city over the past 2 decades. concrete and checkpoints are everywhere. so we also try to minimize images of chaotic streets and the areas overcome with rubbish in many districts. so tonight, images in a civilian neighbourhood represent. it's
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a popular busy market. these abandoned 19 forties read. we bes is longed, looked the gray young dusty. now they're painted in vivid colors. the initiative is trying to revive iraq's artistic history by highlighting portraits of renowned iraqi figures. this one here depicts the late poet mother for a no ab, who was revolutionary poems in his play of the many across the arab world. a mutilate, this takes was done long hours to complete from day to night was done, wants to complete 20 murals. and she hopes the initiative will is spread to other provinces. so like baghdad that wants to stood as a min, a read of that up culture. they'll also re capture some of their last to prime. moved up through our head,
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alicia 0 brother or bangladesh is officially opened. it's the longest bridge linking the capitol, dark irony, southwest region, which is homed around $30000000.00 people. built by china, the $3600000000.00 projects offered major cost overruns and delays. the wild bank refused to fund it following a corruption scandal, but it is hoped that these 6 can almost along panama bridge will help boost the areas economy. as well as making life much easier for commission commuters or can i bring you some live images now from the u. s. where people have been gathering outside the supreme court. this some 24 hours after a historic and unprecedented ruling that abolished ro versus raid, which enshrines a woman's right to an abortion in the u. s. constitution. this is a very polarizing issue in the us very strong opinions on both sides of the debate
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. and in the immediate aftermath of the ruling, we saw people turning out to express their opinions both for and against abortion rights. and people have been protesting in cities all across the country to day. the concern is that there are women who will not be able to travel in order to have the procedure. as there are trig bands that will come into effect in some states that mean women will not be able to access abortion more than a couple of minutes. ah, i just thought it was. so i la la la la la la. why is one of the, how do you to visit with counsel the philistine bitten the from such for yeah, and about the fisa that kind of little sob? is it done?
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well, i can go to shower in the cod. there's topics here that if awesome, thought and i could run you by the middle of coffee and like in the, on the path on makia in that a fee. alida is like a month to help audi. i mean, for the 2nd law in english, i feel new. why did i can't even before the book, bmw? ah ah, he got with
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walking ideals, the french republic, islam for a claim. but just what is modern? france in a 4 part series. the big picture takes an in depth look. the trouble with france episode won on al jazeera. well, we understand the differences and similarities of culture across the world. so no matter where you call home will, but you can use in current affairs that matter to you. frank assessments, it sounds like you don't expect anything to change the problem in lebanon. it's actually structural lebanon needs and use social contract for it to solve this problem. in depth analysis of the days global headlines inside story on al jazeera, ah, protest is then there.

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