tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera July 17, 2022 12:00am-1:01am AST
12:00 am
an extraordinary film archive spanning for decades reveals the forgotten truths of the countries modern history. the forbidden real part for the ear of darkness on a j 0 is only foreman's to go to the world cup and the clock is ticking. as teams and fans prepare for catherine 2022. we'll have updates from different regions across the globe. this month, the focus is on africa. pants, senegal mountain challenge for the tropi to winning the africa cup of nations. will be cameroon. gonna to nicea or moral cope. it's the alicia join us for the world. yo countdown on al jazeera ah. ready this is al jazeera
12:01 am
ah, hello i, marianna mozy well come to the news, our ly from london coming up in the next 60 minutes. united states is not going anywhere. president joe biden tells arab leaders that america while walk away from the middle east. let it be influenced by russia, china, or iran. wildfire tear through europe during a blistering heat wave, forcing thousands of people from their homes drank. i'm told a video for those killed during months of unrest, while millions struggle to cope with the countries was economic crisis. memory uninstall the familiar 9 leading the open championship. rory mcroy has made his move on day 3, the home of gold and un bruce, thanks to moments. hm
12:02 am
. hello, welcome to the program. joe biden insists america will not walk away from them at least, or let it be influenced by rivals like russia, china, or iran. he was president, made these comments while addressing some of the our world's most powerful leaders in saudi arabia during wants turned out to be a controversial visit. the middle east, our white house correspondent, kimberly help. now reports with joe biden wrapped up his 4 day middle east tour. with this pledge, united states is not going anywhere. the u. s. president spent his final day of his trip meeting with leaders from the gulf co operation council, along with jordan, egypt, and iraq. his goal to reassert america's leadership role. one he fears is
12:03 am
slowly being eroded by geo political rivals. role becoming clear to me how closely interwoven america's interest or with the successes, melinda, we will not walk away, leave a vacuum refilled by china. russia ran biden faces high inflation back home, driven partly by a spike in energy prices. so he's pushing gulf leaders, including saudi arabia, to ramp up oil production and bring down fuel costs a goal. he's failed to achieve the game. look at, we don't know if you had the magic kingdom or carry out it's rolled with regards to oil and gas production, as it announced increasing its production capacity to 13000000 barrels a day. to quote, saudi arabia will no longer be able to increase production beyond that market. returning to the u. s. empty handed is a problem for
12:04 am
a president grappling with low approval ratings. biden's also being criticized for resetting relations with leaders, accused of human rights violations. among them, the saudi crown prince, the c i a believes mohammed bin selman may have approved the killing in 2018 of journalist shemelle cas shall g. but referring to the invasion of iraq, the saudis counter that america has lost its moral high ground mistakes like this happened in other countries. and we saw a mistake like this, been committed by the united states in a border. despite the controversy, the white house insists the meetings were a diplomatic when, even as biden returns to the united states with little to show for them. kimberly help hit on al jazeera, a holiday job bridge, the son of
12:05 am
a former top, saudi intelligence official and minister state, his siblings, omar and sarah hostages, in saudi arabia. join me now of a skype from washington. thank you for taking the time to speak to us. first of all, can i ask you how this trip went for saudi arabia? how, what will be the likely view in riyadh of present biden's visits i think and re update. first of all, thank you for having me on your show. i think this visit so far is exactly what the current current premises saudi arabia had been seeking over the past 3 years ago. they sion legitimize ation by the president of the greatest power, the united states, before the visit and even announced, i urged present biden to fix the relationship with federated good. because as a saudi says, and even next dial, i do care about the relationship and my advice would do it, but not in all costs. so far it looks like there's only one sided concessions and
12:06 am
the president has expended a lot of political capital for nothing clear and return one of the consequences likely to be for me, it's the juggler. circumstances, i am reminded of what happened 5 years ago after the last president who did saudi left. the kingdom within, within amongst and d. s. became the crown prince. and on that same day my siblings were 7900 became his 1st victim. but it wasn't only to human rights that the new crime print, emboldened by by a presidential visit from the prison. united states embarked on a campaign of reckless regional adventure as them that harmed us interests. in addition to a degree just from the vice violations, we saw, the boy caught caesar because we saw that could not be the problem, this sort of lebanon, and many other reckless policies. i feel right now, regardless of what well intended objectives president biden,
12:07 am
is seeking from this visit, the perception by the saudi crime prince, that this is another carte blanche by the greater power you and your family know something of the inner workings of that government in saudi arabia, do you think that washington on the stands, the sort of behavior attitude mentality of somebody like m b s, i think they do, and that's pretty well established right now. he's no longer in a non commodity they, they put in this behavior or the past 5 years, top, the top 5 in by a real hands. basically, you know, released the report concluding the us intelligence community assessment that he was culpable in the murder and suffering from my family's experience. his text messages to my father extorting him and blackmailing him and linking the
12:08 am
release of my hostage siblings to my father's return is as a direct example of how somebody like n b s micromanage is everything including the hostage. ready situation of a couple of teenagers us saying that after the visit of president trump to the region, there was some pretty reckless destructive behavior after that. how do what might happen now? what might this strengthening sense of impunity potentially lead to not just human rights conditions inside saudi arabia that potentially for the region. i worried about india and barking, or another campaign of reckless regional policies against our neighbors and saudi arabia. again, even, you know, taking some, you know, offensive moves that can bar corps,
12:09 am
we've seen the quagmire in them. and as an example, it's really, you know, we've, we've seen that happen before. and my concern without establishing a clear framework of how the u. s. relationship would go forward and building it on reciprocal respect of common interest and universal values. my fear is that we are going to see what happened 5 years ago. start happening again. call it a job, re thank you for joining us. thank you so much. well now violence has fled between israel and palestine, group hamas, just aus after president joe biden left. israel force saudi arabia israeli fighter jets of bomb 2 sites in the gaza strip. israel says one of them was an underground rocket manufacturing plant. video of the aftermath shows a children's playground was destroyed in the on the night attack. the bombing was
12:10 am
in retaliation for rocket fired from garza of the southern city of ashville on human side, has more from kansas city. com has the tory day in these hours in the gaza strip. previously, i on the early hours of don't israel is strikes, shook different areas. and because the strip targeting different military sites here in garza, in the central south, during and in the east west area. because of the city and gaza strip these violet trades have occurred or has caused a lot of material damage in the residential areas. and recall to close to these sites these where in retaliation is 2 rockets today where previously flyers from the gaza strip towards the south. then cities of us cologne, one was intercepted by the iron dome,
12:11 am
while the other ones fell in an empty area during the rates. also 2 other rockets where a launched from because the strip know how sirens were sounded in the southern city of ash cologne either. but because israeli military said that they fell in empty areas, but as a response for israel carried one more raid on the central part. because the strip this, these rates have been very violent. the most violent in the last month, a vigils been held and shrank up to remember those who died in the unrest that saint gulf the country during. what's been a story economic crisis and collapse is a lot of anger over the soaring cost of fuel energy, food medicines, it's all lead to months of anti government protests with president. going to buy raja packs of fleeing to them. all these and then singapore to escape these riots
12:12 am
and then being forced to resign. many protest is ending the influence of the raja packs of family own shrine because politics is still the priority. what is happening here is that we are commemorating arby a fallen heroes. all brothers or sisters who sacrificed their lives in the course of the struggle as you're going to remove it 99 days ago when we began the struggle on the approval on the goal for his green, we had, we had hope we had a dream. we had it, we had the determination that we would take away the worst it will rule ever rule this country. that is both what i did. i did not show the p. mecca, the figurehead of good, i did, i should be nasty and roger oxycontin. open $9.00 to $9.00 days of struggling. i think the of you to see if you see that we have successfully managed to achieve your goals. shank, as our said president has defended his record, saying he took all possible steps to prevent what happened in economic crisis got to by roger pox. his resignation has now been accepted by parliament and the process of appointing or placement is started. the prime minister, runaway from a singer, is serving as acting president until a new leader is put in place,
12:13 am
which should be within the next week. meanwhile, the energy minister is asked foreign countries a financial help to try and deal with the crisis. we have made requests re nearby, have made requests to every family mission. so any com who that comes for her bus. we appreciate that right now. the indian government is the only country that has provided us with the credit line or shrink is health care system is on the brink of collapse because of this economic crisis al jazeera step wanston is following all this from columbia. rippling fuel shortages are really paralyzing. sri lanka at the moment and one sec that is very badly hit, is also the medical sector. health workers have been given priority on a saturday to get fuel. so in this queue, you can see doctors, nurses, all kinds of medical workers, but the priority is not been given everywhere because other people are affected as
12:14 am
well. the other problem is that patients don't have fuel to go to hospitals to seek treatment. so the medical association for doctors are saying that the health care system is nearly collapsing does or if your cause is continues healthy ever grows, aren't able to get the fuel. and there's no uncertainty about the fuel shipments. so if that reminds you the go, because to collapse in about 2 weeks time, what will happen then? the patients will die ah, without the drugs patient will die without seeing the healthy also workers or doctors. so time is running out a doctor say if these medical. a equipment there, madison and fuel is not going to be supplied within 2 weeks. the health system could collapse completely. now acting president, money away from a single has now released some emergency funds for food and fuel at madison. so that's a welcome announcement, but it remains to be seen for these people here. when the supplies will arrive,
12:15 am
you at the knees, our life from london, there's more still ahead for you on the priority of b, we're going to be in the ukraine and capital keith, where soldiers aligning to cope with the trauma of conflicts, or bring that story also showing the seas for self sufficiency, mexico hopes to tackle soaring inflation in order to avoid a food crisis. and light trends for one of the best strikers in the world is leaving germany, and heading to barcelona. ah ah, extreme heat and strong winds of spots scorching wild fires in europe, forcing thousands of people to flee around 3000 fire fighters of battling blazes in the french regions of sharon. and although almost a 100 square kilometers of land have been burned and the pfizer inching closer to
12:16 am
popular tourist towns to similar scene in spain, where temperatures have talked to $45.00 degrees celsius and 360 heat related deaths have now been recorded. military has been deploy to fight fires in the south and the west multiple fires of spread across the border to central and northern portugal. and a plane being used to tackle one of them crashed, killing the pilots. more than 3 hundreds, quite kilometers, have been burned in the past week. that's more than all of last year. over all greece, crow shangri, in italy of all been fighting wildfires this week. scientists are saying climate change is to blame for this. after unusually horse and dry spring left the soil parched to journey me now from barcelona is mark cast lieu of fire chief and while far expert in spain's catalonia region, we were just mentioning temperatures there, topping 45 degrees celsius over 350 people have died as
12:17 am
a result of the heat. what can you tell us about the way in which people and of course, are the 5 fighting authorities? how is everyone coping with this? well, situation is complex, complex, but it is just a study. we know that these would last, at least until the end of july, and we've been in the, by the, the fire since beginning of june. so the doesn't put it to is being one of the hardest season we have seen. since if we remember, i mean it, it's worse to be one of the longest one, but this is not me. we were expecting that. and we knew that climate change will bring those kind of seasons. and we knew that that will happen because all in the western europe, our landscape has been changing the last 4 years has been becoming more european landscape. and that has created the conditions for climate change to create the 5
12:18 am
commission we're having today. so we can blame climate change, but we have to blame or the lack of management of the landscape as well. so it's kind of a problem on top of a structural problem that we are having. and i just need to be clermont because you, you are making very important point and we need your colleagues of those fighters must be exhausted because they've been doing this since the beginning of june. so is it that the heat is intensifying or that the season is lasting longer? yeah, so in a, in an average back in the ninety's, you can expect out season this starting mid july and ending mid hour. so one months of us really high temperature will be a big season in the 90s. right now. the seasons can last from end of may until end of october and that's a huge change. but that has been unfolding in the last years. so we expected that,
12:19 am
but this year it's becoming clear. so it's, it's like having a small window open to see what's coming in the next year. so it's, it's not new. we cannot say it's new. we expected it. but it is, it's, it's something that it's going to be wars in the years to go. how much, what do you think it will, it's going to get you say that this is the hottest year? yeah. that you've had so far. is it a big difference from last year, or are we seeing the temperature rise gradually? of temperature as a rising gradually, but we can compare to what happened back in $94.00. 94 was the last of the season. it all over europe. that's a bad here we had around for a 2 days above 50 degrees. last year we had already $71.00 days of $52.00 degrees. and these year we already have had 40 days and we're only in 15 of july. so that's the,
12:20 am
that's the change we've gone from seasons and 20 years ago with 30 days, really high temperature of the season. we are having almost 2 months in the house and it does commission for the change. if you look in the lifetime of, of a fire, you know, really is really big. how do you see this evolving? then how is this affecting? the wind has in europe, who and this is having to times of change. one change is, is our flores are not healthy. they, they are changing or day week because they, they have to cope with a climate which is not the climate they would live with her. they are stressed that makes them burden easier and they burn for a longer time. so the classical fantasies on that used to be one summer. now it's all year around. we are button fires in the summer and fall and winter and spring
12:21 am
on the beak season that used to be one month in summer. now it just starting in may and ending october. so any ease that kids are beat chains very distressing us as a fire services, but we can see and concerns before it is also understood because it's changing. so the idea when you look at the other, what we understand it is that wave of change is that wave a change that will change over the landscape. the will change, met the landscape. we've been living. i want how if i tell us more, how is it going to change that landscape? because we have seen forests and lodge tracks of land and gulf by fires. but these areas inhabited by people will that people not have to leave their homes permanently, not go back, not rebuild, and say you just have these sort of wastelands that existed, have been, but i know that you can't live in them. that's not the case. if you run a for the 1st, we'll come back with will not be the same for it will be either i or 4 as of that the to a new claim on. it means we can not sing the big plot, nate,
12:22 am
to far as we've seen, year back in the last sent to he will be a stay here for the biggest. com. no, the climate has change and they go see some will change accordingly to the climber . and we should manage our for us to help them adapt to a new climate and not doing that is creating the fire problem. and that's what we are fighting right now. they misunderstand as a human society of what is unfolding our as an around us. we should adapt to the new plan, then we should have our or helped with that our forced to a new climate and fires. are the diesel effect of the change that he's unfolding? well, why is this happening worldwide? or in the last 5 years we've seen that happening. we saw that in the battle making us try to that on 20 california last year in greece and turkey in western europe. it is just a way for change, a global wave of change that goes with the climate change. but climate change,
12:23 am
it can do that because it is finding an unmanaged landscape that we have left because we have become more un society. so it's not an easy, broad, it's not a simple problem is a complex problem that has the fire of the most beautiful effect. thank you so much . i appreciate you taking the time to speak to the staff from barcelona mac. katherine, you well, italy could lose a 3rd of its farm land because it's longest river is drying up 20 percent of the country's water supply has been lost in the last half century. and staples like tomatoes and olives of badly affected adarine reports. now from the po valley. this is what italy's longest and most important river, the po looks like right now. parched and it dangerously low levels. it's water provides the life blood for farmers who produce italy's most valuable crops,
12:24 am
walking through his field of stunted corn farmer, arianna tune, yolo, the son and grand son of corn growers shows us the damage wrought by the drought. ah christa with tongue is this year this comb will just be throwing away all because of the drought because it hasn't winded months can on this yet. i'm is totally ruined teresa buddha down river, where the po empties into the adriatic engineer rodolfo lot. anthy shows us how the current is running in reverse, from the sea to the land, because the river is so low, level looking over maps, he shows me how salt water is entering nearby farm land. lot anti says salt water barriers are failing because they weren't built for such dangerously low river levels. he regularly monitors the salt levels in the river. he's never seen this bad. this is him of, in the seems like, i mean it's now registering 25 grams per liter. that means that sea water,
12:25 am
so water level here should be one gram per liter to be able to distribute to farmers. and the effect of so much salt water incursion, burnt crops, worthless and withering in the field. many fields poisoned by salt water may not even produce crops next year. it's not just a problem for agriculture muscle farmer paula mancini says he'll lose 30 percent of his harvest from this lagoon on the co delta this year. busy to close it out with them all these muscles are all dead. fresh water from the po hasn't made it here. so they just die. seems like this are increasingly common along the po. whole area is usually covered by water, now exposed turned in the beaches or islands of sand in the middle where the river usually flows and those who provide water to farmers in the po valley. so they're not just worried about this summer's crops. but about years to come a once in a lifetime, drought shows how life could change here forever. so the way the mechanic was,
12:26 am
if we lose this resource, we have had to centuries, will have to abandon our excellent crops. we'd give up our whole cultural heritage, a frightening prospect as people here and millions of others around the world struggle to adapt to changing climate. adarine al jazeera in the po, valley of northern italy. at least 31 people have been killed and fighting 9 others injured during days of violence between rival tribes and sudan. forties of declared an overnight curfew in 2 towns in blue nile state. members of the houser and bar to ethnic groups began fighting after a farmer was killed earlier this week. local residents a, the violence hasn't stopped the authority say they've made some of ras. doctors there say there isn't enough medicine to treat the wounded. will not her father is the vice chair of the sudanese american public affairs association. she joins us
12:27 am
now from omar. and can i ask if you have been in touch with anyone in the area what they are telling you about the, the fighting between these 2 tribes and whether it is still ongoing? yes. so the latest news did tell us that the why the still ongoing. it coms were a few hours, but then starts again. and it's just important to know that these tribal fights are not new. these sort of things that have been going on for decades. but they're now being exacerbated by several factors such as climate change that you guys were talking about recently. but um, unfortunately it's expected that this might come down with my thighs again in the next few days or hours. this is something that we're saying increasingly in parts of africa, it's probably not getting enough attention, which is the impact of climate change on the landscape and the way in which that affects the competition for livelihood and livestock. can you explain how
12:28 am
that applies in this positive sit on? well, as i mentioned earlier, the, this is not new. it has been going on for decades. it's, you know, the climate change definitely has a big role into this. but the biggest role that plays into that is the political instability of the country. and the fact that the current cool leaders exploit these types of fights for their own benefit. because the message i'm trying to send to the nice public is that either us or instability, you choose us, or instability and drought and bad conditions in the country. however, i think the city is people are now at the point where they're not accepting that message anymore. and they continue to progressively ask for their own rights to go over the country and not be subjected to the sides of harassing messages. because this is taking place in blue nile state, but if there is a security vacuum in some parts of the country. and then also,
12:29 am
if the military leaders are trying to exacerbate these conflicts for their own sort of advantage, or we'd like to see more such more of this violence in the country. yes, i mean, and we've seen it and our floor, you know, they do will be agreement, did not really resolve the instability issues that are happening there for before. and in some instances, it might even got worse after the coo that we have seen recently. we've seen these in blue. now we've seen them in eastern sudan in all regions of sudan that are unstable. and they have several tribes that were cohabitate in peacefully, in the past. what had happened though, during the previous redeem during the national congress party and assures government they spread messages of racism and hate and urban ization in the country . that lived b strives to clash over these resources. but not only that, but accessor base that into severe violence. and in some instances local civil wars
12:30 am
. and that was really a divide to conquer type of attitude, the type of approach from the sheer government. and we all know that this current who is nothing but extension of the previous regime and nothing but extension of the ncp party trying to come back dressed in a different outfit. but you know, this may be the will, as i mentioned, are so alert and they know exactly what the messages are that the be portrayed to them. and we really hopeful that local tribal leaders will play the role that they used to play in the past in calming and controlling these fights. in addition to local authorities, you know, unfortunately, right now should i experienced the lack of state lack of law enforcement, which is allowing the successor bait. right. but can i tell you what is the plan for, for testing now, because we have seen a situation deteriorate, and that doesn't seem to be any international scrutiny or pressure for change. yes,
12:31 am
and that's exactly the message that i would like. the international community to here is that the attitude that we have experienced from the international community that we're not going to intervene because intervention is going to lead to excessive ration of the situation and it will lead to more instability. but unfortunately, the instability is already happening to them. there's currently no state. there's currently no state institutions in the country. the country is on the verge of going to civil warg and going to complete it cannot make and political and security instability. and that will not only affects to them, but it will affect all neighboring countries because it has open borders. so we're talking about wars, it update cost. if you help you close this house, then close to the western borders. and you know, the situation is just going from bad to worse, so the attitude of not going to intervene. we're not going to impose measure strict measures of the cool leaders and the jen, joey leader, committee and we're hon. is not really leading to improvement of the situation if
12:32 am
anything is getting worse day by day. and we've been asking the u. s. government and other international communities, the post strict sanctions target is sanctions. again, as the school leaders, because right out there hold the the economy, the security and the whole country hostage at their own hands so that they can continue to roll over. all right, well, thank you. not for door joining us, vice chair of the didn't use american public affairs association. thank you for having gunman of killed 10 people and wound to 2 others in an attack on market traders and indonesia pop province. tac is believed to be separate. his rebels and members of the west, part for liberation army local police say most the victims were immigrants, from other indonesian islands, flashes of escalating the countries east in most province. since last year. when rebels set fire to several schools and killed 2 teachers all than a 1000, hungarians of rally against prime minister victor or ban,
12:33 am
let in the latest and was been a series of anti government protests. demonstrations began after all vans ruling party passed legislation to sharply raise taxes on small businesses or banners facing his toughest challenge. yet since taking power in at 2010 landslide, with inflation at its highest level in 2 decades, saturday's rally was caught by oberon's independent opposition challenger, whose alliance was defeated in april elections. rosemary rosa gord, winery mitchell. he passed the government is commonly planning such austerity measures that people cannot tolerate them any more. for example, changes in taxes, teachers are underpaid. they can all make a living and so on. this is why we have to come out on the street and say, we cannot go any further like this. here with and he is our life from london was to lead on the program. at concern is a river that provided drinking water to syrians for centuries, begins to dry up the right to pay for a pint one unit very us for
12:34 am
a commodity. most gas in cash, cooking oil, and africa's fastest man. other comes the odds to advance in the 100 meters of the wild athletics championships. ah, how i read that extreme heat continues to build across western parts. if you're being see the clear skies for many little more cloud up towards the northwest, their course or northern ireland was to pass a valid far north of scotland. but otherwise high pressure really in charge delivery of low pressure pushing some of that warmth further north would say, as we go on through the next couple of days to see the heat transferring out to spain into france and eventually hops across the channel into the united kingdom 3536 celsius a possibility of
12:35 am
a 40 you have been hearing about that on the news. possibly for 40 by tuesday afternoon. he garage, he makes his way further east, which is we make our way into the middle of next week. so as long as he try and fight and boys at hot some sherry waiting to scratch the north west, pushing into scandinavia a little bit of wet weather to into the far east of year where it is somewhat cooler. and we're seeing some larvae showers long spells of rain as a central parts of africa. the pulse of east list, they're easily waves driving across while they're making a fair way north. ashley, southern near central to southern parts of new jesting, some of that wet weather southern parts. so formerly martini, could catch a shower or 2, some really heavy downpours into liberia possible as here, flooding there for ca. ah. with some of the world largest with me, it provides much at the uranium that fuels europe's nuclear power plant. but at
12:36 am
what cost, people and power follows the uranium trail from the dead to the source of the mediterranean and investigates the devastating effects on the planets and all those to inhabit the industries. part the curve of uranium pot to on al jazeera blue, a blue ah, wherever you go in the world, warner line goes to make it for you. exceptional katara always going places to go. ah
12:37 am
ah, welcome back. look at the main stories are following now. us president is wrapped up, afford a tour of the mid least, i drink more american cooperation with the gulf countries. joe biden says he won't at region be influenced by china, russia or iran, at least 31 people have been killed and 39. others injured in days of violence between rival tribes in sedans. blue nile state members of the house of bar to ethnic groups started fighting after a farmer was killed earlier this week. extreme heat and strong winds of spark scorching wildfire in europe, forcing thousands of people to flee their homes across france. spain and portugal signed to say, climate change is to blame. officer on usually hot and dry spring left the soil
12:38 am
parched while a river that's provided drinking water to syrians for centuries is drawing up. farmers in the north east are alarmed by the changes and blame dams in neighboring turkey. for this, the un estimates the disruption is effective, close to half a 1000000 people. mohammed val has more. know be in the out of the trouble. tell you how to me that standing in what was once the middle of the hovel refer the biggest tributary of the fatigue in syria for centuries. people in the northeastern region of husker have depended on it for their livelihoods. but that's the thing of the past, says the farmer. i view my la no, there is no voice because they put dams on the river supply and very close to what brings and tug. well it's around the springs and put them to the cupboard was is or cuts off. the diabetes worsening. the impact of dams built on
12:39 am
the turkey side of the border until recently, wheat, cotton barley, rice, were grown in the harbor revolving. another farmer says on the ground water reserves are also affected. none of them will know him. as of today, they are suffering because there is no water when the level of else has gone down. the people who used to live of the harbor river have reached a new level of quality. there is nothing hammered hans. the odds of the shallow water is undrinkable. and carbo already, and i knew most people used to drink water from the problem, but now we don't even let she drink the water because they can immediately work in the lamp is the only way of life. these farmers know. i said, i live in a madness that i can. the drought has hit us hard. we don't see any more when we do the crop, di, or the plant seeds on both sides of the river and we take losses. you know how much agriculture cost these days or if god has mercy on us and give us rain water,
12:40 am
the crops weiss, and then when i die in, what about the celia has been devastated by civil war since 2011 the fighting has forced people from their homes, now the drought is dancing. the result of those who have stayed against all odds had fall under 0. rushes military is fired. missiles and shells across the crane. after declaring days, ramping off the tanks to stop ukrainian forces from assaulting russian held positions in the east. kind official say at least 17 civilians have been killed. including 3 in the northeast and says you have to have the bodies were found in the rubble of a housing block in a school. both damaged by rocket strikes. 3 others have been injured. they kill children, they take away our children. how is this possible? a woman has been killed, she ran out of the house and she was hit along with a husband. he was killed as well. the man from the flat just over there was killed, 2 or 3 people lost their lives. why? what for?
12:41 am
because put in, when much doctors in ukraine say that they are worried about the trauma soldiers being exposed to on the front lines. a seeing a significant rise and serious brain injuries and post traumatic stress out there is alan fisher reports now from a rehabilitation center on the outskirts of the capital case, the are the injuries of war. you can't see the trauma, the damage from the front lines. this clinic on the outskirts of keith tries to help the patients have p t s. d post traumatic stress or significant brain injuries . christina, who needs dinner, is the clinics director. emphasis. lou then you are patients of people who lived through the events of the war. a work is focused on psychological trauma that they suffered and we work with them to give them strength to go back to the front line. and we're going to molly, i'll just eat a 1st mit andre at the beginning of the war, a former soviet soldier,
12:42 am
he signed up as a volunteer for the ukrainians just days before the fighting started. but on the outskirts of money, a pole he came under fire. something can't leave behind. not easy to get away from what's going in your, in your, in your had a page and then some kind of you know, flashback flashbacks. you know, when you just close your eyes and everything is start to blame faster and faster and faster on your head. and sometimes it's very much he struggles with his memories. he gets anxious when he is the miss else on it. but still, he thinks he's lucky, i was lucky because i am still alive and i have to to, to hand and legs and i can walk and i can remember something that is very,
12:43 am
very good. because a lot of our guys actually a died for, for a crane for freedom for, for forever. the use various techniques here to help recover the physical and the artistic, the even half pet therapy, the horses and a popular diversion that us oh, cool. live on the. it's hard to help while they're actively serving with the military. we have to stabilize them and get them back to the front. the real work will start when the war ends every now the average stay for patience here is around 3 or 4 weeks, but the recovery that takes a lifetime. i one fisher, i'll do 0 on the outskirts of keith washes invasion. every crane is divided finance . cheese from the world's biggest economies. ministers from the g. 20 of wrapped up a summit on the indonesian island of bali where they discussed the global food crisis. a global corporate tax and inflation. they couldn't agree. on
12:44 am
a final communique, jessica washington spoke to indonesia, finance minister, st. will jani in that are whitey. at the start of these meetings, you asked your fellow menaces to put politics aside, put tensions aside, and think about the millions of people, depending on them, do you think they were able to successfully do that? i think so. yeah. we are agree in this gift that the 20, as the premier economic forum play a very important role. we also recognize that many issue are almost all issue in the world, cannot be solved by any country alone. and that's why the spirit of cooperation, collaboration as well as multilateralism is very, was an end that is the next in almost all issue that we discuss. what maybe it's not agree this about the war itself. but actually the implication of how we have to address the issue, we just very important for the words, especially for the population as especially the most about poor people and poor
12:45 am
country. i think the all agreed that we need to do something collectively together . so it's, it's quite a successful in a way, given the contacts, given the complexity. i think this is a very successful thing. you personally satisfied with the outcome? well, because i, i'm, i was actually and also, and they will get and dealing very detail one by one and it's all the members country as soon as national station. i think this is the best that we could expect. if we look at the current situation where we have more than $70000000.00 people pushed into poverty, millions around the world struggling with the rising cost of living. is the g 20 doing enough to meet that crisis? that is exactly what this discussion is all about in this case. and that's why after recognizing the global economic situation,
12:46 am
we just getting worse because of both the higher inflation food energy price, as well as the sanction on the policy side. the consequence of getting many of the poor and poor, poor sees the under a really a severe distress and how we so response. in this case, i think the most important is that's right. so we are using, for example, like how we shouldn't make sure that in the national financial institution, or that sort of can response to this possible mar, massive problem in the poor countries. economists in mexico, when some communities could face a hunger crisis, if the country doesn't tackle rising inflation, food prices are forecast skyrocket by 10 percent this year. the government's hoping to counter that by producing more food locally on your wrapping reports from mexico city. this family farmers in the mexican capital or harvesting no
12:47 am
pine cactus. no panel is a staple food in mexico and just one of several important cash crops produced in the community of mil. alta prose in battle is supposed here. we produce nepal, corn, and beans, and the majority of the food we produce goes towards feeding mexico city with food prices. on the rise, mexico's president has called on farmers to increase agricultural production. and the government has already set a plan in motion to assist farmers through subsidies. let's program a increment that we're all the programs the government has implemented have helped us because costs are rising. the cost of fertilizer is increased and the economy of the country is not doing well. one of the governments programs is called sim, bundle vida, or sewing life 1st launched in 2019 as a broad strategy to combat poverty and inequality. today, it's being geared towards increasing food security in the face of worsening
12:48 am
inflation. but many in mexico are worried that not enough is being done to rain back sky rocketing prices. so i guess you know everything is expensive. the price of all makoto, lemon tomato has increased. we can't afford it anymore. so economists in mexico have warranted that inflation could reach as high as 10 percent by the end of the year is a complete the problem worse and, and we see the inflation rate reach double digits. the repercussions in terms of inequality and poverty would be devastating. the mexican government seems confidence that promoting sustainable practices and investing in small farmers like those in mill, but will ultimately be the best way to avert a potential food crisis. the us food and agriculture organisation have expressed optimism over projects, likes in bundle vida, or sewing life. the goal here in mexico is to expand the existing program by including more crops and using organic fertilizers. and thus moving the country
12:49 am
toward food self sufficiency. experts in mexico see that while subsidies offer a good solution in the short term, the only way to guarantee food security is through economic policies aimed at curbing inflation. manuel did up a little al jazeera mexico city. or the warn you crane has let her global shortage of food items like cooking oil, which is missing from many supermarket shelves in europe. one german very though, as found a novel way to tackle this crisis surgeon customers to pay for their beer with sunflower oil. people can swap liter of oil for a liter of their favorite brew. could be attempting deal a liter of beer cost, about $7.00 in pubs, while liter, sunflower oil. if you can find some cells for $4.50 before the war, ukraine and russia, cancer for about 80 percent of sunflower oil exports, neurological getting oil is very difficult in the supermarket. you can only get it
12:50 am
russians. and if you need 30 days a week and only get 15 instead of some point, you won't be able to fry schnitzel any longer for it's coming up this news our including on his sorry when for island of the all blacks and easy ah, i'm a like a vase in the south of india to find out how tiny bass in this cave brought an extensive mining operation to a standstill. corona virus wept across the world with devastating effects. and it is widely believed to be connected to the legal wildlife trade. here in vietnam, we visit a rescue center for some of the worlds most threatened to animal and joined the call for an end to the global wildlife sharing. arrived on al jazeera
12:51 am
with mock ideals, the french republic, his long proclaimed, but just would ease modern france in a 4 part series. the big picture takes an in depth look fronts him focus the concluding episode on al jazeera lou ah, for now. thank you so much, mary moore. there is a familiar name in the top of the leaderboard, adding in the fall around of the open championship. 2014,
12:52 am
when it really macros made a serious move on day for it's and entries in scotland. orland 6 and the surrounding the 16 under for the told him that he shares a for short lead with no ways thinks a homeland who also thought a super $66.00 the 24 year old is taking his thick tree in a major look at the later bought the macro and hovel and will play alongside each other again on sunday. this time though, in the final group, cameron young was the 1st round leader cameron smith is on top of the lead aboard. after a day to master's champion, world war and scott scheffler is 5 shots back. but say now from the car leaders, i think it's appreciating the moment as well and appreciating the you know, the fact that it's unbelievably call to have a chance to when they open at st. andrews. i mean it's, it's what dreams are made of, and i'm going to try to make
12:53 am
a dream come true. it's more just to be yours very special, but i have a chance to win. one is, as i have to pinch myself, but that doesn't mean i'm going to hold back tomorrow. it was skilled to get it somewhere close, but it was like that it went in the whole so and you need a little bit of luck every now and again, especially in the big tournaments and, you know, that was, that was a nice been if you can run a let the sun, but guido has one the 1st major gold medal of her career days. already the world record holder, 5 to 5 and 10000 meters. 24 year old is now a world champion as well, holding on. so in the 1st part of these championships being held in eugene, oregon. raining olympic champion, finished out of the metals in full. and just over here i was time african fast this man, ferdinand omen. jala will continue his campaign of championships. these are a, she's been the kenyan and he just made it to the u. s. in san for his opening 100 meter rice. so hell malik reports, it's been a whirlwind couple of days. africa,
12:54 am
the fastest man ferdinand armine ala. here he is nairobi just a day before is 100 me to see to the world championships, 15000 kilometers away. in oregon, the kenyan, it only just got to the united states visa, alleged application backups of various us embassies around the world of escrow meant around $375.00 athletes, unofficial faced issue. but despite all the problems and more than 20 hours of travel omen jala made it on time. with the arriving at eugene, he would feel straight from the airport off the landing with less than a few hours to spare. you was in good spirits, however, printer telling al jazeera that he was looking to make every one proud. and that's exactly what he did. how many i saw injuries
12:55 am
with ally, omen y'all and managed to come 3rd. and in doing so, sealing a spot in the semi finals. his time of 10.10 seconds was understandably far off his personal best of 9.7. 7 was i thought it was going to be easy, but it wasn't because i felt so tired. i've 60 meters, i mean like my blues are not moving, so i had just to close it up and say through, i thank god i made it to this. and finally, i gotcha. at 5, the field i go to the field at 5 because again, straight up from the airport. so i'm not even ticked into my room. amandola doesn't have much time to catch his breath with his semi final happening later on saturday . so hell, melisha, i'll g 0 in football, european powerhouse germany has moved into the knockout stage. this at the women's euros without conceding
12:56 am
a goal. germans taking care of philip 3 now to win all the games in the group stage . germany have won 6 of the last 7 tournaments. the other thing to progress from group b is spain. they will face host england in the last days. chelsea had completed the signing of senegal, international calendar kill of ali from napoli. the 31 year old is joining the london club for a fee of $40000000.00 killer poly assigned for your de la chelsea. following 8 seasons in italy, napoli had a top 3, sorry, are defense in 6 of those campaigns. and bond meetings, president says a verbal agreement has been raised to several 11 dow skita barcelona, the 33 or polish strike a score more than 300 goals during 7 seasons with by now in rugby island of pulled off a historic series victory in new zealand. a week after the 1st of a winning new zealand, allan scored 3 1st off tries this time out, opening up a 19 point lead in wellington free time will champion easy and did hit back in the
12:57 am
2nd half. at one point they look set to steal the series decider that island score the final troy of the game to secure the win 3222 like it doesn't get much better than this to like to not to go to and by saying that it's the biggest respect we can give you didn't like the celebrations, probably weren't. you know, the most humble, but like we chose him which means was to come down here and like we came here with the lions and we taught us great year to draw. undergoes that felt that we should one, criticize them and so to come back here and, and do it. this was very, very special. and england celebrating series went in australia for just the 2nd time in their history. they want the sydney decided by 21 points, the 70 all of these countries building up for next year is wealth, coughing, france. and we really wanted the team just to,
12:58 am
to cut that off probably because we, we've read out a great time. we start to have a we, we've spent a lot of time together. we've really invested told me each other. so we want to scott, and we want to make this whole special. ok, but if i sports looking for now, let's get back to marian in london. andy, thank you very much. that's the nice out, but i'll be back in a couple of minutes with another full bulletin for you, the top stories coming up in just a moment. i i la la la la la listening. why is one on the how do you to visit what else? cancel the philistine with the from the switch for yeah,
12:59 am
well and about the fisa yoda can, a little sob isn't done well, i can get to shower in the cod. there's topics you called that a person sort not valuable. camella coffee. i'm working on the press on the macedonian dollar fee on the line. it's like a month to help out or yeah, i mean for the shuttle in the cool, shy fucking room. why did i can't even fucking the book with on counting the cost of could jo 5 is re engagement with saudi arabia help the stabilize the oil market. demand is 5 minutes. that has one
1:00 am
a new mandate. what's next for that economy? and had argentina rain and storing inflation and poverty. counting the cost on altos, they're both journalism, the police violently dispersing protest. this, these are sort of a good tens of thousands of people throwing 2 global inspire to program making. welcome to generation chains, unrivalled broadcasting. white people did not want black children in their schools . we have to apply for it and al jazeera english proud recipient of the new york festivals broadcaster the year award for the 6 year running. ah you know.
40 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on