tv News Al Jazeera July 17, 2022 1:00am-1:31am AST
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is the oil market? the house prime minister has won a new mandate. what's next? the bass economy and hand argentina, rain and soaring, inflation and poverty. counting the cost on al jazeera bolts journalism, the police violently dispersing protest. this, these are sort of a good tens of thousands of people. roy 2 global inspired to program making. welcome to generation chains, unrivalled broadcasting. white people did not want black children in their schools . we have quite forecasted and al jazeera english proud recipient of the new york festivals broadcaster of the year award for this 6 year running. ah nice places not going anywhere. president joe biden tells arab leaders that america
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won't walk away from them. at least let it be influenced by russia, china, or iran. ah, hello, i'm mary. m m i z e watching al jazeera ally from london. also coming up on the program. wildfire tear through europe during a blistering way, forcing thousands of people from their homes should consult video for those killed during months of unrest, while millions struggled out. cope with the countries worse economic crisis in memory. sewing the seats, his self sufficiency, how mexico hopes to tackle soaring inflation and avoid of food crisis. ah,
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hello, welcome to the program. joe biden insists america will not walk away from the middle east or let it be influenced by rivals like russia, china, or iran. the u. s. president made these comments while addressing some of the our world's most powerful leaders in saudi arabia, during what's turned out to be a controversial visit, the middle east, a white house correspondent, kimberly how care reports. 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 cooperation council long with jordan egypt and iraq. his goal to reassert america's leadership role one he fears is slowly being eroded by geopolitical rivals. role becoming clear to me how closely woven america's interests
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are with the successes, melinda, we will not walk away and leave a vacuum refilled by china. russia ran by didn't 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. saudi arabia will no longer be able to increase production beyond that market. returning to the u. s. empty handed is a problem for president grappling with low approval ratings. biden's also being criticized for resetting relations with leaders,
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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 cause 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 being 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 holly. the algebra is the son of a former top, saudi intelligence official, and mister state, his siblings, omar and sarah hostages, in saudi arabia. he says, you escort very little out of the trip. this visit so far is
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exactly what the current conference with saudi arabia had been seeking over the past 3 years. validation legitimize ation by the president of the greatest power, the united states. before the visit and even announced, i urged present biden to fix relationship with saturated because as a saudi says, and even next dial i do care about the relationship and my advice would do it. not in all costs so far, it looks like there's only one sided concessions, and the president has expended a lot of political capital for nothing clear and return violence. a slide between israel and palace any group hamas, just hours after president joe biden left israel for saudi arabia is ready 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 and the overnight tac bombing was in retaliation for rockets fire from garza of the southern city of ashley belong.
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you're going to say it has more from the city call has a tory day and 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 the city and causes strip the violet trade have occurred or has caused a lot of material damage in the residential areas and a great culture lounge close to these sites. the is where in retaliation if 2 rockets today where previously flyers from the gaza strip towards the south and cities of us cologne, one was intercepted by the iron dome while the other ones fell in an empty area
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during the rates. also 2 other rockets where launched from because the strip no sirens were sounded in the southern city of ash cologne either. but because the 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, this, these rates have been very violent. the most violent in the last month are now extreme heat and strong winds of sparks scorching wildfires in europe. and this is force thousands of people to flee around 30055 is of battling blazes. and french regions of sharon and board doe was 200 square kilometers of land have been burned
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and the 5 inch in closer to popular terrace towns. it's a similar scene in spain where the temperatures of top 45 degrees celsius and 360 heat related deaths have been recorded. military has been deploy to fight fires in the south on the west. multiple 5 also spread across the border into central and northern portugal. and a plane being used to tackle one of them is crashed, killing the pilot. more than 300 square can on which is of been burned in the past week. this is more than all of last year. overall, greece, croatia hungry and easily have been fighting wildfires this weeks with scientists saying that climate change is to blame for this off to an unusually hot and dry spring left the soil parched will mark castille new as a fire chief. and while fire expert in spain, scott looney region, he says, governments have been far too slow to act. well, situation is complet complex, but it is just
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a study. we know that these will last at least till the end of july. and we've been in the by the, the fire scene beginning of june. so the 1022 is being one of the hardest season we've seen. since, if we remember, i mean, it's forced to be one of the longest one, but there is no need. 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 are 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 a fire commission we're having today. so we can blame climate change, but we have to blame out of the lack of management of the landscape as well. so it's kind of a problem on top of the structural problem that we're having now. italy could
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lose a 3rd of its farmland because it's longest where that is dry, not. 20 percent of the country's water supplies been lost in the last half century, and staples like tomatoes and olives of badly affected. adam rainy reports from the pole valley. this is what italy's longest and most important river the po looks like right now. parched in it, dangerously low levels. its water provides the life blood for farmers who produce italy's most valuable crops, 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 was done this year. this comb will just be throwing away all because of the drought because it hasn't winded month. and this year i'm is totally ruined through up or down river, where the po empties into the adrian mac engineer. rodolfo la
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n t e shows us how the current is running in reverse from the sea to the land. because the river is so low that looking over maps, he shows me how salt water is entering nearby farmland lot didn't. he 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 at this bad. this is him of into seems like that. i mean, it's now registering 25 grams per liter. that means that sea water, salt water level here, should be one gram polito to be able to distribute to farmers. and the effect of so much salt water incursion, burnt crops, worthless in 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, parliament gene says he'll lose 30 percent of his harvest from this lagoon on the po delta this year. busy close to them,
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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. hole 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, if we lose this resource, we have had to centuries, we'll 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. adam rainy al jazeera in the po valley of northern italy. vigils been held in sri lanka to remember those who died in the
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unrest that's in golf. the country china was been a historic economic collapse as anger over soaring the soaring cost of fuel energy, food medicines, and all this is led to months of anti government protests with president got to par roger pack, so fling to the mold is and then singapore, to escape the riots and then being forced to resign from many protest as any the influence of the roger packs of family on shank as 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 cause of the struggle as you're going to remove it 99 days ago when we began the struggle on the right 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 kick over the worst ever ruler to this country. that is, was what i did. i did not show the picture. the figurehead of garage at all should be nasty and roger parking overnight demand is are struggling. i think it's safe to say that we have successfully managed to achieve your goals or shrank as asked him
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. prisoner is defended. his record saying that he took all possible steps to prevent the country's economic crisis course by roger boxes. resignation has now been accepted by parliament and the process of appointing replacement has been gone . the prime minister renelle were promising or is serving as acting president until a new leader is put in place, which should be within the next week. meanwhile, the energy minister is asked foreign countries for help to deal with the economic crisis. we have made requests re nearby, have made requests to every family mission. so any come who that comes for her bus, we appreciate that. ah right now, are the indian government is the only company that has provided us with the credit line areas. michelle fernandez has more from columba, the scenes outside this patrol station and at fuel sheds around the country is an example of the complete chaos caused by the economic crisis in sri lanka. i mean,
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just at this federal shed, queues have known to sneak more than 10 kilometers around for people waiting for fuel. it's impacted not just personal vehicle users. it's taxi cabs, it's the industrial vey cause it's essential services. it's everyone that is really struggling to get on with their day to day lives. it's about me getting back and forth to work mostly been walking for days and days on end. this is my 3rd printer queue. oh, i've never seen one this long before. never stayed this one before, not eaten, not drunk properly. so it's very stressful. and people finding a day to day living like this q that you see are the 3 wheelers. it just sneaks around and round before it actually gets to the projects. are these people just get 5 liters of fuel sometimes waiting as long as 7 days for that, and then must q again. so the day was, what they want is
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a system that allows them to get on with their day to day lives. watching al jazeera alive from london coming up after the break, we look at the invisible injuries of war in keys, why ukrainian soldiers amounting to come with trauma, constant conflicts and a new way to pay for a pint one unit, very us, very commodity most gas cash ah hello there still a rather cool across northern parts of australia, but at least it is dry cool enough into the southeast as well with blustery shells rattling through the bite. and we will see some of those lively showers just making the way into our victoria port, fairy melbourne, seeing some lavish as charter, what a 2 showers in the southern parts of new south wales as well and of course tasmania,
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we'll see some of that rather wet weather rattling through, i will, the next day, i'll say mart, divorce is fine and dry. they'll be a few showers longer spells of brain for a time into the southwest perth at around 20 celsius, where the weather will set in across new zealand. as we go to the early part of next week, it will be heavy at times. possibility of some flooding had accosted a bit of snow over the high ground seats involved the heavy rains. he making his way across parts of japan recently and see this chain of sherry ranges coming to central parts of china through the yellow sea. seasonal rain set to bring further pulses of lobby downpours over the next day or so hot. and he made wet there for shanghai around $36.00 degrees celsius, some showers there into the korean peninsula. some show was to cross southern parts of china, but law, she's thank settle plenty of sunshine for hong kong. ah,
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too often of the stone is portrayed through the prism of war. but there were many of gonna stop thanks to the brave individuals who risk their lives to protect it from destruction. an extraordinary film, archives spawning for decades, reveals the forgotten truth of the country's modern history. the forbidden real part for the era of darkness on i'm just 0. ah ah, welcome back to look at the main stories of following now and u. s. president is wrapped up
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a 4 day term and at least pledging more us cooperation with gulf countries. joe biden says he will not let the region be influenced by china, russia or iran. extreme ease and strong winds of sparks scorching wild fires in europe, forcing thousands of people to free their homes across france. spain and portugal signed to say, climate change is to blame often on usually hot and dry. spring left the soil polished and a vigils been held in trying to remember those who died in mass antique government protests, months of demonstrations led to the dramatic fall at the raja pox and political plan which has ruled should i cut from most of the past 2 decades gunmen have killed 10 people and wounded 2 others in an attack on market traders in indonesia. popple province, a tac as a believe to be separatist rebels and members of the west up well, abrasion, army. oh, could please say most the victims were immigrants from other indonesian islands
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clashes of escalator in the countries of eastern most province since last year. when rebels set fire to several schools and killed 2 teachers will at least 31 people have been killed and 39 others injured during days of violence between rival tribes in sudan authorities of declared an overnight curfew in 2 towns in blue nile state members of the houser and berta ethnic groups started fighting after a farmer was killed this week. local residents a, the violence hasn't stopped. although authorities say they have made arrests. doctors say there is enough medicine to treat the wounded. now def i dollars from the sudanese american public affairs association, which told me that these kind of tribal conflicts are exacerbated by the political instability in the country. this is not new. it has been going on for decades. it's, you know, the climate change definitely has
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a big role into this. but the biggest role that plays into this 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 this is denise public, is that either us or in the stability? we've seen these in blue nile. 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. would have happened though during the p to redeem the national congress party and of the huge government they spread messages of racism and hate and urban migration in the country that lead these tribes. the clash over these resources, but not only that, but excess of that to severe violence. and in some instances, local civil wars roches ministry is 5 missiles and shells across ukraine. after declaring that it's ramping up,
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attacks to stop ukrainian forces from assaulting rush and help positions in the east. ukrainian officials say at least 17 civilians have now been killed. fis includes 3 people in the northeastern city of to have that bodies were found in the rubble of a housing block and 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 when she was hit, along with a husband. he was killed as well. the man from the flat just over there was kill 2 or 3 people lost their lives. why? what for? because put in, when much doctors in ukraine say they are worried about the trauma soldiers being exposed to on the front lines. a seeing a significant rise in serious brain injuries and post traumatic stress out there is alan fisher reports now from rehabilitation center on the outskirts of the capitol cave. the are the injuries of war. you can't see the trauma,
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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 was neat sinner 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 frontline. we're going out to molly. i'll just eat a 1st mit andre. at the beginning of the war, a former soviet soldier, he signed up as a volunteer for the ukrainians just days before the fighting started. but on the outskirts of mighty pole, he came under fire. something you can't leave behind. not easy to get away from was going in your, in your, in your had a page and some kind of you know,
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flashback flashbacks. you know, when you just close your eyes and everything, you start to blame faster and faster and faster on your head, and sometimes it's very much he struggles with his memory. he gets anxious when he used the missing assignments. but still he thinks he's lucky. lucky because i am still alive and i have 22 hands and legs and i can walk and i can remember something that is very, very good. because a lot of our guys actually they died for, for ukraine, full freedom for, for 4 hours. 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,
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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. marina, the average stay for patience. here is around 3 or 4 weeks, but the recovery that takes a lifetime. i'll and fisher, i'll do 0 on the outskirts of keith, economists and mexico of warn, some communities could face hunger crisis. if a country doesn't tackle rising inflation. food prices are forecast to skyrocket by 10 percent this year. the government's had thing to counter that. i am producing more fitted locally. my rapid reports on this now from mexico city. this family of farmers in the mexican capital or harvesting no piled cactus. no bonnet is a staple food in mexico and just one of several important cash crops produced in the community of milva, ulta, yankee, sup, rosen, or balise. suppose here we produce nepal, corn and beans,
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and the majority of the food will 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 last pro, musk angram and follow. we had all the programs the government has implemented have helped us because costs are rising, the cost of fertilizers increased and the economy of the country is not doing well in one of the government's programs is called sim, bundle vida, or sewing life. first 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 inflation. but many in mexico are worried that not enough is being done to rain back, skyrocketing prices. oh yes, everything is expensive, the price of over kado,
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lemon, tomato has increased. we can't afford it anymore. some economists in mexico have word that inflation could reach as high as 10 percent by the end of the year. i completed the problem worse since, and we see the inflation rate, which 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, by eyes, death will ultimately be the best way to avert a potential food crisis. the u. n. food and agriculture organization have expressed optimism over projects, likes him, but on the visa 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 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
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curbing inflation. manuel did up hello al. jazeera, mexico city. the worn ukraine has. i took global shortage of food items like cooking oil, which is missing from many supermarket shelves in europe. but one german berry is found a novel way to tackle this it urging customers to pay for their bare with sunflower oil. evil can swap a leisure of oil for a leisure of their favorite brew. it could be attempting deal for many, but a liter of beer cost about $7.00 in the pub, wanna leisure of sunflower oil. if you can find some sales for $4.50 new electrical, getting oil is very difficult. in the supermarket, you can only get it russians. and if you need 30 days a week and only get 15 instead, at some point, you won't be able to fry schmidt. so any longer africa's fastest man ferdinand amanela has defied the arts to advance the semi finals at the athletics. while championships in oregon, canyon sprinter came 3rd in his 100 meter heat chest hours. after landing in the
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united states, sal malik reports it's been a whirlwind couple of days for africa's fastest man ferdinand or many allah. here he is that nairobi airport just a day before is 100 me to seat at the world championships. 15000 kilometers the way in oregon, the canyon had only just got his united states visa, alleged application backups, or various us embassies around the world. or diverse group meant around 375 athletes, unofficial faced issues. but despite all the problems and more than 20 hours of travel, aman yalom made it on time. on monday, arriving at eugene's hayward field straight from the airport off the landing with less than a few hours to spare. he was in good spirits, however, the sprinter telling al jazeera that he was looking to make every one proud. and
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that's exactly what he did. and i was with you soon. good omen. y'all 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 line was i thought it was going to be easy, but if it wasn't because i felt so tired, i've 60 meters, i'm in late, my blues are not moving. so i had just loaded up and so through i thank god i made it to this. and finally i gotta at 5 the field. i got to feel that favor goes against it up from there, but so i have no different took into my room. amandola doesn't have much time to catch his breath with his semi final happening later on saturday. so, hell malik, i'll g 0 1st. can you.
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