tv News Al Jazeera June 29, 2022 5:00am-5:31am AST
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caribbean, see, i was going to bring some heavy rain in the days ahead to the likes of costa rica and panama that she weather with the new voice, the heating up the airway. lot of chinese listeners with, kimberly here, but i really think in their own country shifting palate a case, the rise of citizen journalism has changed everything. how do you happen? it happened on social media and the undeniable impact of the mainstream narrative. australians went to the pole with those images front of mine is a war is very much going for, it's out in the media as well on the battlefield. they're listening page. dissect the media on al jazeera ah . turkey drops his objections to finland and sweden joining nato, clearing the way for the expansion of the alliance.
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ah, you know, i'm robot this and this is al jazeera, alive from doha. also coming up a hearing into january is us capitol hill riots is told. donald trump demanded to join on supporters and attacked a secret service agent, but he was told he couldn't go the u. s. government vowing to crack down on human smugglers as at least $51.00 migrants have found dead. after being abandoned in a truck in texas. plus, drawing from history and miss artists in london address slavery and racial inequality. ah, after weeks of uncertainty, turkey's agree to support finland and sweden in their beds to join nato slavery, the path for a major shift in european security. the breakthrough came on the eve of
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a summit in madrid. the nordic countries have been neutral for decades, pushed to join the military alliance after russia invaded ukraine, but application was initially blocked by turkey. turkey jo filane and sweden, however, signed on the memorandum that addresses turkey is concerns including around arms, exports and the fight against terrorism. no ally has suffered more brutally toast attacks than her kia, including from the texas group, p, k. k. well, let's take a look at the memorandum in more detail and the document, finland, and sweden recognized the kurdistan workers party or p k k. as a band terrorist organization. turkey had raised concerns that sweden had been harboring members of the separatist group which took up arms against the turkey state in 1984. now sweden and finland have agreed to address any extradition
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requests from turkey and toughened their laws to prevent p k. k activities. sweden also agreed to end in arms embargo against turkey. that leads back to its incursion into syria in 2019 john hall has more from madrid. what a round of tripod talks this afternoon between turkey, mister irwin and the leaders, finn and sweet and clearly produced a breakthrough. the 3 signed a memorandum, a memorandum quote to extend their full support against threats to each other's security. jen stilton burg hailing the successful search for common ground, he said nato has resolved its differences. now. turkey had been the only hold out among the 30 nato members against this bid by sweden and finland to join on the basis. mister, i do, i'm said of the 2 noted countries providing a safe haven for kurdish militant groups and it is not clear exactly what has been agreed here in terms of addressing that particular issue. nor is it entirely clear
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whether perhaps some other concessions may have been part of the deal. what we do know, of course, is that this allows nato to put forward a united front in the face of russian aggression. and that is absolutely core and central to the aims of this summit, not just a united front, but an expanded front with 2 new members. now, mr. stockton back saying the political decision has been made finland and sweden giving up their traditional military neutrality. as i said in the face of the war and ukraine, while the warren ukraine is dominated the summit of the world 7, which is nations g 70 does place $4500000000.00 to fight growing hunger as a conflict pushes our global food prices. the commitment was made during the final day of the meeting in southern germany stuff austin reports some damaged pot and cushion. it was a summit of strong language amid scenic views. leaders of the 7 highest income country stressed how united they are in the condemnation of russia and ukraine.
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missile attacks on keys and the crowd is supermarket and common took taking place during the summit, only increase their anger. we have addon fighter, we will continue to hold up and drive up the economy and political cost of this war for president putin and his regime to that end. it's important to stand together also during the long haul, and that will surely be at stake here long and, and we will also resolutely counter the russian narrative that this is actually a conflict. and we're only the west and the so called global west is condemning this attack. and otherwise the world is watching what russia is actually doing. that is not the case leaders acknowledge the fall out of the war is increasingly been felt around the world and needs urgent action. but they sat little about a possible solution to a russian blockade of ukrainian grain. an additional $4500000000.00 package to protect people around the world against hunger is seen by 8 organizations as
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disappointing focuses on the warranty, ukraine. and they found billions and billions of dollars for that. and they haven't found the money that we need to, to fight hunger for their own communicators. over $323000000.00 people worldwide, a new record could face salvation in the next few months, for and often in dollars is a drop in the ocean for that. so it's a real finding by the g 7 with the war and ukraine and the energy crisis, taking nearly all their attention. the main loza here seems to be the climate. a german lat, reversal on a band for public funding on fossil fuels seen by environmental looks as a real setback. while still, depending on russian fossil fuel. so their energy supply, g 7, lead us appeared more concerned with lowering energy prices and trying to reduce rushes, large profits on oil and gas. they agreed to investigate whether to impose a controversial price cap on russian oil. let. let's just forget the, okay,
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the don't perception the situation is absurd. the rising global energy prices helps to fund the war in russia. that's the reality. so the idea to kept prices is a very good one. and the difficulty is the technical one. russian oil doesn't flow only through one pipe sold in several countries. and if y'all be with many crises unresolved, the leaders are traveling to madrid, to join other nato partners at a summit, which will determine the future of the alliance. steadfast m l g 0. in gar, ms barton kia him, a former aid of the white house chief of staff, has been testified before the january 6th select committee cassette you hutchinson has said that then you as president, donald trump, was told people that his raleigh were armed with guns and knives. she also said trunk tried to take the steering wheel of the white house limousine. when he was told it was not taking him to the capital. how did yo castro reports and were going to the capital on january 6th, 2021. president donald trump did not accompany his supporters to the capital to
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disrupt the certification of his election loss, but he wanted to thank you very much. according to cassidy hutchinson, the 1st former trump white house employee to testify publicly. trump finished his stopped the steel speech board at his limousine and was surprised to learn from his security chief bobby angle that their destination was the white house. the president said something to the effect of, i'm the irving president, take me up to the capital now. to which bobby responded, sir, we have to go back to the west wing. the present reached up towards the front of the vehicle to grab at the steering wheel. mr. trump then used his free hand to lunge toward bobby angle. and when or not i had recounted the story to me, he had motioned towards his clavicles. hutchinson did not see the episode herself, but said she heard it from tony or nato. the former white house chief of operations
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and with angle present the president of the anecdote was the most startling of many shared by the former white house ada tuesdays hearing one that was urgently announced after the committee said it received new evidence for the white house of police audio from january 6th revealed gone, had been spotted among the crowd, gathered near trumps, rally hutchinson said backstage she heard trumps say the event should not have had metal detectors. i ever heard the president say something. i don't think that they have weapons. they're not here to hurt me. the suing violence contributed to the death of at least 7 people, and injured 150 police officers. hutchinson said she watched the riot unfold from the white house, just doors down from trump. she recounted this conversation between her boss, chief of staff, mark meadows and the white house is top lawyer. i remember pat, safe and effective mark. we need to do something more there. literally calling for
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the vice president to be. i think han and mark had responded something to the effect of you've heard of had he thinks like a girl that he doesn't think they're doing anything wrong. the he was trump. according to hutchinson testimony, she said, trump was reluctant when he called off the riders more than 3 hours into the violence. we have to have peace. so go home, we love you, you're very special. trump weighed in on tuesdays hearing, saying he hardly knows hutchinson and denied many of the accusations. hutchinson also says meadow and trump warmer, personal attorney, rudy giuliani, both thought presidential pardon. and she says, many members of from inner circle were concerned that the cabinet would use the 25th amendment to remove trump from office committee member say they've been concerning signs of witness tampering. the plan at least 2 more of these hearing in
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july, heidi joe castro al jazeera washington. us authorities have opened a criminal investigation after at least 50 migrants will find dad in an abandoned truck in texas. the bodies were discovered in san antonio about 250 kilometers from the us. mexico border officials were alerted by a pos are by who had cries for help. the white house says humans smugglers are to blame and is wanting to crack down and their networks. some people will find a live inside the truck, suffering heat exhaustion by no rough follows in san antonio. with the latest, there have been calls for an investigation from international human rights organizations, including the un international office of migration as well as amnesty international will criticize border policies that they say are leading to more migrants choosing these dangerous routes. criticizing policies that for lack of a better term, have up ended the traditional asylum process into the united states. now, given that so many of the bodies that have been identified or of mexican nationals,
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the mexican government did announce that that mexico would paper the repatriation flights of these individuals. now we should note that cases like these cases like this one are not without precedent, especially for city like san antonio relatively close to the united states border with, with mexico in 2017. that were 10 migrants who were found dead outside of a walmart shopping center under similar circumstances inside of the back of a truck, 2003, another similar case with 1900 migrants who were found dead in the back of a semi truck. and we began our day on the other side of the border in mexico where unfortunately, this cases like these are something that have become all too common. just last december, there was a case involving more than 50 migrants who died when a semi trailer flipped on its side in southern mexico. still had an autism anger on the streets of gunners. capital protests was calling the government to tackle the
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rising cost of living. i'm the oldest person to go on trial for war crimes during the holocaust is sentenced to jail. ah, the journey has begun. the before world copy is on its way to catholic group your travel package today. hello, that heat is certainly the story across east asia in particular for japan. and taco is sweltering under a heat wave for 3 consecutive days. now we've seen the temperature touch up to 35 degrees now that's challenging a record set for june, a 150 years ago. we are expecting the temperature to dip down any time soon you can see lingering in the mid thirty's there. and if we have a look at the 3 day, you'll only be saturday that we get very slight relief,
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but hot and sunny all the way through. and the heat's been dominating across northern areas of china. but the rain continued for shine. dawn, we have had warnings, the thunderstorms out here, that line of rain pulling all the way through the korean peninsula, bringing flooding rain sia and to northern areas of japan. now down in the south, we are going to see that rain pick up in particular for hong kong in the days ahead . and if we have a look at se, asia that thanks to when windy weather swirling away to the west of the philippines, we've got flood warnings out for manila and areas here where that rain is falling heaviest. but as we move to south asia, it's the northern areas of india that are going to see torrential downpours in the days ahead. we've got read warnings out for router account and or to pradesh. we are expecting from flooding here. i saw airway official airline, the journey ah shoot, come our ward for translation. and international understanding is accepting nominations
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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, with ah, you want to go to 0 reminder what top stories this are turkeys, agree to back finland and sweden in their beds to join nato. they signed an agreement on the eve of the military alliance is summit in madrid. the nordic countries apply to join after russia invaded ukraine, ending decades of neutrality. a farmer,
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white house aides been testifying before the congressional panel investigating last year's attack on the us capital cassidy. hutchinson said, former president donald trump tried to seize the spoon real of a limousine. when he was told it wasn't taking him to the capital or supporters were rioting. and years of hurt his have opened a criminal investigation. after at least 50 migrants were found dead in an abandon truck in texas. a bodies were discovered in san antonio about 250 kilometers from the us, mexico border eco doors. legislative assembly will vote shortly on whether or not president guillermo law, so she'll be removed from office. the no confidence vote comes, as the president withdrew from negotiations to and a nationwide strike by indigenous farmers which is paralyzed the country and left at least 7 people dead. our latin america editor, lucy newman, reports for quito. o indigenous strikers gathered outside of keep us basilica. reacting angrily. toodle to meet him issued by ecuadorian president key
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yet more lasso. oh, thank god oh no, we will radicalize our strike. we won't leave pizza without results. long lived the struggle her into the 3rd week of a crippling, nationwide strike led by the confederation of indigenous peoples. it appeared that negotiations with the government inside the basilica were making headway. but an overnight attack against a military convoy escorting fuel from the oil which amazonian jan, left one soldier, dead, and 12 injured. the government blames the confederations leader loony thus isa. who in turn suggests it was the army that attacked an indigenous community. first, allow him president law so rushed to end the talks that are normal when emma has in thermal, her yellow that we will not sit down again at the negotiating table with lenny this isa who only defends his own political interests and not those of his union members,
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indigenous brothers model, you deserve better than miss opportunistic leader, so as to see you and the entire country, ah, the ultimatum is seen by many indigenous communities as a declaration of war. ramos are one. we are going to resist them until the last consequences we want surrender. if we have to die, it will be standing up, if not on our knees any while the national assembly prepared to vote on a no confidence vote against law. so, you know, you're, the leader of the legislature appealed to the president to return to the negotiating table. the president strategies obviously, to try to divide the until now united indigenous breakers. but it seems unlikely that they will want to turn their back on the charismatic leo need as isa, at least in the short term president loss of has refused to cave into demands to lower fuel prices. and repeal a decrease that expands mining in indigenous regions rather than put on them for cannibal. sooner or later,
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the government will have to understand the situation is unsustainable. and given the situation of ungovernable to here is dramatic value. but lasso is remaining firm knowing full well that in the last 26 years, 3 ecuadorian presidents have been forced out with the help of the combative indigenous movement. to see a newman al jazeera kito, columbia's tooth commission has presented its final report into the country's long running civil war. the body was created under the 2016 piece deal with fog rebels, and had seen as an important step towards reconciliation. alessandra amputee reports from bull guitar, the canister were looming. after 4 years of investigations, the president of columbia street commission proudly presented the body's final report. is the most comprehensive narrative yet of columbia's long and brutal internal conflict award that over half a century cost more than a quarter,
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a $1000000.00 lives. 5000000 people were forced from their homes by the violence, tens of thousands, either kidnapped or raped, that i am or who may bring a message of hope in future for our broken and violated nation disturbing truth that defy our dignity. a message for all of us as human beings, a message of true to help halt the intolerable tragedy of a conflict in which 80 percent of the victims are civilians. the commissioners who were shirts, the red there is future. if there is truth, interviewed almost $30000.00 people for the report, victims per, per terriers, even former presidents, all much get it clarified the facts and context that allowed the conflict to perpetuate. including the rise of paramilitary groups, cocaine mafias, and the role of the united states. that 4 years funded columbia's counter insurgency operations. historical gretel, the report also provided
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a number of recommendations to and the violence among them. a sweeping transformation of the country's armed forces, drug policy changes, and fully implementing the 2016 piece agreement. absent was outgoing president, even decay, who has had a fraught relationship with the commission. instead, tellingly, it was president elect, lefties was that will pedro who received the report he pledged to carry out the recommendations. a thickest of these recommendations will become successful in the history of columbia. truth doesn't mean revenge, it means dialogue. it means agreement. it means coexistence. it means reconciliation. at times, victims of the conflict interrupted the speeches shouting from their seats, demanding recognition for the deaths of their loved ones, or protection for their territories. i was kinda looking for, we know the and everything we went to the in the report. but it is the stuff where we can do altogether. we need to untangle this upset with us that we even
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a stable any julian piece. um, okay, this will not be the end of the commission's work. as commissioners will travel throughout the country. the next 2 months to share their findings with colombians, then a 2nd commission will be elected task with supervising the implementation of the recommendations in their report for the next 7 years. further steps in the long and complicated pat to where reconciliation and columbia allison that i'm get the, i'll just see it over with her negotiations for libya on a path to long awaited elections are taking place in geneva. the u. s. political chief has urging the hands of levy as to rival parliaments to agree on a plan to hold a free fare and inclusive vote. negotiations aimed at resorting a un lead election broke down last december. or in challenge has more from the talks in geneva. what you have here is 2 days of talks between these 2
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rival delegations. you've got, i get a sally, who's the speaker of the house of representatives, and then there's colored mystery. the president of the high state council overseeing and mediating is stephanie williams. she's a former us pro match who is now the special envoy ready to the united nation support mission in libya. and what these negotiations are trying to do is to get libya back to a more positive and stable version of where the country was in december 2021. that's when parliamentary and presidential elections were abandons at the last minute. basically because of disagreements over the the candidates, the, the shad jewel, the legitimacy of the vote. we've had 3 rounds of talks in cairo that concluded
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last week with progress made but no real bright through. and so stephanie williams invited these 2 men and that delegations here to geneva to try and bridge those gaps, or she puts it in, in diplomatic, speak, the timelines, the modalities, and the milestones to guarantee a clear part of the holding of national elections. as soon as possible, thousands of people in the going to in capital, i could have been protesting against corruption and a stagnating economy. demonstrators are angry about steep tax increases, rising fuel prices, delegations of police brutality. they also accused the government of misappropriating funds meant for the countries pandemic response. protests, a broken out in the indian tourist, had you order poor after man was murdered in the states of roger state police of arrested 2 men for the attack, the attackers posted a video of the murder online they say was in response to a controversial comments made against the prophet mohammed, by
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a former spokeswoman of the governing b. j. p. internet services have been suspended in parts of the state and police are asking people not to share the video. a german court has sentenced a former nazi concentration camp guard to 5 years in jail. joseph schultz is the oldest person to be charged with complicity and war crimes. during the holocaust, dominic king reports for much of the last 77 years use of shoots had lived in obscurity. but on tuesday that came to an end. despite all his attempts to conceal his identity, he could no longer hide his past. escalate at him, only clacton white as being by the court has sent him to the accused to 5 years in prison for aiding and abetting murder and attempted murder. the court was convinced, after having gone through the evidence, that the accused had worked for 3 years as a guard at the saxon house in concentration camp and had supported the murders committed their through his activities interested to day few of the barracks that
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has the hundreds of thousands of prisoners remain, but reminders of nazi brutality linger this sign, reads any one crossing this line will be shot without warning. it would regularly be patrolled by guards. people like use of shots the duties of a guarded this camp were many and various, but one of them was in this building, looking out on the camp where you see all the barracks and was left of them. why? because here the s s built and machine gun nest to look in on the inmates because in the view of the ss, the inmates were the threat. this is where prisoners would be murdered at 1st in small numbers. but then the nazis took to killing soviet printers of war in the thousands, eventually gas chambers and a crematorium allowed them to dispose of the evidence of murder in secret. the prosecution maintained shirts could not have not seen the processes that led to the
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deaths of thousands. so why did it take more than 75 years to bring shirts to justice? why were others like him left to live out their lives? astrid lie works in the memorial site here. she told me that following the end of the war, many felt it important to choose rebuilding their country over the search for justice. it took a long time until a generation em grew up and we said, we're gonna stop this now we can every one, like like persons like this and just let them unto day who's completely free off of their the thought that he had to kind of and keep it under the blanket soon. all those who played a role in the murder of millions of innocent people will be gone and germany will be left with the question. why so few were ever brought to justice. dominic cane al
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jazeera at the former's oxen house and concentration camp. and he won't show in london as addressing racial injustice using mythology and counter narratives as well as fantasy 11 black artists have come together to put on the group so called in the black. fantastic. jessica baldwin has the story. a sound suit by african american artists. nick cave, wearable oversized sculptures that obscure with pattern and color, is the person inside black, white, male or female. this particular sound suit was made in response to the murder of george floyd. the wearer cannot be overlooked or de valued. 11 black artists brought together in one exhibition, in the black, fantastic, ah, using paint film, sculpture and textiles. to address racial injustice. these are to so graph clear
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with some for it difficult subjects, but many of the works in here are compelling them beautiful, mesmerizing works. this dichotomy here, the choice of these art is to embrace beauty is not about denali is difficult histories, the blurring of fantasy in reality, to emphasize alternatives to the usual euro centric vision. in i'm talking about sad, seen reversal ideas around blackness. and how we, as a mostly western society have created a casting my around, it is a lot of negative connotation, so say to with blackness, with darkness. and so i'm really trying to turn on his head and, and korea a different viewpoint. these artists are disrupting traditional history, providing an alternative to the largely western narrative of white supremacy and
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black subjugation. using mythology counter narratives and fantasy. these already show that race is a fiction, a socially constructed fiction with no scientific basis. the 11 artists are just a small sample of a far larger emerging conversation happening among writers, authors, musicians within the black creative community. the gruesome legacy of oppression is replaced by a new narrative of infinite possibilities in the way the black d. as bora can construct the world. jessica baldwin al jazeera london gains carried out a brazen daylight rate on an international ard for the netherlands. video posted on social media shows for men targeting a jewelry case at the fair in the southern city of maastricht. one man spacious, the case with a sledge hammer on 2 others worn off. bystanders was what appeared to be hand guns .
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