Skip to main content

tv   News  Al Jazeera  June 27, 2022 1:00am-1:31am AST

1:00 am
citizens, what does the future holds from the headlines to the unreported? people in power investigates, they use an abusive power around the world to lagoons, voting a referendum and a new constitution. could it spell the end for the only democracy to have emerged from the out of spring uprising? as india suffers unprecedented heat wave? one o one e goes to the fiery heart at the crisis center goal heads to the polls with the main opposition parties. 19 can be reco power away from the ruling party, july on al jazeera from the for villas of correct us. so the battle fields around most of our job is to get to the truth and empower people through knowledge. ah, russian missiles write down on cave hitting an apartment block while people was sleeping, as seen as
1:01 am
a message from president present to g 7 leaders meeting in germany. they are striving to ramp up the pressure on loss. go with move to ban russian gold exports . ah, hello i mary, i'm to mozy in london. you're watching alger 0 also coming on the program. a stand collapses during a bull fight in columbia killing at least 5 people injuring dozens also ah, across present. if the state of emergency heat imposed, admitted to eat, strike is opposition. politicians tried to remove him from office and destroy parents. e carts is in south africa after 21 young people are found dead in a tavern. ah.
1:02 am
l. russian missiles of rain down on ukraine's capital for the 1st time in weeks hitting an apartment block in cave. it came hours before leaders from the group of 7 wealthy nation, started a summer in germany. they have reaffirmed their support for ukraine and announced more sanctions against russia. but for months into the war, leaders are facing multiple crises and countries around the world hoping for concrete solutions to solve high inflation, food shortages and hunger. that wasn't reports. now from the summit. the scenic beautiful views of the bavarian alps are in contrast with the urgent and grim crisis. the 7 leaders of the world's highest income countries have to tackle just before german chancellor olive sholtes greeted his guest. russian rockets hid the ukrainian capital key if it was seen as a message from president vladimir putin to the leaders of the g 7 who want to impose more sanctions on russia like an export ban on gold. mr. president,
1:03 am
your reaction to the russian missile strike from the apartment building. and he, the u. s. president replied calling it more of russia's barbarism lead us the keys 7. want to show a united front against potent and their common support for ukraine. but the unity is increasingly under pressure. now that the fall out of the war is affecting more and more people worldwide, including and g 7 countries gives even stopping all g. 7 countries are concerned about the crises that we have to deal with. some countries, the shrinking growth rate, increasing inflation shortage of goods and disruption of supplies that these are not small challenges together. we have to take responsibility, but i'm very confident that we will send a clear signal of unity from the summit that's getting the most urgent signal 8 organizations are waiting for is a clear plan on how to tackle food shortages as a consequence of the war column for the food into the wall to stop the invasion
1:04 am
because his action is effect and millions of people very far from where he was, where he thought he was having to. you know, he's well, so that is a call. well beyond that, as well, is to think about how do we come, how do we de escalate? how do we talk about, you know, how do we get everybody on the table? it is time to think about the lives of those were affected. and, you know, and this price is as soon as possible. a survey house ahead of the summit shows that while most european feel solidarity way to crane and support the sanctions against russia. many are worried about the cost of the war and they want the war to and as soon as possible, they also not necessarily want to boost military support for your grade. a message leaders here may have to take into account sub files and algae era. in darmesh fox and president ramirez in any case called on g 70 just to stop russian aggression. brosuti canopy show hood, what are these missiles to go show us?
1:05 am
what do you yesterday? 62, miss. our shot. within 24 hours shower. it's russian handwriting to trigger escalation. every time international events take place and at the same time it is about determination. the leaders of the g 7 who gathered in germany for the summit have enough potential to stop russia and aggression against ukraine and against europe as a whole. it is possible the attack on ukraine's capital king valia was the 1st time had been targeted by russia. miss alden, 3 weeks official say a 37 year old man was killed when an apartment building was hasten, the early hours. 6 people were injured including the dead man's young daughter, the ukrainian national guard reported the 14 missiles were launched on the capital on sunday morning. and the most sustained barge key was experienced in month rescue as have been trying to reach survivors believe to be stuck inside. charles stratford reports from the scene of those strikes in case the building behind me
1:06 am
civilian residential building hit. we understand this morning by at least one cruise missile was holding another one landed in the near vicinity. also the happy in civilian casualties. there are ongoing rescue efforts we understand to try and free one woman injured possibly fade dead. her daughter was taken away, sadly injured a few minutes ago, and her husband also severely injured no signs of life when he was taken away in an id. that's what we've been told. i mean, you can see the level of destruction of the power of these missiles the say these 2 . busy to a for the, the capital given the early hours of this morning, ukrainian military says at least from t missiles hit various locations in the cave region early sunday morning. and i developed or when we are saved the young girl approximately 8 years old. her mother
1:07 am
is still under the rebel. we are finding it difficult to remove the debris, but the situation is under control. also, so listed as an office, we heard the me file come in. this is not the 1st time this error has been heat. so when you, we just had 23 seconds to take our after the explosion to the came outside to ask neighbors if they will keep that to be heard. they're forced to rock, had come in and we ran for cower an hour or so later. emergency services carried an injured woman from the destroyed block of flats. this is one of the other strikes sites close by what you're looking at. there is a kindergarten. now it's sunday. the school is not open today, but look at the size of this greater. it gives you some sort of idea of, of the power of the weaponry that sir the russians are using. according to locals. they heard the explosion around about 615 this morning, a residence in the building behind me on the right believes that at least one person has been injured. as a result of this strike,
1:08 am
bear in mind that according to the ukrainian government, this kindergarten is one of more than 800 schools that have been damaged since the war began on february, the 24th chaw stratford al jazeera keith oliver. i spoke to alexander and janski's an advisor to present, but in his lensky, tell me russia retaliates even more off to sanctions from the west. we should be expect anything from russia and the more weapons were going to get west and weapons . multi rocket launch systems that the russians here, just in general, any type of military support. the more likely the, the techs will, you know, be used again because that's what russia is doing to basically have their revenge to know sure that they will not basically agitate from hitting our civilians as response to more military support. and also the more, you know, the mother is talk about putting extra sanctions pressure on russia. more likely
1:09 am
this will be the case as well. so that's what we should expect. well, there is a certain fear in that direction. i will say because we, obviously, we can notice that there is severe fatigue with the more people are, you know, just tired of seeing the pictures, the depths, the bad news all the time, especially in western europe and in the west. more generally. so there is a certain fatigue in people want to have good news just distract themselves by, you know, looking elsewhere. and that is, you know, bad news for resistance or the bad news for you cranes war against russia and continuous support that we should be getting both military and economic, an extra pressure on the russian regime through sanctions. so we do fear certain fatigue, but so far we've been getting the support this just sometimes not been fast enough . ah,
1:10 am
columbia meter is reporting that at least 5 people have been killed. dozens have been injured off to part of an arena collapsed. it went down in the middle of a bull fighting event in l. aspinall in central columbia. this footage was captured by a witness. at least one bill escapes and run through the streets, injuring more people. there are fears dest, whoa is likely to rise. genevieve glasgow is a freelance journalist in bogota and she explained some history behind these types of bull fights. these types of bull biting festivals are common here in columbia. they're different than a spanish bullfight, in which there's one bull and it dies at the end. it usually involves about 30 bold and spectators. the public are invited to engage with the bulls to ride them, taught them chase, and it has resulted in injuries and deaths before in columbia. president elect to study petro tweeted, i hope that all the people affected by the collapse of the past and now will be
1:11 am
able to recover from their injuries. this has happened, for instance, a level treated as mary's office is not the author as any more spectacles with the death of people or animals. this has come up legally in columbia before well the tide band practice before it was overturned by the constitutional court several years ago. infants below the event that he's referencing the northern city in columbia, known for the bull festivals in 1983 levels of the balconies class, and left 400 people dead. and 4000 injured and the town been suspended the festival 1000 years. but then resumed again in 1999 before being suspended again in 2013. so this has been a political issue in columbia for many years with those on one side saying that it's a tradition and those on the other thing that constitutes animal cruelty and a danger to the public as well. and south africa are, authorities are investigating the death of at least $21.00 young people found inside a popular tavern in the coastal town of east london. police are collecting samples
1:12 am
to see if the victims are exposed to some kind of poison or challenge reports on this. police forensic teams and onlookers gathered at a south african township harb on sunday. but what killed many young people inside this building in the city of east london is still a mystery. officials said the bodies don't show obvious signs of injury. they were found strewn across the tables, chairs, and the floor. investigators taking samples the signs of poisoning. it's believed the place was busy on saturday night, as teenagers from the scenery park area celebrated after high school exams. the deaths of raised questions about youth alcohol consumption and safety standards at the informal local bars that any of any tavin is typical of parents. if the victims spoke of their shock, i know we have
1:13 am
a child that was there who passed away on the scene. that's the information that we have. this child, we were not thinking would die this way. this was a humble child respectful and he listened. but as we know, kids will always be kids from the information we have. he was with one of his friends and that attended a function after their exams and they finished at school. they hired a car and went to that place. he was 17 turning 18 in november. we are very sad indeed. we are unemployed and we don't even know where to start. his father here is not even well we have parents who dont know what to do to south african president, serial rama fossa, expressed his deepest condolences to the families of the victim. those families waited outside the morgue where bodies had been taken, hoping for news. and for answers will reach helen's al jazeera still to california on this program, days after an earthquake hit a remote part of afghanistan. so i,
1:14 am
we say they're in despair about the lack of aid, an activation continuing to rally in the us when more states and closing abortion clinics after friday. supreme court. ah, there are still hostile southern states of the us. but the stormy weather actually is to the north le bar stormy. i mean, from the storms that could have produced tornadoes, they're dying down there, but they're being brought by this frontal system, which is going to squash the walks out from this eastern far dropped temperatures by 6 to 10 degrees loss. a cool things down in texas, houston and dallas down 6 or 7 degrees as a thunderstorms develop. and it's welcome right in the desert southwest that on the when you, if you're lucky, get these big showers cross the can be danger that they are also on shore. welcome
1:15 am
. but maybe surprising. there is heat now in the pacific coast and particularly somewhere like oregon with portland 11 of our gym and idaho boise, idaho. it's also pretty warm 11 above average. what time i get to monday. this will get knocked back, but not till tuesday is rain. the more familiar type of weather reaches vancouver, seattle, and then she may be portland, as drops as the biggest showers in the last few days at the next few days, i think could well be around cuba to make it in the central bahamas. but also in southern mexico and fact good polish of mexico looks fairly wet. same is true venezuela in columbia, but it's much dryer now through brazil and not very warming montevideo, 11 degrees, rather below the normal ah. with
1:16 am
marketing ideals, the french republic, islam for a claim, but just what is modern, france in a 4 part series that the picture takes an in depth look the trouble with france episode one on al jazeera lou. ah, welcome back to watching al jazeera life from london, the main stories. now g. 7 leaders have been meeting in germany where they announce for the sanctions against moscow, including the move to bond russian gold exports for months into the war and ukraine
1:17 am
. they are facing multiple crises, a home and hoping for concrete solutions to so high inflation and food shortages hours before that summit began a russian missile he to residential building and ukraine's capital killing. at least one queens national guard says, 14 russia missiles were launched on sunday morning in the most sustained barge caves experienced for weeks. and at least 5 people have been killed, dozens injured off to part of an arena, collapse in the middle of a bull fighting event in central columbia. at least one will escape and run through the streets, injuring people. now to ecuador, the national assembly has resumed a no conference herring on present care. my last hope it was suspended late on saturday after 8 hours of heated debate law. so as lifted a state of emergency imposed in 6 states made an ongoing strike led by indigenous groups in which 6 civilians have died. for 2 weeks they've been protesting against the government. angry at rising fuel and food prices is a loss,
1:18 am
was economic reforms are hurting the most vulnerable communities. lasso is accused . indigenous leaders of trying to overthrow is government. like our last america editor, lucio newman, joins us now. from key to in ecuador, to tell us what's happening there, were people been telling you to see a well, we're right outside the cultural center of kito. where is it? which is the main meeting area for the striking indigenous groups that are here that have marched all the way or driven all the way here to the capitol, and the who are the ones that are responsible for blocking most of the roads in the country. ah, this is the, the 2 week anniversary if you like, of that strike and they've been given the day off to rest. 0 are but their leaders say that they will be back on the street to morrow to continue to protest continued to march. because so far they have not received og, what they want from the government, the concessions that they want. you've mentioned some of them, but also debt relief, a lowering of food prices. fuel prices betters
1:19 am
a health and education. many people here have been sleeping on the ground for the last 2 weeks. some of the mothers with small children in fact as well. they say that they have nothing to lose anymore because they are so many of their children are already going hungry. and so there is the sense that they may just may be reaching a point where there may be a breakthrough. given that the president lifted the state of emergency, but it's still far too early for them to grow victory. gym bully is an indigenous hamlet in the ecuadorian countryside at the diana class . it is, takes us to her field to show us why they're more poor than ever. i wish to fling along a phillip on an audi ask when we can't afford fertilizer. this is all that grows. we can't fell anything ever looking moment as in most indigenous communities. this, when lacks decent education for the children. only 2 teachers for the entire lemon
1:20 am
tree school, other than is not the name of all of our please have fallen on deaf ears. says 35 year old at the diana who has 5 children. mother is on with who is sped, answer has been working the feels good since she was 7 and says her hands are permanently stained from the soil. moving in my in liver this year. and the cost of everything goes up except that of our produce the president doesn't know anything about working yourself to the bone. all he does is some people to kill us, like my husband and son who are in the capitol risking their lives protesting should be quality, but everyone in this country. chronic infant malnutrition has soared in ecuador in the last 2 years, reaching nearly 50 percent in most indigenous communities. the 2nd highest in latin america or not because of that as new one out of every 3 children is suffering from chronic malnutrition and half of them are indigenous. oh, outside of the capital, mainly indigenous communities have been blocking highways as part of the total loan
1:21 am
strike. they want the world to know that their demands cannot wait. young man, oh, well, we can't afford to feed our families. our children are starving. we can't send our children to school that even it, even before the pandemic and war in ukraine. indigenous communities who provide the lion's share of food and labor was struggling more than 50 percent of non indigenous ecuadorian are also supporting their demand for better education. fuel subsidies, health services, and a moratorium on bank debt. but as has happened many times in the past in this country, the ones who are leading the charge of those who say they have nothing left to lose . how is this affecting the president in his position in the country? the president's position has clearly been very weakened because most people in this country believe he has not shown leadership. and certainly the people who are out
1:22 am
on the streets, demanding an improvement in their lives. there's a very, very high poverty rate inequality made much worse, of course, by 2 years of pandemic. but he has so far, it looks like he will survive the no confidence vote in the net legislative assembly, which is taking place again right now. for the 2nd day. it looks like the opposition does not have the votes, however, tube to, to push him out to force him to out of office at this stage. because most ecuadorian, or many, many ecuadorian at least believe that that would just be too much unseen stability for this country and that whoever would succeed him, which would be the vice president wouldn't probably do a much better job. what has to happen now is that he has to make concessions. he's got to improve the lives of ordinary people. if he does that, he may be able to finish his mandate for which will last another 3 years. a latin america is elissia newman and kita ecuador. thank you. rights groups are calling
1:23 am
for a comprehensive investigation into the death of 23 migrants who tried to storm the border between morocco and the spanish enclave of melia. this video appears to show a moroccan office of beating one of them tried to climb aboard a fence. american association for human rights as injured migrates, were left to die. spain's prime minister has blamed human traffickers for the tragedy agencies of join the taliban and calling for western sanctions on afghanistan to be eased off to wednesdays. devastating earthquake or the 1100 people died. another 2000 were injured when the magnitude 6 quake struck. deliveries of vital surprise to people in the remote pac tica province of been held up because of poor roads leaving survivors desperate for help. afghan l. the officials a warning of disease outbreaks among of quake survivors. so or should i between 10 and 30 house is the small village. around 100 to 200 people have been killed and most of them were children. many were injured and died due to the way for someone
1:24 am
to show you another one of them with the others, the entire world to help people, very poor. they were on 500 to 600 injured and they have been transported to the cities. we go to brazil. now environmentalists have been holding a video for leading indigenous expert and john las mud. and the amazon early this month, funeral took place for british shown is don't phillips. it was based in brazil, wife edge one is to remember don love of humanity and paid tribute to the indigenous people he'd been writing about when he was killed. his sister promised to continue his fight, the environment, and social justice. he was because he tried to tell. c what was happening to the rain forest and these inhabitants his mission clash with the interest of individuals who are determined to exploit
1:25 am
the amazon rain forest. we are committed to continue with that work. even in the time of tragedy. the story must be told and more kiana, kiev rings is more in this from rio de janeiro. not only protesting because of but dom phillips m a little bit ada, who's the indigenous expert who was traveling with them. but they're calling attention to the fact that there is still massacres going on in indigenous territories. there was just a reason confrontation, i'm up a little symbol, so which is another state with other indigenous peoples. so what they're saying is we must continue or not let this story die. we must keep the their ideas alive because. 6 all the amazon for is to will be destroyed. this is in
1:26 am
the electoral year, there will be presidential electors in october. people are, are, are people here are blaming this government for having a like, turned a blind eye to the devastation in the amazon and also for having stimulated with the things that he says, ah, for people to take over the amazon for my nerves. he will, he's in favor of exploiting commercially the rain forests. so this has made people fearless when they go and they enter land for they should not and have and for illegal activities or protests to continue across the us. 2 days after the supreme court voted to remove a woman's right to an abortion prompting several states to immediately close termination clinics. the court, which has majority concern of conservative judges over turned the roe. the wade precedent saying it's now up to individual states to decide whether the procedure
1:27 am
is allowed. leading female democrats of coolant, president biden. i'm congress to protect abortion whites nationwide. a fall now package. please have broken up crowds that gathered for his stumbles annual pride much. ah, dozens of people including journalists, were arrested authorities. and this is double that issued a 7 day final gatherings leading up to sunday in an attempt to prevent much from taking place onwards of people waving rainbow flags gathered in streets adjacent to famous tax and square, which was entirely close to the public. when hong kong is staged, a special light show mocking 25 years since the territories. honda of its china
1:28 am
events will culminate with a celebration on friday in the handover from british rule, beijing agreed to give hong kong a high degree of autonomy for 50 years. but it since imposed a sweeping national security lo crackdown on pro democracy protest is and politicians. and they've driven out many young people from the territory. go to south korea now there's a lively protest culture there as well. but one cause in soul is led to a noisy dist ish supports the current and former presidents have set up outside the huns. eating complaints from neighbors. robert wright explains when he left office last month, the liberal, former president of south korea, mood j in arrived at his new home, helping for a quiet retirement. but the politics of office followed him as did right wing opponents, setting up a permanent and noisy protest, much to the misery of the neighbors. neither simpleton, just as they play music all night,
1:29 am
there's an 86 year old grandma and my friends mom who is 83 suffering from hallucinations. south korea has a vibrant protest culture from the massive to the small the angry to the kids. but when the new president, conservative unit secure, seemed unmoved by the plight of his predecessor hadn't ha, well if it's all in accordance with the law, he suggested that when liberal protestors got angry. oh, they took up residence opposite his home in ganga. the fashionable suburb made famous by the cult classic gangnam style. the protesters sing loudly and often, oh boy, what they like in numbers, they moulder, make up. boy, if boom, this market part of soul is chosen by those who cannot moderate already.
1:30 am
exclusivity and sophistication, not much in evidence right now. oh, police monitor the noise levels while banners from residence complained that that children can't study and babies can't sleep. will aren't all you got. you mean, of course we're sorry for rested. well, even though we have no choice but to protest, would it be apologized to them all to it's partly the president's fault, says this neighbor, is it a nuisance? oh yes, he says, now supporters of the president of set up their own camp to counter the count to protest. doran, she piano don't, we'll here to stop such gatherings because we don't like them to walk and all side seemingly prepared to try to out protest the other. rob mcbride al jazeera so ah.

39 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on