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tv   The Stream  Al Jazeera  July 1, 2022 11:30am-12:01pm AST

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for me, that's an indication that testing is not accessible and and so we don't really know what the numbers are. the u. s. federal government said they would release a little more than $50000.00 doses of monkey pox vaccine immediately to various cities throughout the united states. and about $750000.00 doses are expected to be made available by the end of this summer. but many health officials worry it could be too little, too late. we would need to be vaccinating wildly, and we would need to be doing that several weeks back. it's reported to multiple states throughout the us. now, $50000.00 dose is right now. it's not. it's not very much. there is only a short window to stamp it out before it spreads even further. my worry is, if we don't deal with this outbreak here, and now, especially in a city like new york, then we might be seeding
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a pandemic which is then endemic. and that is the worst case scenario. everyone wants to avoid. gabriel is dondo al jazeera new york. ah, he's al jazeera these. you top stories, hong kong for mis security to john lee has been sworn in as the territories new leader praise the controversial national security law for creating the stability. tony is present, gigi ping beside it. over the ceremony, russian missile strikes had killed 17 people and wounded thousands of others near the ukrainian port. city of odessa rescue is a wedding to find people trapped in the rubble and fishes mo, from keep. so the russian leader will come under renewed pressure given this new attack, people will see it was very clear that this was a civilian target,
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that this was a residential block in odessa that has been hit where 14 people were killed. 3 others in the rec center. but of course resumed that vladimir putin has been largely impervious to international pressure over the last 4 months. you, as president joe biden has called on the world to stand behind ukraine. his remarks came at the end of a nato summit in madrid. he said the alliance will defend every inch of its territory and promised ukraine another $800000000.00 worth of weapons. in france, airport workers are on strike as days before national school holidays begin. there demanding higher salaries to deal with inflation. 17 percent of friday's shed your flights out of paris to main airports have been cancelled. at least 9 people have been killed in protest in sudan against military rule. thousands rallied on the streets of the capital cartoon. demanding a return to civilian government. the tele bands recruit reclusive supreme leader
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has joined the lawyer jaeger, a meeting of thousands of religious scholars, clerics and tribal elders in afghanistan. the 3 day gathering is expected to address topics including education for women. the u. s. supreme court has limited the environmental protection agency's ability to regulate emissions from power plants. the case was filed by a number of republican lead states. as the headlines command next, the stream talk to al jazeera, we ask you be more specific, coleman he talks, are you asking for and what kind of military equipment we listen, asked the people of cuba in the street. if there is a difference between donald trump and we'll wait for them, when we meet with global news makers, i'm talk about the story stuck matter on al jazeera. i.
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hi, anthony. ok to day on the stream we crossed the globe to bring you time the updates of 3 important stories that we've covered in the past. if you're watching on youtube, thank you, helped me ask the questions that you want answers to are using the comment section and joining today's conversation. we began in tanzania, where police have been trying to forcibly remove thousands of indigenous, my sy, from their ancestors land. i get my degree with who we are joined by joseph alshaun, j a human rights lawyer, a member of the mass i as it welcome back to the stream. good to have you. i'm
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going to remind our audience the last time that we spoke to you on the stream have a look here on my laptop right here. the story that we did and this was back in february, have a look here on my laptop. join me everybody. here we go. townsend. he is my side facing eviction wired handsome years. my site being forced off their ancestral land . that was the 26th of february of this year. now we're seeing violent evictions. can you remind us what the problem is with mass i living on their own as ish door land? joseph. ok, thank you very much. so for having me here again for the 2nd time now, ah, what is happening and why the must have been evicted? ease and i have said in the interview is, is the last of money. is the last of dollars at the government is so much eager in getting so much of the money isn't getting the human right is of getting the law basically giddings, the hot orders. because when we talk, when, if a bloody west thing of way that whether there will be, is
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a wants to read or know. now we are in one, we are in one where the government deployed the military. so to say, ah, to force did the magazines off that marcy lands not only quantity pool cons animal, not only do sort of getting that right back on friday, could the is september or off guess this? or that in could 18 that better because the government not to interfere with that pending arc, they shows all the final verdict of the court which has not been issued that actually they said you're cool. oh cassandra does. i don't get too deep into a court case. but basically you're saying what the government is doing is as has not be legally decided yet, and yet they're still doing the evictions. i want to show our audience what those evictions are like to hear the stories of the people who have been evicted. let's take a look. this is a mess i outta from earlier on this month because he says,
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you know, we are here and we are tired. we ran away the 3 of us and we were ambushed by the military. i can say it was the military. they got out of their vehicles and started beating us. i personally tried to plead with them, my fellow townsend eons, do not kill us. why are you killing us? this land belongs to our grandparent does. if the government has denied that they are forcibly evicting people violently, they are saying that they've been clashes with the police. that the mass i have been fighting, the authorities not the of the way round. where is the truth in this matter? the truth of the spectra is, is very simple from all on 67 and 8. the government deployed the military and actually eaten one after a few days. then little commissioner told the chief of defense forces that we have
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the president people to fest forces or perish un enrolled in the world. now what happens and you can see your, their footage, he teased the military attacking the people in the light bill. it's because of my mercy. i can hear some of the voices, for example, somebody saying can you really tell it now we are tired of being haunted? and somebody said no more, not will not kill the people, not for like fire the arrows but know what happens because the medi saying there is no violence. what happens on tens. ah, and 11 cadets, there has been a military operation in one youngel. 51 people hasn't been seriously wounded. more than 1000 people has caused the body. and fortunately, one of their, unfortunately, one of them actually is the one i have seen in the, in the, in the video. the old man was also injured in, in that operations. and we'll have 25 people now in detention are detained without
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having access to lawyers, not in the family for over 10 days. so it is not the mass actually fighting the government's ruler up, those muscles in a way to fight against them. it was or was some sort of racism that this is allen. you cannot de my, cate, our lance, contrary to law. and the court has said they were right. it was the government that was in the wrong it, but there is violence. i know the government is ignited, but fact they're say those are the kenyans people bought harness. do you say ok, can you even get the, can you now authority that tell them what is happening on the other side of the border? what they're doing now? actually they're saying that i'm a ticking and operations to such for people. they calls for a nice if not, i'm now to be in one's picking up is being named as joseph arina. i just let me just share a couple of things for you. i'm. i'm seeing on youtube right now. susanna,
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the legal bekins and the leander must be up rooted, illegal pickens, can you explain what a legal beacons off i quickly does all it? it is illegal. yeah, he shows describing about the water lines that the government has actually 17. they gazetted again, continually and they call it politics. why are we saying it is illegal? ok, it is illegal because it was med without consulting dot or what it is and the village people i hate lose. i want to be one more quick, quick, quick point here for lunches, so people can talk to you as well. j chatty says, shame on the tanzanian government for forcing the indigenous mass sy, from their land. this will in sight civil war. i want to get one more thought inhere joseph, and this is from roland abolla, from amnesty international. how do you solve this impasse? this is what role and said earlier. we want bill tory cheese intern vanya, to old, the ongoing,
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the migration process. and this creature partition in leander and we want the government to begin gin consultation with the massive community such as if, why this matter is with the courts. what happens to mass i communities, are they still in danger of being evicted from their land? not it didn't actually offset the mob after the mckesson's no question from tense talk or go on. was a pretty. i went to the governments, they issued it 24 hours. notice that everyone living normal living with that that, that lamb one. so that if i wanted a squeaking tomatoes should but take the place within 4 hours. okay. and many people back until the place, almost overnight. you can see people like it. but like quoting bad things are rockies and others cool tavin out of that land. and those who are phones, the cows, the donkeys, and if she's hasn't been shot dead last week for being phones to be staying
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in the land. now what does that which i was saying was declared again. what on ebay? i on friday to law and going round, we're going rattled circles as if what is all the people of yeah, yeah, we're going around the circles. i. i appreciate what it must be like for you to work on this issue. thank you so much for coming back to the stream and helping us understand what is going on. does it alicia? engage on twitter, you can follow jose if he's at all a sion gay. thank you so much for joining us. we move north now to libya, where hope for a better life is vanishing for around 600000. my grades were stranded that, according to a new report by doctors without borders, a majority of refugee and asylum seekers on gonna quote here, victims of arbitrary detention torture and violence including sexual violence. we commonly see loose burns even though we see evidence of
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electrocution. lots of meetings with those and things like that. here's a discuss the report and what needs to be done to protect my guidance in here. we have still per break. steve is going to be a coordinator for doctors without borders. we have been following my parents and the sites going for libya for several years. now. what does this latest reports and thoughts that would just tell us that is mean? it shows us what we've learned since we started working on migration in sort of the year in 2016. and we see this as a medical organization, honestly, migrant to extremely vulnerable and extremely exposed to abuse inside libya. and what that means is firstly in the official detention system where they want to be on the trailer time, forced to pay rent and to be released. and then we see in the,
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the tracking warehouses where many migrants attract on the way to libya, or even when they, once i instantly get and they are being tortured as your michael and forced to pay rent since to get it is effectively industrial sco trucking. what we find is, as doctors, is that we have no safe place to discharge of patients. we can provide physical medical care and we can attempt to provide some mental health care. but once these cases have been treated by us, we have no say option because on the phone book cases they are not safe inside the deal. and the reason we're calling for becky, where she is, because the only it's only for protection is part of these cases. i'm thinking about the organization. does that, what is your so careful about treating everybody who needs treatment wherever they happen to be, whatever the circumstances. but i feel that this report is saying the circumstances, i'm not sustainable, we have to change the circumstances. i, you stepping up
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a speaking out. exactly. we were going to come normalize to situations with over the course the years. and what we're saying now is the mechanisms to protect some of these mobile will migrants and refugees just on functioning the systems that are in place for reset ones are too slow and a to restricted. there are many migrants who need just protection refugees who need extra protection, who are not eligible simply registration inside libya. what we're saying is that we have seen examples of we got to washing codle's work from libya and from other countries. and we know that is the best option to protection for these, these people we, we recently acquired accusations, particularly because they can be much faster and much creek. and it's because if we discharge a patient who's recovered from torture recovering tuberculosis, which is effectively the disease of the tension. and we have going to take place
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this just in case that person that my group is at risk of being re traffic. the risk of being, if there woman and i mean a trucking warehouse, extreme risk of sexual balls. and we have dozens and dozens of testimonies of use are demonstrating this. we have no say place to, to do certain. the only option for these most common cases is evacuation through an ex thought process and say that i'm going to show our audience some of the my doesn't hear from some of their own experiences of what it's like to be in libya. that's havanese. let's have a look. i mean, you might be losing money to take
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those migrants out of the situation that they're in. it's not a huge operation multinational operation. so at the moment you wouldn't see you when it runs evacuation over. i'm sorry, and some of the accusations from the preschool numbers last year, they were taken out of the country and the organizing migration does some voluntary concentrations from the tension and from back to, to come to the origin. well, we use as medicines asking for your particular government and do that to provide essential section for some of the most exceptional cases. they're at least a migrant and a lot of them are there for work. the leading economy depends on law margaret labor amongst the rob refugees and, and there are other markets,
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exceptionally on the traffic and they reach rapid identity to attend the mediterranean and being intercepted important. you return to where they end up going to detention center. and then we see them again. this is a cycle of violence and it's not changing. we're not saying it's early. it can, it doesn't people in need to be evacuated. but there is certainly a code or is much larger than the groups who are getting out of and this is an interesting question. one i thought about quite a lot that on youtube, escobar is saying why people still going to libya after hearing with the stories. but it basically means the push factors are more important than anything else. the fact is that making, i'm watching the question myself. see, why have you hated to do that? i had always boxes. i why would you though? but i know, because if you're hungry that have no hope,
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you might as well go safe. go ahead, give me an address on that. i put in to say it, you're actually right there, the better people will be playing bomb to know him. countries a key factor, or we can also section, you know, country as well. ok. and then come to the as a typical a lot of different kinds of music and with modern state, they make the journey over there. it's soon i've learned. but amongst some of those also are extreme cases of violence and tracking and you know, from some of the, the earlier of meetings of right, a shot. and so i think the timing issues or the mass is not use. so these are to people who are coming. many people don't have a choice. i mean he will come for other reasons not. i'm not expecting to see this little box. i've got one more thought and one more voice to add to this conversation. it comes from mark k who's from the international rescue committee.
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this is what he told us a little bit earlier, is in just a problem. it may be as making and we are a global community and we need to be doing more to ensure that this group are, are supported term and that can be seen, you know, with the e. u and other states are doing more to reset all of these people who are increasingly vulnerable in libya. and we'd also love to see the you do more to ensure the proper search and rescue missions are occurring in the central med to prevent further completely prevent loss of life. i'm going to leave our conversation there. steve, have a look out my laptop. everybody. i want to see the report for madison some frontier that's doctors without borders right here on my laptop. so you can go and check it out yourself, which is remind you what it is called out of libya, opening safe pathways for vulnerable migrant start in libya. you and hcr has actually just recently flown out, migrants from libya for
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a safe corridor. so some action is happening. steve, thank you for doing this to our attention. is the advocacy manager for doctors without borders, and now to the full out following the united states supreme court's decision to reverse roe vs wade. until last week, the landmark case had granted women the constitutional right to an abortion. the court's reversal has made women's, reproductive rights and health care, a soldier restriction of individual states. let me welcome to this conversation. amy, how a report at scopus blog. hello, amy, goodness me. it was such a week on friday. you could feel america's feelings, emotions, regardless of where they, what they felt about abortion, abortion rights. everybody was talking about it all the way for the weekend. and even now, if you could explain to an international audience what the reverse of roe vs wade
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means for united states. what would you say? sure, so as you noted this supreme court in the 19 seventies and then again in 1992, ruled that there is a constitutional right to abortion. and the supreme court last friday, in a case called dobbs versus jackson women's health organization, said in essence that those 2 decisions roe vs wade and planned parenthood versus casey or wrong. and that they were so wrong if the supreme court was going to take the step of over ruling them. there is a concept in american law called story decisive, which is the idea that courts should not overturn their past decisions unless there's a good reason to do so. to give a sense of stability and legitimacy about the court. in this case said, we are going to overturn roe and casey they were wrong. there was not and is not now or a right to a constant rate under the constitution to an abortion. they said,
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abortion is a profound moral choice that should be left up to the states, the peoples representatives. and so now the issue, as you said, does go back to the 50 states for individual states to decide what restrictions if any, they want to place on abortions. i'm thinking about immediate reactions and immediate actions. some states are ready to make very straight abortion laws. some states are ready to push back from very strict abortion doors. can you talk about that split for us? any that's right. some states have been anticipating this for some time and have what are known as trigger laws, which were laws that were already on the books in states. and that would go with the idea that they would go into effect if the supreme court were to overrule row and casey. and so right now there's litigation ongoing. in some states about
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whether or not these laws can go into effect in, in florida, for example. and in kentucky, there has been litigation about whether or not, even if the u. s. constitution does not protect a right to an abortion. the individual states constitutions might, that there's litigation with that. and then the flip side of that, as you said, is that in some states like california and illinois, that are democratic strongholds where there's not really a question of the right to an abortion being in jeopardy. but that officials in the states, some of them have talked about taking action because they anticipate that women in states where abortion is banned or is difficult, will come to their state in the hope of obtaining an abortion. and so, states like california want to make sure that they have enough doctors to perform the portions that, that made people that women may come to them for any on on the screen. we all stopped attending a whole tra, to share huff, thoughts and feelings about well,
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stage america is in right now in terms of access to abortion. and this is what she taught us. pregnancy is inherently risky and the reason so this decision in the subsequent enactment of the heart b bill in ohio on post patients, pregnant patients in ohio at further risk both physically and mentally mom. we know that patients who are interview serve or unsafe relationships, see an increase in violence during pregnancy and forcing them will increase that risk. but more importantly, patients who her of o find out that they have a lethal and normally in their baby or have a be he does not, has a problem that's not compatible with life are now going to be forced to continue these pregnancies. i cannot begin to imagine what the mental health impact of that is going to look like for the future of ohio. so i me,
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these are very real concerns and so many have come up not just since friday, but in the lead up to friday because people were anticipating that this may be the case of abortion rights in terms of federal law may, may disappear. i would love you to help us understand the celebrates removed though, amongst the lobby, that was very happy that abortion is no longer in the hands of federal law, but goes to states to decide joyful. i remember i was was on social media and praise the lord and hashtag praise god, what we're trending. can you talk to us about that side of the debate? certainly, so interestingly, when roe vs wade was 1st issued in the early 19 seventy's. there was not a big reaction to it, but over the years. ready the issue of abortion has become a very polarizing issue in the united states and many people, particularly social conservatives, people who are very religious,
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strongly believe that abortion is an abomination. and this has been a big political movement for many years. many people attribute the abortion issue and in no small part to the election of president donald trump. back in 2016. when he was running for office in 20152016, he pledged to put justices on the supreme court. it would be pro life. he said it would automatically over rule roe vs wade and, and plan pare parenthood versus casey. and there were many people i think who were suspicious of donald trump when he was running for office. he supported democratic candidates in the past year. we've been married 3 times and social conservatives were suspicious. but he put out a list of judges who he would nominate to the supreme court if he were elected. and i think that helped to convince many people to vote for him. and they saw this
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decision last friday as the combination of years of efforts. anyhow, thank you so much. anyhow, is from the scopus blog. i highly recommend that you follow it. they have some latest news and they had a couple of scoops in the last few days. thank you so much, amy, how let me to see what you're saying here on youtube, your moran je says, i think that this will just increase the kitten, the numbers of unsafe abortions and why not give people the right to choose if they're able to terminate their own pregnancy, that is a big why and the united states continues to debate that even now. thank you so much to all of i guess to day for the 3 stories that we covered. i'll see you next time. take care. ah. the latest news as it breaks this decision, basically said that the robi way decision was simply wrong. it is highly unusual
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for supreme court to overrule precedent with detailed coverage. the problem bridge will not only significantly reduce the shadow price, but it is expected to initiate an acreage damage boom from around the world. this one here depicts, the late poets was offered and know up who was revolutionary poems in his play. the many outside of the conflict can ukraine, how concerned should we be about designed to build on? we bring the stories in different months that are rapidly changing the world. we live in the want become roches new dollars. it becoming rushes new dawn, counting the coast on al jazeera reporting in the field means i also get to witness not just news is breaking, but also history as it's unfolding. dropping from serbia hungry to rep one day, i might be covering politics in the next year, i might be covering protests. but what's most important to me is talking to people,
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understanding what they are going through so that i can convey the headlines in the most human way possible. era. we believe everyone has a story worth hearing, ah, holding the powerful to account. as we examined the use his roll in the world on al jazeera too often of canister as portrayed through the prism of war. but there were many of gustavo, thanks to the brave individuals who risked their lives to protect it from destruction. an extraordinary film archives spanning for decades, reviews the forgotten truths of the countries modern history. the forbidden real part to the communist revolution on a just eda. ah .

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