tv The Stream Al Jazeera July 19, 2022 11:30am-12:01pm AST
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is in different cultures and in different locations, but also become i think, the 1st stage of the world, which, which has this overpowering sustainability statement to it. in addition to stadium 974, seats, and components of other venues, will be donated to developing countries in need of sport infrastructure. with a non profit group, carbon market watch says to offset emissions. the material would need to be used multiple times, especially if shipped thousands of kilometers away by using recycled materials, reducing construction costs, and developing green and living spaces near stadiums. cut our is hoping it created monuments to sustainability that will inspire future world cup host. natasha game, l. jazeera, doha ah,
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fellow. again, the headlines on al jazeera iran is hosting a summit on the war, and syria has been overshadowed by the conflicts in ukraine. there's turkish and iranian leaders will be joined by russian president vladimir putin. russell sars are has more from to her on prison, adamant of turkey. i'm a russian president of them are putting are going to hold a bilateral meeting. and the main issue during that meeting is going to be the grain export from ukraine. so the officials from both sides, they said that one of the technicalities, they have agreed on how to create a safe corridor through through the black sea and to export the ukrainian grain from their port cities. and then take, they're going to stumble from a stumble to be set out to the international market. however, the experts here are seeing that what the technicality is. agreements are there, but now it is time for the political decisions. a scorching heat wave in europe is
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fueling dozens of wildfires across the continent. they burn through thousands of factors in france, greece, portugal, and spain. the u. k is also bracing for what is predicted to be the hottest day on record. through lancaster, parliament has announced the 3 candidates nominated to become through lank as next president. they include interim leader and former prime minister, run over christmas finger. a final vote is expected on wednesday, violence in sudan, southern blue and i'll state has sparked unrest and several cities, days of violence between the house and bertie tribes in blue nile have already left at least 79 people dead. and 150 injured tribes began fighting overland access. last week. the number of people known to have died after a boat capsized and central pakistan has more than double to 50 local governments. as the vessel was overloaded, most of the passengers were women and children going to a wedding. 3 people are missing in the chinese port, city of change in after
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a gas explosion. 11 others were injured and the partial building collapse. the cause is under investigation. those are the headlines on al jazeera, more news coming up at the top of the hour. right after the stream of i talked to al jazeera, we ask you, be more specific, how many troops are you asking for? and what kind of military equipment we listen, asked the people of cuba in the street. if there is a difference between donald trump and july for them, it's saying we meet with global news makers. i'm talk about the story stuck matter on al jazeera. i high of for me, ok to day on the stream 3 stories in one episode. the run up to the canyon presidential election is nearing its final lap. and while checking on the last campaigning push in egypt along abdul l fattah has spent the best part of 2 decades
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in prison, where speak about the f as being made to free him. but 1st we start in ukraine. weight has been almost a 150 day since the war began. fighting rages in the east peace towards continued to hit hurdles. and the global grain shortage caused by the war continues, but it civilians who are paying the highest price. his jo, english from unicef. this situation, my tuition and armies afford to buy the conference in the grand continues to be 3 desperate and children are paying her price for the fighting. almost 350 children have now lost their lives, almost 550 ever been injured in the fighting. and these are just the numbers you and has been able to verify. so we know the true tal is likely to be far higher, and while sufficing has been concentrated in the east for much of the last few weeks, just this week we saw an attack in the center of the country. take the life of a 4 year old. so truly, it feels like you know,
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as safer for children for families in ukraine at the moment. and so we continue to call for a cease fire because ultimately in our until that happens, we will continue to see children lose their lives. day of the day. last week, the international criminal court court for an overarching strategy to bring perpetrators of war crimes and ukraine. to justice and representatives from dozens of countries have pledged to cooperate. and as the global food crisis continues, officials from russia and ukraine are expected to discuss resuming caves, exports dozens of ships to australia, and 20000000 tons of grain. our stock so much to discuss with us. we have catalina milofa. she is a journalist in kith, catarina, thank you so much for joining us. i'm jo english. there were saying no way is safe as a journalist. how would you report that story? that sense that ukraine is under attack and has been under attack for
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a $150.00 days. well, i agree with him, anita. first of 1st and foremost, i'm not a journalist, i'm a human being and i'm also scared of the, of the ongoing war because i've been covering the war in ukraine for the past 8 years. and i also covered another conflict. but i, some times when i think about the horrors of the recent weeks when residential areas were targeted by the cruise missiles or cali, but a launched from the, from the, from the sheep's. it is scary to get to sleep sometimes at night or wake up because you don't know, it feels it feel unsafe everywhere in ukraine. so you can't find a safe haven anywhere in ukraine at the moment. i want to bring in some voices or civilians who have been under attack. and one of the worst areas have been attacked recently in ukraine, hear their voices and then carrying. let's talk about the people who decide to stay in a conflict country. here the civilians festival. yes,
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children need to live their lives. the youth's 1920 year olds are made into cripples. they kill children to take away our children. how is this possible? a woman has been killed. she ran out of the house when she was head alone with her husband. he was killed to the man from the flight just there was killed. 23 people lost their lives. why? what for? because put in went mad a year ago, the more fool you came and was already military objects. are we talking about destroyed houses, schools damaged kindergartens. are these military objects? these are all civilian objects. today, there are many families that lost ruse over their heads. they have no apartments, no houses. people have worked all their lives to create normal conditions to live in here, birchum, sushi ya from. when you know, when the time i attended school, i was not a big fan of it. but now that i have seen what happened, i ask,
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why do the kids when the war is over? where are they gonna learn? domco label dos. i will say that is a can, she's having a good day. you too, which it's catarina from your reporting when you've been talking to somebody else and telling the 70 story, what would you like to share with us? will i speak to people in different areas of ukraine? but i would like to try some people who stay on bus, where the cbs bottles ongoing right now. so people been lead for the past 8 years. the families please. and also, you know, when you talk to people about why they're saying why they're not leaving quite often, this is the situation connected to the financial, the financial situation, and occasionally with political inclinations. because a lot, there are, there is a number of people in the boss who never felt, never go, you know, never felt an art of ukraine and because of the language they speak because of the
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russian language. so i'm talking about the elderly people and course team there. so unfortunately, this is a situation we see a huge number of refugees, ukraine and refugees in europe. but even those they're coming back to ukraine because of the financial issues to them. they have to leave on disease and you know, shell in constant struggle for their lives. i want to talk to you because some of our view isn't wanting to talk to you in and asking questions. this one is probably neat views watching like now. thank you. this war must stop the week, belongs to the world, or the trading partners, and not to a single country. for trade agreements, we need at least 2 parties. this week is urgently needed. what can you tell us about the grain? the way that he's been trying to get out of ukraine into the rest of the world. how
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is that going? well, actually not to part is right now, and full part is beaman bolton's a discussion. and hopefully this week, because integration will be assigned to name this party. there are ukraine, russia, turkey. and the last weeks of the discussion talks about the decision that have been made about the exports of the week of the green. the stock right now in ukrainian storage is more than $22000000.00 grain is talking to green, i'm storage and can be exported right now. so we hope that on the 20, so 21st the the actually, the agreement will decide between these 4 parties. but the, the biggest problem is, of course we understand that ukraine is their world food basket and you clean them for the ford. yes. that is a gauge of ukrainian exports. just to say that ukraine is in
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a good cultural country. and but, but we, i provide enough green for the, for the green and for the local population who is suffering. but most of the, in the world. so example, if we produce an early 100000000 thompson grain, you can just need 2020 grains. so we will produce 45 times more than we need passionately let me just bring in the european union foreign policy chief, joseph brown, who said this just a little bit earlier today, i have listen the most body shop thing is the lack of foot in many countries around the world and it is not food because of russia is blocking the expert of opinion grain. we are doing whatever we get in order to support these grain through other ways for this order today. delays to the black c terminal manual there yet.
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but that's not enough. so i hope you have a hope that these week will be possible to reach and nobody mental the block or vista. and although you cranium ports, katerina, i'm going to show you one more thought for new to this one comes from water. hughes . hello water. water says it is already world war 3. it's not just been waged on the battlefield, but all over the world, almost every human is being affected by this war. that is how water describes it as we wrap up our conversation today, catarina, how would you describe the war in ukraine? it is. it is scary to put it in one word and because i've never seen anything like this before, i will you from the situation or i'm certain to you. we're worried about our families. we're worried about the outcome of the war. we are deeply affected already. we have numerous casualties among the city and population. and
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among the soldiers the, the population is traumatized because so we have to work. we have to e. everyone need to accelerate to basically pay to put an end to the shower, but it is scary. scary. thank you so much katerina for shang, where the show reporting in ukraine, and we appreciate you the come back to in the future. now we had to kenya where some are skeptical that the upcoming presidential election will have any real sustainable change in the country. asking a prepares for the next general election in august 9th, 2022. we see the rise of misinformation this information in fake news, especially as a shield media platforms will said by different political entities and media that has been accused by different political court. as of being biased and the rise of
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opening bulls that are trying to ship a political conversation on whose them was will be, look, ended, and hawkins are likely to vote. unfortunately, we're still struggling with the question of apathy. as most young people did not show up or time out to read this as voters, but also we the tough economy times that i'm making a handful, especially young people to be invested in the political conversations that are happening. wait us now fiscal come and take the apache casara. patrick, welcome back to the street. we always love having you on. all right, so it is tanya shoving, having a voting fee there, or is it more of a mileage code? where are we with a selection? was made like i did a few ways definitely on now. uh it was a month ago a wild to sort of catch on and i think this election has been diff from previous
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ones. i'm in the sense that there hasn't been a smart investment mama in participation in it. you know, especially amongst the use. a lot of them will be what, what really, how been pushed to register? well, in previous elections, you know, you don't want you guys trying to get on it. you see, ah, i think though, in the last one month you've seen much more engagement, especially after the running mutual or, or beat out. so i'm, there's much more excitement now than there was before. i wouldn't play an elevator of martha korea before i do that. she is a running as a v p for why did i, can you just set up who she is? what she stands for before we hyphen mother herself. well, my worker is mama running. i'm in for the pleasure of the
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in decimal coalition unloading her momma. she has been in the trenches for our reform for a long time. are somebody who is really well known for taking tough stances? i have her share of a scandal, and now also off old say i disaffected. alteration of bad behavior by politician. so she's not exactly mrs. clinton. ok, but i actually because i am politic. i like the way that you're very cautiously approaching, describing martha cure as background in politics. let's hear from her. as a corruption is talking the mission. we need to lease the resources available,
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both financial in other ways to meet the needs of the b. i am wondering about other candidates. it looks like patrick there were some candidates your rank just on one issue, not how do we improve kenya, but how do we improve one thing about kenya. phil's new to me. is it new to you back? it is neil an outlet. it either tender encouraging to me. i've got to say, ah mar for a long time my elections, i've been run essentially as an ethnic census in our every guy tries to come to good to bring. he thought of what a block of a he's is. he is. it is tribes, middle, his ethnic mates, ah, what for him. but if the election has been different, a lot of it has been actually i get on the basis of our particular issues, you know, are my and even if you speak about kind of like the french candidate,
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somebody like prefers, like, where are more amino, who's made one of these blanks the nicholas ation of marijuana and other than my one the trade in, i mean that's, that's a great thing. i think it's, it's, it's good that people actually talking about issue talking just about a message in or am i look at what william rudolph standing against, ah, rail is doing also, he has made this campaign more about, ah, what he calls hastily was his dentist in ohio, and that's great. it also the father, we get away from this or off. i'm identification waves ethnic communities to actually discuss the problems that kenya's have. for me that would always be a good thing. i need to, we have nasty eye out on. i hope i like hang on this election might repeat itself as it did in 2007 that's calling way back at over at back 8th has
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a long time. yes it is. is. and i think m m in the law is the question of whether they're going to be balanced, nor do we do, to be honest. it is a fair question because we've never had elections or don't have at least some level about us. and i had asked and to very at, but i think this one want is unlikely to have significant bowers for the simple reason. look our history, our more so our wireless has happened when incumbents are running our marcella. they took about 2007 when i presented michael running for reelection, you know, or march 2017. we're in prison, cattle running for the electrons. those have been fairly violent or elections. but there was in between that to when you don't have an income benefit money, how bins are remarkably less val. and so i think way nasty, which now or brazil,
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delicacy retiring or so he's all gonna be running again. and i think he's just probably learned repeated saw the 2nd thing, reason why i don't think there's going to be balance best is i to live, come along when establishing institutions were dealing with electro conflict harm in 2007, we really didn't have a corporate anybody could trust which is part of the reason why to put forth the side to be settled out on the street. noble. i'm says 20132017 or seem court cases are under the election being challenged. are the supreme court in 2017 or it was actually a gnarled it'll and i think that has actually sort of given lots of. busy confidence to people that if there is a dispute and i have no doubt that there will be a dispute after the election to look at what are the campaigns are saying they're already circuiting in our archive. i think one of your challenge, hagey guidance. i love that, lia, ending on a positive note,
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which is not always the case when we talk to you on the screen that i like that i think we should get out while you're still fairly up to mistake. patrick, thank you so much. appreciate it. now or we go from kenya to egypt, and the case of allah ad l factor, who is one or thousands of political prisoners facing brutal conditions, an overcrowded sales. have a look at this case for my colleagues at listening past. ah, a law abdel factor is just one of an estimated 65000 political prisoners in egypt having strength most of the decades since the arab spring behind bars. he is now more than 3 months into a hunger strike. it cruelty. what is left of his line? his is a voice, the egyptian authorities clearly want, sorry, the men of the minimum city live with me
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in a long process and some of them are sick, willing to sell and live alone or that is heartbreaking. to hear that from your brother, like we're not going to win, we may not win, but we still have to fight. mona safe is allah says she joins us now live on the stream. and he's saying about me, who's in egypt and libya research at amnesty international. thank you both for joining us when you hear your but i know you've seen that before. that clip mona, when you hear him say that, does that really summit? your situation as a family member, trying to get him out of prison in agent? yes. it does some of the situation. and she, that the clip pitney a bit hard. because when you know the context, as when it gives you a glimpse into our story as a sunday, this was in september 2014. when i was briefly released from prison
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a month after my father passed away. and this was in way of service for my father. even his name was a human rights lawyer and less than a month later and it was back to prison again. so it was just and brief, few weeks in which he was out and he had a chance to talk to the people and to share this particular statement, which is very powerful and is how you function. so we don't know if he'll ever be victorious. we don't know if can ever be able to, you know, stop humanise violations in egypt and hold everyone who's committed them accountable to what they did. but we have to be constantly victorious just to being right to the truth. doing our best to it is saying, can you be super handed hair about why is ally in a prison in egypt right now? why is he locked up? quite simply because allah is a prisoner of conscious he is in prison too quite simply because of his critical
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beliefs. he is in prison because he dare to leave for a democratic egypt is imprisoned because you have been the voice of some ones that was a died been tortured and died in prison before this is not an artist. this meant even this is a court document that convicted him solely on the basis of tweets, where he defended, sorry, of a man's, a thought in a prison, the same person that he was initially imprisoned. mona, what do you do when you're facing a force and a, a justice system, right? egypt where so thousands of people are prisoners of conscience, their political prisoners, their opponents. how do you get your loved one out of that situation? this the thing is because it's not just on it because it's thousands of people out there that thousands of people looking at the he's present it. you realize that
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your journey is a collective one that you need to work on a more collective pressure and, and, and documenting and speaking about what's happening. business was happening to thousands of political prisoners and, and, and you need to make the people everyone aware that the alley is a little says i is a known activist. he has always been targeted by different genes. he has been in prison for the past 4 with the majority of the course 8 years. so since the fact that he came to power and the fact that he's been exposed to torture, the fact that he has been deprived of basic christ like use papers reading for more than 2 years. a lot of time correspondence with the family time out and even a fair trial he has been sentenced in front of emergency court. we didn't have to try and we didn't have access to the files. so all of these things give you a glimpse into the reality of what other thousands of people are enduring in egypt
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and their families. ready because if this is happening, tyler, who is a very well known activist with support and with the families, you know, what will then what is happening? you know what i'm wondering, i'm wondering what you tell your nephew a little boy 10 i believe. what do you tell him your nephew about his dad? it's very difficult and it's very difficult because calendar just turned 10 last year. we don't understand how much he understands of the whole situation. we do know for sure that it hit him very hard when i was released in march 2019. and haley was excited to welcome and got it back into his life. they were going to swimming lessons to go there. that every then, you know, 6 months later taking weight on him and he got thrown into the worse condition ever . so the, that las conditions his prison are actually making it,
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making us unable to dig pallet to visitors. we haven't seen her for over a year now. so it's laid off. it's very tough to maintain this and actually i'm glad you asked me about that because this is precisely what draw violet to. so the hunger strike in april 2nd because he was feeling like his boy is going to become a teen eater soon end without his father. and he was just to head up with top, you know, tolerating this kind of abuse and, and, and, and being deprived of his life. and so he went on hunger strike to, to either to put an end to the soil out and the others. okay, let me just ask her saying, as i know we're at the very last moment of our show will a hunger strike, push egypt to release allah. it's very simple here. lick allows detention is in violation of international law, even violates egypt. and lo, either not be imprisoned, just like the 10s of thousands of political prisoners in egypt to throw in prison
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simply for dreaming of her bitter egypt. the president, prison of the 5th there has to be. she has the power to release all abit there by european law buys it, launched it for emergency, but on those constitution was assembled up in that conference room so he should release him and i must be released. are you? the new person was an, a little man. thank you so much. we do appreciate you joining us, a mona as well. and to watching everybody i see next time. ah, both janice and the police violently discussing crisis with these are some of the 10s of thousands of people try to flee. gobble, inspired to program, making welcome to generation chains, unrivalled with broadcasting. white people did not want black children in the schools. we have to fight forecasted and al jazeera english proud recipient,
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official airline of the journey is only 4 months to go to the world cup and the clock is ticking as teams and fans prepared the car. so a 2022, we'll have updates from different regions across the globe. this month, the focus is on africa, and synagogue mounts a challenge for the tropi to winning the africa cup of nations will be cameroon. gonna to nicea, omar, o, cope. it's the alicia join us for the world. go count down on al jazeera. ah, the russian president vladimir putin is in tucker on his 1st trip outside the former soviet union. since the start of the ukraine war.
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