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tv   News  Al Jazeera  July 2, 2022 7:00am-7:31am AST

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al jazeera agreement, the price is 300 years of danish colonization and international interest in the i didn't resources. grey's, a younger generation emerging determiners to and their future no matter that different meta wrap. and his fiance, a student and a politician as they tackle h l t issues with that powerful forces the fight for greenland, a witness documentary on al jazeera. we understand the differences and similarities of culture across the world. so no matter why you called hand out, you sarah, will bring you the news and current affairs that matter. t out is the era ah,
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protest, a storm. libya is parliament building it to brook fed up with power cuts. poor living conditions on stool talks over elections. ah, hello, i'm darn jordan. this is al jazeera live from della also coming up, ukraine's president accuses russia of deliberately targeting residential areas after missile strikes. mere odessa kill at least 21 people. confrontations between saddam security forces and demonstrators demanding justice of people killed an anti government protest from thursday and a major test for us airlines. the 4th of july holiday weekend gets off to a turbulent stop with flight delays and cancellations. ah protested of stormed libya's parliament in the eastern city to brook the angry of a worse living conditions and political paralysis witnesses,
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se security forces left the site when the crowds entered several fires could be seen near the building. libya has been spit between east and west since 2014 falling. the revolt that toppled dictated ma gadhafi. 3 years earlier will have also been protest in the capital, tripoli, and other cities. libya has to rival, got most one placement, tripoli, and another in the east. connections were meant to have lost december, but both sides failed to resolve their differences. grandmother said we, the youth came out today to demand the end of the transitional period. we want to elections. this is the right of the libyan street. people and the right of the youth. the street is the basis of legislation. enough transitions. we want legislative and presidential elections on what months or elk is on the university of texas at san antonio. he says the political crisis would only get worse. unfortunately, since leading to fragment to, to break up of the sacred to 3 just when they before the 5 it's, it's, it's
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a dismal situation. libya has, is all done on purpose is a failed state. it's been a fail safe for why was 6 years now. and there's nobody really cares about the state be a fail safe at nist through the miserable. i mean, ultimately nothing functions working works. you know, so there's no social services. i mean, people get money. they have the money, they get there that there a but there's no deductible, you know, there's no work shot like is extremely expensive. the infrastructure is dismal, miserable then no roads, no, no, no, airport plays other than delayed by 3 and 4. why based? they sometimes they salt water electricity, is it all off for 3 or 4 days depending, depending where you, where you, where you walk it's, it's the gum. there's no government. i mean, in most countries, in the more you wake up in the morning at 7 o'clock or 6 o'clock in the open grading, they tell you, oh, it's a wonderful day today. we have this and have that know that in the roads,
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this is open, close, and libya. this begins at 11 o'clock in the morning because you don't treat an empty deliver morning. don't do anything. there's no work being done. there's no, there's no the linkage which is horrible. courts don't function because it's been manned by actually denique up to me can post judges who know nothing. if people lose their rights and not get any more, this want to complain to the product that you have no recourse to any, any, any legal section or government with that you can convey to it's not there. you claims president vladimir zalinski has denounced a russian missile strike on an apartment block and resort as a deliberate act of terror. at least 21 people were killed and dozens injured. when the buildings were hit near the port city of odessa, the kremlin has denied targeting civilians. alan fisher reports from keith. the
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attack came in the early hours of the morning. many people were embed, it was quick. it was devastating. a 9 story building partially destroyed, the rockets fired from russian aircraft according to local authorities. pictures from the scene in odessa were quickly uploaded to social media phase one for so many people have taken shelter from possible attacks in the basement of buildings. but to carefully move the debris, trying to find one more person to save in the ukrainian parliament, they held a moment of silence for those killed in the attack, which also hit a local recreation center in order for ukrainian mornings not to start so tragically as it started to day with miss alt strikes at odessa in odessa region. 2 days morning started with a lot of victims. we want mornings of ukrainians to become as peaceful as the mornings of each european capital in the 21st century. the attack came just hours
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after russian president vladimir putin insisted his forces do not target civilian areas. you book any our army does not take any civilian infrastructure. we have every capability of knowing what is situated. and we're ukrainian general say the number of russian missile attacks has more than doubled in the past 2 weeks. and they believe they are using more soviet era muscles which are much less accurate. and that means more civilian areas may be hit, whether they are targeted or not. alan fisher al jazeera keith and rockets of hit the eastern ukrainian town of buck, moods destroying houses. their volunteers are evacuating the elderly. the town is just 70 kilometers from several don. it's which fell on the russian control last week. russian forces are approaching from the east, where the in a fierce battle with ukrainian troops were controlled. the region rose bill, glue solos, beer bore it, destroyed the roof completely. the ceiling fell down the window smashed. there's a lot of rubble. i'm 81 is nobody to hell. dirt you rubble,
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you. the roof is over. what shall i do? tell me here. i see the ship both give sure. i see light hewitt at baltimore. we heard a strong explosion. we was still in bed here we went out and we're like, oh god people, what is happening here? we bought them. we looked at the very from we didn't have any words to say to legally abandon the house and go wet with them. shall we take our passports and go to the train station or what do you mean? i don't know, lucy, we didn't have a place to go earlier. we don't have one. now you have at least we were sitting in our page. but now i don't know what to do though, is i think russian president vladimir putin assigned a decree to take full control of this 2nd to gas, an oil project in the east of the country, as seen as another move and an escalating economic war with the west and could for shell, and 2 japanese companies out of the venture. a cycle in to project accounts for about 4 percent of the world liquefied natural gas, which could unsettled the already strained gas market. a come in says no plan to
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hold gasket of res. from the project passes or protectors of return to the streets of sedans, capital demanding an end to military rule. just a day after at least 9 people were killed. security forces, again, 5 tear gas at demonstrators on thursday more than a 150 people arrested. the biggest rally seen in months, more than a 110 people have been killed during crackdowns on protests since the military seas power last october. and police incident said they're investigating a shooting incident. it was caught on camera and shared on social media. the video shows the moment to protest was shot, and cartoon. a police officer is then seen kicking the injured man lying on the ground and he later died. but he said they'll track down the officer. morgan as more from car to protesters are out on the streets for the 2nd consecutive day in the sudanese capital hot zoom. now on friday, the reason why protestors took to the streets is because of the anger because of the force used by security on thursday against protesters. this hospital where
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protesters are standing in front of it is al, go to hospital. it's one of the hospitals where dozens of injured protesters were taken to on thursday and were at least one protester was pronounced that protesters have been staging as it's in here for more than 24 hours now. and they said they will continue to voice their anger against the military and continued demanding the military hanover power to a civilian government. now at least 9 people were killed in physics protests. more than 500 people have been injured. according to the medic group, central committee for sick denise doctors and the amount of violence used by security has angered many protest is not just here in the city of cartoon which also embassies upon demand and buffy, which make up the capital states to come state police issued 2 statements on friday with regard to 1st its violence. the 1st statement read that the protesters according to their words, challenged the police by coming and armed with molotov cocktails and instigating violence. they also set at least $200.00 of their security forces. members,
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including both police and the sudanese armed forces were injured due to confrontations with protesters. they issued another statement following their release on social media of a video showing police firing at a protester and then kicking him when he was on the ground. they said that these were not actions that were carried out by police based on orders, but actions of individuals and will be investigated now, protested, happened repeatedly, angered by statements from the police. they said that the police has unfairly been accusing them of instigating violence despite the fact that they have come out peacefully, an unarmed trying to express their desire for civilian government and for the military to return to the barracks. more than 100. 12 protesters have been killed so far, and hundreds of was have been injured in anti military protests, but protest as he has said, they will continued to voice their anger and continued to demand the military, hanover power, the civilian government. until that happens. tensions are rising between saddam and ethiopia spock by a disputed border. saddam says it's fine,
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heavy artillery and retaken territory that up until recently was held by the ethiopian army. catalogue has had a young reports a 0 village macys. com, but it said the center of a heated dispute between sudan and he, theo, bia, for more than a century, both countries have fought for its surrounding border area. alpha chava, a rich and fertile region of about 250 square kilometers. al jazeera has gained rare access to the village where the latest rise and violence has emerged. sudan says 7 of its soldiers and one civilian were recently kidnapped by ethiopian forces . their bodies left mutilated, the one on the north through the shade. one of the villages was a family member of you had thought uncommon for i puke your neighbors took it back or kill us for ransom. they demand huge sums of money. we are forced to either pay or be killed. the, the opium government denies the accusations. it says the local rebel group is
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responsible and has promised to investigate the attack. sudan says there is no time to waste an ascending military reinforcements to the area. i am going to hug mcfall young with up with all of our armed forces must respond to this assault. one of our duties is to protect our citizens, homeland and property. it is our duty to safeguard the international border lines of suden. the alpha chicago region lies within sedans, international boundaries, but ethiopians have long settled in the area and cultivated its land. behind these sudanese mountains, ethiopian forces are reportedly on high alert, especially after the sudanese army recapture to vast areas forming land which were controlled by ethiopia for decades. now the threat of violence has made it difficult to farm the nearby. lance has to say that you know, america, if we had gripped with fear, we are suffering. the cost of living as soaring and women are forced to take all
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the low paying jobs. we no longer enjoy the dignified life we had in the past. the tension isn't new, but it is escalating partly fueled by border disputes, and also the construction of ethiopia, hydro electric dam on the blue nile, which sudan fears will compromise its water supply. and now the killing of soldiers has renewed their mutual mistrust. katya locus of the yan al jazeera, an earthquake as it's southern iran killing at least 5 people that's according to state media. the magnitude 6 tremors struck the province of autumn was gone at about 2 am local time. 2 similar quakes followed as well as a dozen aftershocks 12 people reported injured. one village near the gulf coast was flattened. the earthquake was felt as far away as dabei wants us to come. we are not as err including el salvador leader vows to step up a campaign against criminal gang,
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but rights group say it's going to far and your state of california gets tough on plastic pollution more that ah, the journey has begun. the 3 for world cup is on its way to cattle. hook your travel package today. hello, welcome to look at the international forecast. it's all about the wind for the middle east. it's largely dry. you can see not too much cloud showing up on the satellite pitcher quite a keen shamal wind just around the radiant peninsula just around the golfer. and that is gonna cause the usual lifted dust and send one or 2 showers up towards the or caucuses, but elsewhere as you can see, hot dr. sally sums it out. so business as usual for the most part, maybe one or 2 showers. they were towards, or afghan to star, maybe to pakistan, but elsewhere said largely try quite a keen southwesterly when that is,
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of course the southwest monsoon, making its way across south asia at brisk wind, still brushing up that said east coast of africa, samaria we'd like to see more showers, i'm afraid not too many showers in the forecast here at present. not too many showers there to across kenya. the ongoing grout drought certainly set to continue . ethiopia, we'll see some showers a chart. so one or 2 showers to intercoastal fringes of tans in the air, maybe into central areas of mozambie. you could catch a shower to the in zimbabwe bit for much of southern africa, it is dry. not too much. wet weather in the forecast may see a little bit of weather the sweeping across cape towns we go through sunday, which had in dryer behind. i saw air white official airline of the journey to some low boat is a mechanical. okay. or even that self driving train at the airport. but android today can be the ever, the humanoid robots like me, will be everywhere. al jazeera documentary,
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next to the lead on the weird and wonderful world will box that learn, think and even trust. i feel like i'm alive, but i know i on the machine. the origins of the solutions. oh no. because yeah. oh ah, welcome back. a quick amount of our top stories here at this hour protest as of storm libya's parliament, the eastern city of to brook. they're angry of a worsting living conditions and political deadlock. the most similar demonstrations are several other cities. ukraine's president has denounced a russian missile strike on an apartment block on resort. as a deliberate act of terror,
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please 21 people were killed with missiles at the buildings in the port city of odessa, the kremlin, as the night targeting civilians and thousands of protest as of return to the streets of sedans, capital demanding, an end to military rule security forces by tig acid demonstrators chasing some down streets and alleys. now the taliban reclusive supreme leader has praised the groups takeover of afghanistan during a meeting at carrick. and tribal elders is the 1st gathering of the lawyer jug since the taliban seized power nearly a year ago. but women are not invited under simmons reports. national unity is the tele bands theme for their lawyer, jr. got 3000 participants from all over the country. meeting behind closed doors, not one woman amongst them. alarm world wide about the exclusion of women from public life is increasing. and girls banned from school before they even reach their teens. are welding juno, moser, my mac?
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yeah, that is it. the girls issue is a challenge and needs to be solved by the government, and the government has responsibility to listen to the people's to mans. aim the nozzle. i'll tell hm. but since the chaos of the taliban seizing power last august, it's public face is seen by the west as differing to reality. oh, this is its supreme leader not a new face. the reclusive. hi bartolo. arkansas mother has been in positions since 2016. he's reported to have ordered the schooling band himself. he talked of afghan, astounds pride at the taliban victory, and accused the u. s. of using conspiracy and propaganda. after that defeat on the streets of kabul, education for girls is a major issue. why her micah were these la cameras should try to open the girl school so that the level of education for both men and women should improve. like we wanted female doctors, teachers, and nurses,
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and martha duncan in switzerland. the u. n's human rights chief appealed to the taliban to respect the rights of women and girls. secondary schooling for 1200000 girls discontinued. these are only some of the daily experiences of women and girls in afghanistan says that i live until power women and girls and experience is more significant and rapid rolled back in enjoyment of their rights across the board in decades. and in kabul, there's anxiety about the effects of banning access to education. so there is a ban on golf school ah, since last year their mental situation is not normal. they're at home staring at the walls. they can not do anything. most of the girls have goals, dreams, ambitions, ah, but they cannot do anything about it. beyond the education issue, the u. s. and most of the international community have shunned the taliban government at
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a time when the humanitarian crisis is at its height and the needs of millions of hungry people has never been greater. full this and the struggle that still going on to deal with the earthquake disaster in practical properties. andrew simmons al jazeera critics of tennessee, as president, ty, you'd have accused him of giving himself royal powers. comes after he released a new draft constitution. it'll further expand the president's powers and limit the role of parliament. opposition leaders have described it as a fast but side says the changes are needed to save the country from a prolonged political and economic crisis. a referendum on the proposal is scheduled for later this month. protest as in morocco gathered outside parliament and rabbit demanding answers after the death of 23 migrants a week ago. the victims were trying to get across the border to the spanish enclave of malea moroccan officials, boehme the death and i stand peed with the migrants tried to climb aboard a fence rights groups a calling for an investigation. the july 4th holiday weekend in the u. s. is after
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a busy start and that's putting airlines for the test on thursday, an estimated $2400000.00 travelers took flights, but some companies are struggling to cope with demand, which is soaring to pre pandemic levels. hundreds of flights of already been cancelled and thousands delayed. airlines blame staffing shortage is bad with an air traffic delays. we'll talk courteous as an asian analyst and an essay dot com. he says a combination of factors like stuff sorted isn't bad. weather could lead to total chaos. it says, almost as simple as the pendant that is, when the pandemic happen. massive changes happen in the industry. part of those changes were, people had to be laid off and, and some of them retired. and when demand goes up, which it didn't last few months, it takes a much longer time to get the staffing back to what it should in many countries, there's a minimum staffing in the cabin part of the aircraft. then they're also requirements
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for maintenance, air traffic control, and the other parts of the asian infrastructure anchor. and another issue is the staff have had to be in the right place. you can have an aircraft, but you have to have the staff to fly it. and the staff have to have their rest periods before they fly again. and sometimes it's just not possible to match the aircraft with the personnel, the united states, it's a long weekend, and there is a increase level of travel on this weekend as well as an overall increase in the summer. and what you will have is a situation where they will try as a might, but any small problem, a store in one part of the country at a strike in some part of the world or a strike even by air traffic controllers could upset the entire system because they're all very interconnected. the government of al salvador says it'll step up its campaign against criminal gangs after 3 police officers were killed. more than 40000 people had been arrested in recent months as part of a crackdown. but human rights groups accuse authorities of arresting. some people
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without reason is gentlemen, the solver, those now been living in a state of emergency for more than 3 months, as the government tries to dismantle the country's gang civil rights suspended his authority to taint tens of thousands. in that state of emergencies, just been extended for another month by congress, dominated by the ruling party, gave up a lot of law, probably say that would be the end of it all. that our basic s n will do it as many times as it's necessary. we're going to approve it until we finish off the last gang member in the country. i looked him up on the many salvador and support. this is a country in which whole neighborhoods have suffered extortion rate in killing over decades at the hands of going to school matters. the human rights organizations say the arrests have been incredibly arbitrary and can be based on nothing more than a tattoo or living in their own part of town. we've seen not rooting on the face
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of hundreds of people at a tire, meaning that they don't have the right to cover the defense. we see the presumption of innocence and we have spoken to judges and other members of the justice system about attack somebody. and they told us that they'd be getting pressure from about not to the quick. anybody as a result of some of those prisons are so the government's planning to build new ones. additions that are by crowding. one percent population is now a prison. which means this i would take in the us to hold the world's highest incarceration rate. we documented cases to treatment inside the senses. but some of those presidents, this is only going to get tougher after the killing of 3 police officers in an ambush on tuesday. and i feel that on the doesn't on those part,
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the gang members are stupid. we're not going to back down. we are not even going to stay the same. what we are going to do is intensify this war against gangs. there are questions over both, whether that work of the salvadoran government's will so tried to crack down hard without success. and how many innocence would be left in the countries? prisons. when this is over, john holman, out 0 firefighters and peru have finally contained a forest fire. near the ymca ruins of match a pitcher had been battling the blaze for 3 days, but as concerned that strong winds may reignite the flames. the fire broke out on tuesday at near one of the world's most famous archaeological sites and destroyed approximately a 100 acres of land that's almost as big as 50 football pitchers. youtube as general under say they are being targeted by the government. traditional media are already subject to tight restrictions, making the online platform a proper alternative for journalists. but some of you choose biggest broadcasters
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or no wonder, have been jailed and say they're being tortured and threatened with death. malcolm web reports from kigali. you know where i was, john williams in tale says, being jailed by police for weeks at a time and receiving death threats. come with his job here in rwanda. langley horton, he's a journalist and youtube there will caster to have it. he says the people, he speaks to a sometimes threatened to with here his reporting on a community of people who were evicted by police and whose homes were bulldozed, their houses from this area. we want compensation. many, several of rwanda's most followed youtube broadcasters are already in jail, but our, including some he reported on all were critical of the evictions. i'm focused on justice, human rights and advocacy. and i know, although the 3 areas are risky here, no wonder. but i'm committed to john williams. youtube channel was had more than
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$2000000.00 views since he started it last year. it reports on things that can't be seen on traditional media in rwanda. like the court appearance, last month of another youtube, a monthly camera sera, was jailed last year and charged with genocide, denial after re spoken abroad cost about who'd killed members of his family. during the 1994 genocide, he told the court he was tortured in jail, denied his medicine for diabetes, and told that things would get worse off to wander hosted the commonwealth, had the government meetings known as children. and my pretty mom was wanting to do him up with the preacher, but i forgot what jorgen, what do you need at the region and you have any idea when you let me, jeff, what will you be there when you will be there? when did you know what i needed? if commonwealth countries came to rwanda's capital kigali for the meeting last week
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for london government denies torturing people and says it's court proceedings. a fair country to many reports by rights groups. no cross, president kick. i'm a was asked about rolanda human rights record in the closing press conference, and not people who are in the prison that shouldn't be there. but there are people who are not in prison, who should be there. now the commonwealth meetings over and the leaders have on john williams is left wondering what's in store for him. both tried to speech, to speak out the job horizon to this 2nd foster to free their country. 3. some of them disappear in all even they die. malcolm web al jazeera kigali, rwanda day trip to venice are to be charged a compulsory fee to visit the italian city from next january tourist who choose not to stay overnight in hotels or other accommodation will have to sign up online and
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pay a charge of between $3.00 and $10.00, it's aimed at trying to ease the number of tourist their visitors court, trying to dodge the feed, the risk of fine, a more than 300 dollars. california has introduced the nation's toughest law to reduce plastic use. companies will need to cut down on the plastic material they use in their products. the legislation also requires single use plastic items and packaging to be recyclable by 2032. and it will set up a group of experts to run a recycling program where richard chart is from the ocean foundation. he says the new law is an important step forward. this is very substantial. it's the 1st ever really it's legislation that was signed into law. that requires in by january 1st 2048, at least 30 percent of the plastic items sold or distributed or imported into the state of california. they have to be recyclable. and by 2032, that number rises to 65 percent and it all calls for
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a 25 percent reduction and signal use plastic waste by 2030 who. and in the case of play expanded polystyrene that phone be white stuff. that number needs to reach 25 percent. i 2025 or else that stuff's going to be banned. ah, this is based on what's called the extended producer responsibility, which shifts the responsibility for plastic waste from the consumers, towns and cities. play the companies that manufacture the products that have environmental impacts. that's very significant. and there's actually in place a monitoring at enforcement mechanism that will make sure this happens. every human being consumes about a credit cards worth of micro plastic every week. and so it spreads around the planet and it's about time that it came home to roost on the companies that make it, that there is a cost to their cellular, let the environment or human health pay the price.

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