tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera July 25, 2022 6:00pm-7:01pm AST
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this is al jazeera ah, hello, i'm carry johnston. this is a news our live from dana or coming up in the next 60 minutes. me a mars military genta executes for pro democracy activists. the 1st capital punishment there for decades. green shipments are set to restart in ukraine later this week, despite russia's missiles strike on odessa, on saturday. tennesseans head to the polls us out of present case, i eased a constitutional referendum to secure his grip on power. the effects of climate change, which was once a rugby training ground in fiji, has given way to rising sea levels on sort of higher to sports, including another world record proposal to armand and planted the sweet bright his own mod. yes. again, the claim gold on the final day of the gold athletics championship in the us,
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or the accent coming up this our ah, we start this news our in the and mar where the military agenda has executed for pro democracy actor. this is the 1st time capital punishment has been used for decades. the u. s. has condemned the killings and called on agenda to immediately cease such violence. and u. n. z, a special repertoire has called it a depraved act on a former legislator from unsung suit. cheese hearty was among those who were killed . tony cheng has more. he was known to many as could jimmy. and he knew the cost of standing up to me. m as military german, you, a veteran pro democracy activist, had already spent 15 years in prison, protesting against previous military regimes. even though he had been found guilty
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on counter terrorism charges in january. you expected the death sentence to be carried out. oh, when we saw this news, be very sad actually, but don't i shouldn't have done this. it should not happen. this is like the twenty's officially challenging to publicly, not pure zerto. another of those executed was a prominent norm maker that had been an m p, an uncensored, she's national league for democracy. since 2012. the former hip hop artists become the face of a youth movement came to power in the 1st democratic elections a decade ago. the executions of the 1st amendment since 1989 and a thought to have taken place at in saint prison and young gone. where relatives tried to reclaim the bodies of the dead. men on monday, calls for clemency from other southeast asian nations, including a letter written personally to john to lee the men on lie by cambodian prime minister on sen. have clearly had little impact gather. this is sending
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a message to them. young people 1st and foremost, are to try to intimidate them, but it's also a backhanded way of a min online telling asi on that. but out that they don't want an advice from us, young, they just want asi and to serve as a shield. and all the protests against the military government are unlikely to stop . like this flash mob, opposing the death sentences. rights groups estimate more than 2000 people. the been killed by the military since the coo. yet the protest as showed no sign of backing down. tony chang, elders are, would that be so hard is the founder and coordinator of sin that burma network of us young organizations working to support human rights and democracy in me in law. she joins us on skype from bangkok, thanks for being on the program. so by these executions, what message is a military leadership sending out the military?
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the military junta is basically telling the people of the country that there will be no mercy. there will be no compromise. there will be no negotiation. and it's, and it's also telling that to the international community, including to us here who has shielded this illegal. hm. is it likely to crush pro democracy activity or just further galvanize it? do you think what it's going to do is actually going to get more. it's going to spark off more conflict and we've already had a conflicts spiral out of control to the through the whole country. it court was quieter in urban centers, but now you probably are going to see more fighting in urban areas because the people on the ground have heard the message loud and clear, surrender or die. and so for many people now it's a do or die situation. if they,
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if they are caught, they will be executed. and so they are not going to give up because there will be no mercy if you tried to compromise with this winter. or what is your understanding then of the extent of armed crashes that are ongoing in me and my the military junta has not been able to gain control of most of the country in many areas. there's actually resistance civilian administrations at local level. this is why the military who inter is ramping up the violence to intimidate the population . but what it's doing is simply provoking them to resist even more because they know they cannot afford to lose if they lose, they die. and it's time the international community, including as the an, the, you and the you and all these stakeholders took,
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it's time for the security council to take the gloves off. they've been, they have been to diplomatic, and they've been too soft on this winter. and that's why this home that thinks it's all right, to execute people like this, given what you say, then what would it take for the military june to, to change course? what actually needs to happen. there has to be a great international commitment to into the criminal accountability for the hunters x. that has to be an a region herb, a global arms embargo. and there definitely needs to be more countries taking a stand against dive into and stopping businesses from paying taxes and revenue to this hunter, because the hunter only uses this money, this revenue to kill people or can we leave it there? debbie sought out from out soon burn a thank you very much. ukraine
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says it's aiming to send its 1st shipment of grain this week under you and broke a deal with russia. announcement is reviving, hopes of easing at global food shortage is caused by the conflict. the agreement has been thrown into doubt since and miss ow stripe by russian forces on the port of odessa on saturday. or moscow a says the deal to resume shipments from black c port still stands. foreign minister survey lover of who's on an african toll says that there are no barriers to grain exports, or he says there's nothing in the agreement that prevents russia from attacking military infrastructure. but at sir, go straight to or john hendern, whose life for a sir in that kiva. john, what more do we know about these vital grain shipments then? well, they've been sitting essentially being kept hostage at ukrainian ports since the
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war began. just massing up on 3 black sea port, and now we are told, the 1st shipments will go out this week. and over the next 2 weeks, they'll be leaving from all 3 black see ports. and that includes the porter to at odessa, that was attacked by russian forces. just one day after that agreement was reached to create the safe passage lanes for that grain to leave the, the black sea with war raging all around it. so it's a complex arrangement. as you said, lab roms, the russian foreign minister says that they will strike those ports if they feel that there are military infrastructure there. so that means this grain movement could be stopped at any time, but both sides say they're going to go forward with it. and there is a hungry world out there waiting for it in africa. in particular, there's a potential for a major food shortage. so ukraine says it's going to go forward, russia says they will allow this to go forward,
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but neither side seems to trust each other. nevertheless, that grain will begin moving this week according to ukraine. and despite the grain agreements, we've still seen russia carrying out strikes in the western region suddenly that's right. so russia says it has struck a facility, holding high mar, american made rocket system. these are multi launch rockets that ukraine has said have helped it be so much more effective since they have gotten them that they've actually struck 50 different russian ammunition depots since the war began. so it would be a big deal if russia, in fact, successfully struck those sites. now ukraine says it is knocked out to russian drones also in western ukraine. and the interesting thing is, this is happening in the west far from the battle lines in the east and south of ukraine. and that suggests that there's no part of this country. it's safe right
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now. okay, it's on the hands on the lie. first, the in the key, thank you. open to more ahead, almond is are including we will endure. let our filipino spirit ever remain on them. new the elected president, ferdinand marcus junior, lays out his vision for the philippines. francis horizon, canada to apologize for the church is rolling running schools were indigenous children were abused for decades and in sports we'll show you another great catch and major league baseball details. coming up with our ah, at least a 1000000 people have cast their ballots so far. polling stations across to news here for vote on a draft constitution,
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which opponents have criticized as an attempt to return to one man rule. present case, i either says his changes have been necessary to rain in a corrupt political elite or people opposed to the proposed changes. say though boycott the vote. sanibel the amman, the so i the that we will build together with our arms ideas and determination. we will build god willing and you were public and we will build a new republic based on real freedom and real justice and national dignity because there is no dignity for nationwide except with the dignity of citizens. while a lot. well, wrestler said r joins us live now from to nasa. russell. what's the latest with the voting? the people are starting to castlewood early in the morning at 6 am and says than on that the wharton is still counting. the police stations are going to be close by 10 pm local time. here in tunisia,
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we have seen the heavy security measures across all countries, particularly the capital sold ponies. army included a counter terrace in unit 4 to deploy to the wall street, and they're pulling our stations. and there are $5000.00 local observers and also more than $120.00 internationally dependent observers for that. but this observers that they have talked to them earlier today, they told me that the did it, that the security forces are stopping them, getting into the police. the police station which uses the questions about the transparency off days is what in our process. so the turn out, according to the officials, a bees $11.00 a one hour ago is roughly around 14 percent and completed that in the elections on the presidential election. 2019. it was around 56 percent. so, so far the turnout seems to be a to quite too low. the to not is
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a key issue because she are in, in tunisia there is a rough random the turner for the referendum. it seems to be a what a confidence for president chi site. however, tonight, by 10 pm, we are going to get the clear picture regarding china and whether it present keiser is going to be able to get the what he asked for the constitution that he proposed . indeed. so when we lay likelier to know the full result, la la. well, the generally sufficient into nisha is that the result is going to be a yes without a legitimacy. the reason for that or position parties here are seen that simply all the political parties have been excluded from this whole process that taking the country to to a constitutional referendum, a very controversial a one. and also it was a rush job, just 3 weeks off of a campaign period. and they said that this was deliberately designed not to let the
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public to have a pool for conversation and debate about it. that's why through the last couple of weeks, no position parties, liberals islamists, and left is were coming together and conducting the protest against is this constitutional referent. them and calling people to won't quote it because the key issue here is going to be turned off and they are trying hard to make sure that the turn of the participation is going to stay low. and they say that if there's constitution is adopted than the fear is that it could pay the way back to authoritarianism, then the counter was again as of solder, half an hour in its eunice. thank you for that. and then we're gonna stay with this now and speak to al jazeera as a senior political analyst at my, on the shot. he joins us on skype phone at paris. so she, neither is where the arrow spring started. many may i ask, is this where it ends? yeah, so of course a good question. considering the deterioration and the adam springs nations the
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last number of years. and the fact that this is very past year, ah, or your site has been a messing powers acting like an autocrat, almost from p. m in his style. except that to him, this is not a strong democracy, has the united states, so that he succeeds today or not. of course, these remains to be the question, but we've heard from our correspondent that they're not so low. and of course, the opposition to this sort of charity and constitution does present, propose, seems to indicate that donations are not ready to give away the keys for their liberal democracy. not yet. but of course, the overall size in the region, the forces the reaction forces before regime forces have been. i've
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been regaining strengths. and i saw you guys gotten some help from those who tried to do the same at egypt and, and, and the golf and other places. so you could say that the process is, of course, witnessing a lot of setbacks with the spirit of the arab spring. i think remains alive. how important has the military been since the uprisings, and also the inability of those who took over to give the people what they wanted. this is probably the most important factor shaping the ever you should or should i say the dissolution of the arab strained in the out of string nations or seen the role of any kind of being quite destructive in places like egypt like syria, exidine. and we've seen it complicit like in patients like denisia were in the beginning, the army was pretty bashfully and all that kind of stood behind the changes,
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which just because i took over, it's been more or less bashful in thinking some serious positions. it didn't meditate is in a but in place i you to do what he's been doing the last year, including the dissolving with a parliament and the undermining agenda, share so on so forth. you wouldn't have been able to do without the, without the military have the security forces. but this is one or 4 fact. there's other factors is as i said, the 5th of the old regime, the weakness of the new order and the political parties. and the huge economic and social problems, economic problems, we know them, my new placement law started living on so so forth, but also the social, the big division into this as well as in the rest of the world between the secular and religious. clearly clarify this using the 2nd really just divides in order to further divided the nation's mass out supports this all present i side would say he
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was elected and these changes are needed to root out corruption. is that a credible argument? well 2nd to his support this think so and clearly as i stated earlier, there were a lot of problems in denisia. but the problem is that not start with the new political parties, nor is it his job. who was the next president and parliamentary democracy to dissolve the parliament? if there were any problems, it's up to the electra then to root out those corrupt parliamentarians or whoever else is. and this is the strength of any democracy is in its institutions, parliament, the sherry, and so on. the fact that science is undermining the institutions of the country. that means he's a massive more hours. that means he's going on that road towards takesha dictatorship. that does not serve a democracy, it never did. we know it from history of the region,
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but we also know from history in other parts of the world because in the wards of you said himself, those sorts of falling stuff he's conducting today. it is done by dictators in order to strengthen their position. so we have those social processes used by the characters on and again and again, in order to change the system, i must more powers, under the protection of the corruption. corruptions will be for the one that you just showed he is alive when the parliament is in session. when the, when does various situations of any country are functioning well, the fact that he was able to undermine all of them was sort of even more corruption . and dictated. okay, we'll leave it there. senior political analyst, my want the shower. thank you very much. protested in the democratic republic of congo have attacked the headquarters of the un mission that it happened
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in the capital of north kiva province goma demonstrators. according on the un mission to leave the country, saying its presence is ineffective, police use pick asked in line to disperse the crowd. at least one person was shot markham whereby joined the fly from nairobi, sir malcolm, what's driving this protest? with a protest said they're angry. the un peacekeepers have been never more than 20 as failing to protect people. anything congo? this is in the context of ongoing fighting between the m $23.00 group, which is widely seen to be a proxy of neighboring rwanda and congo. is army in recent weeks will say thing. people in the morning eastern congo express anger. rwanda, which they blame for being behind the conflict and also that as their own government failing to protect them because the government forces have been
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struggling to contain the 23 attacks. just last week, the president of congo senate spoke in goma. he was very critical of the us failing to protect people, the u. n. as in term, being critical of the government for fermenting this anger. the un following not speech that this protest took place and certainly from the government point of view . if they can deflect some of the heat onto the un, offer themselves that makes things a little bit easier for them. ok, malcolm web in already. thank you. lawyers in the occupied palestinian a territorial demonstrating against a series of laws, a precedent ma, who the bus has been making bone to creek. neither. abraham has more from her mother. this is a fit then by the palestinian bar association and lawyers the year say that not just protesting for their rights, but what they say is being greasing authority of the executive branch of the
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palestinian authority. namely the palestinian president's office. i nelson, the palestinian split between project that was the occupied with bank of america, the 2 of the deceased goddess to the president. and it just that the council has been dysfunctional. and since then the senior president has been issuing laws by degrees. the need does the voyage. people here think is bringing that judicial authority to its lead. must have fallen apart than what i mean. i visally not only affect the bar association but also the palestinian people as a whole. i'm here to tell president how best that these decrees destroy those with the shall system, destroy the ruling authority and could start to civil war. and the past 15 years, the palestinian president has showed more than 350 laws by degrees. now to give you an idea during the time when the palestinian, just as if counsel has been in action, it's voted on, hadn't passed less than $100.00 pieces of legislation. lawyers here is safe enough
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is enough. they've been boy cutting ford for the past month. has a we need allegedly, the council because laws need to go to different readings before they enforce. now, there are a few people making lost, and that's a problem. now, other syndicates are joining the pros this. i know the fear is by many years since that there has been no elections for the past 15 years. the situation is only going to get worse. philippine president ferdinand marcus genia has made his 1st state of the nation address. bon bon, as he is commonly known is the son of a former leader, ferdinand marcus, whose government carried out widespread human rights abuses. marcos junior used his speech to promised tax reform and he says will bring more money to the people in our country must become an investment destination. capitalizing on the corporate recovery and docs incentives for enterprises. so the create law and economic
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liberalization laws such as the public service act and the foreign investments act . barnaby lo has more from manila on the pledges made to key takeaways from the speech. general takeaways one is that finally, he is laying out concrete steps as to how he wants to move the country forward. this is really the 1st time that we've heard him so detailed about his plans and to a lot of this speech is a throwback to his father's time. his father, ferdinand marcus, senior ruled for 21 years dictator who was ousted in 1986 by a people power movement. now onto the specifics agriculture, obviously a priority president von bo, mark was appointed himself as agriculture. secretary, he said that his program would provide financial and technical assistance to
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farmers. he would distribute the land to landless farmers. the other thing where he got a standing ovation was when he mentioned that the national kidney transplant institute, the heart centered the long center. these were centerpiece, infrastructure, and health care projects of his father. but these were only established in the capital. in metro manila, he said that he would expand these and bring them to the provinces outside of metro manila. he also said that there would not be any more lockdown in reference to cobra 19. he said that the philippines would learn to live with the virus that china is warning. it will take what it calls forceful measures if the speaker of the us house of representatives visits taiwan next month. warning coincides with annual evacuation drills in taiwan. when people in towns and cities prepare for potential arrays by china,
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florence louis has more deserted streets on the monday afternoon. an unusual sight in tie, one, even more unusual, people sheltering in subway stations. but these are just drills to prepare people for the possibility of an attack onto a white di holler. then i had just stopped the traffic light when police asked me to come to the subway station to hide away because of the drill. china's he's time one as a breakaway province and has not ruled out using force to take the on. the russian invasion of ukraine has made tie one more nervous and the government has raised its a lead level. yes, he just the way the, the drills are for the events that might happen, such as war. so i think that these exercises are necessary so that everyone knows what we have to do in case there was a situation. does that mean this? yeah, these drills coincide with china's stern warning to the us about how speak a nancy pelosi is possible visit to tie one. to watch in t. e, in thoughtful
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a shot has made it clear to the earth on many occasions day that it is firmly opposed to speak, a policy visit to taiwan. we are fully prepared if the u. s. insists on going its own way. china will certainly take firm and forceful measures to safeguard its national sovereignty and territorial integrity may well, china might just be talking tough, that statement, undisguised. just how sensitive the issue with and how tie one could be a flash point for a possible conflict. florence, li, elgin still a head hair on al jazeera, ah, resumes a president, air ball scenario, which is his campaign for reelection, and go head to head with a former leader. and driven by drought, california's biggest forest fire of the year, still spreading fast. thus in sport,
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flying high, yet another well, reco was mr. c. ah hello. we've got some heavy downpours in the forecast, the parts of the middle east over the next couple of days. we have st. batting rice recently into southern parts arbor. iran sent me some heavy down pause into pakistan. this disturbance now making his way towards ahmad. and as we go on through tuesday, we will see some heavy rain pushing into northern parts of a man that is light is to bring further flooding coming in here. could even see a few showers coming in to the u. e. and yet even here kata, by wednesday we might see some wet to where the temperatures struggling to get to 36 degrees celsius. if we can call that a struggle, certainly possible to see some funder showers farther north, it stays bone drive, 47 celsius theft, baghdad, fine a dry eye,
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which was east the side of the mediterranean temperatures. creeping up around the 30 degree mark dry across northern parts of africa as well. the usual showers just pulsing the way off the ethiopian hyde is across the tropical belt. big downpours and pockets of heavy rain coming into northern and central parcel nigeria may be down towards the south as well. got to say some lively showers. a shout is pushing the way up towards mauritania over the next day or so. but not too many showers for southern parts of africa. ongoing drought continuing in kenya, no rural relief here similar was met with the pos of somalia, but showers, mozambique cypress, a european island openly offering citizenship to those who can afford it. in august al jazeera made global headlines with the cypress papers, confidential documents that reveal a murky passport by investment scheme. august hall. this is head,
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this is now al jazeera is investigative unit, goes undercover to expose further revelations that go to the heart of the cypriot state. al jazeera investigations, the cypress papers on the cover, a sanctuary for journalists. it was a haven from the war and shelter for civilians. refugees were scattered into the garden during cambodian bloody civil stuff imploring us to leave and sub name. we were turning up axon. the commander rouge had taken anything of value out of the hotel, cambodian lebanon, a new episode of war hotels on al jazeera. oh,
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i hear without a reminder of our top stories, this town miles minutes regions as executed for pro democracy activists. what's believe to be the 1st use of capital punishment in decades un special repertoire has called it a depraved act ukraine. it stretches aiming to send its 1st shipment of grain by the black c this week on to you. and i could deal with russia. announcement is revising, it's an easy global food shortages caused by the conflict. cutting stations are open across to new draft constitution which opponents, it is an attempt to return to one man rule. as his change is unnecessary to reign in a corrupt political, and these hundreds of migrants and refugees were rescued while trying to cross the mediterranean to reach you in the past few days,
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many of them have been taken to ports in italy, are authorities there. say that overwhelmed caterpillar, as her young reports given to rescue during a dangerous journey across the mediterranean to europe. in less than 24 hours, more than $400.00 migrants were picked up by humanitarian group. see, watch the risk. many of them know all to well, many of them know that it's quite likely that they weren't make it, that they can, she will drown in trying to seek safety. but for then it's the only option they have and these are the stories that we hear. these people that we meet time and time again. nearby other groups of migrants and refugees weighed on the island of lum, producer. more than a 1000 arrived in italy with an hours many are from afghanistan, pakistan to dan,
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ethiopia, and somalia. basically, european states, a dedicate thing, all of their efforts in stopping people from making their way to european shores. and so it's a policy of exclusion and isolation. the islands reception center has a capacity for 300 people, but 3 times as many migrants are there. the influx comes as italy, gears up for early elections, which could bring hard right politicians to power. oh, the united nation says more than $30000.00 migrants and refugees have arrived in italy by c this year. and more than 1200 have reportedly died attempting to reach europe. katya lopez, civilian al jazeera for this in mexico say they found more than 200 migrants at a warehouse who were waiting to be smuggled into the u. s. the group has now been detained in the central city of yellow topic. most had travelled from guatemala,
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others, or from honduras, nicaragua, cooper, and el salvador, the number of asylum seekers being detained at the us. mexico border is at its highest level in years. at least 17 haitian asylum seekers, including a child, have died off their boat, capsized off the coast of the bahamas. 25 people were rescued, but it's feared up to 60 may have been on board. authorities say they're seeing an increase in haitians. desperate to flee poverty and gang violence on the bahamas is on a route used by migrants trying to reach the u. s. from haiti. prime minister, philip davis, as that appears to be the case with this latest group. blurry investigation suggests that a twin engine speed bold left a docking facility off westby street. around one a. m, with approximately 60 percent on board. it is believed that the
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final destination was miami, florida. the head of the roman catholic church is in canada to apologize in person for the role the church played in running residential schools for indigenous children. hope francis is in the city of edmonton, what he's calling his pilgrimage of penance. more than 150000 indigenous children were forcibly removed from their families and sent to schools where many faced years of abuse or some at 1st nations. leaders say they feel excluded from the post trip to canada. i think as our visit is high, low, long over you hearing something that sort of happened many, many years ago. maybe the start of reconciliation would have started again, that's a part of the problem we had with the church is that they have not been really including ours in the proper planning of this house has been very unilateral. we
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don't feel that it has been about survivors. it has been more about the church. well, j grey from nbc news joins us live now from edmonton and j. what can we expect from the pope's visit today? yeah. well, it's an apology tour as you talked about, terry, and we expect the 1st of those public apologies to be made within the next few minutes. the pope traveling just south of edmonton to a residential school, a former residential school where he is visiting with survivors and elders as well as leaders of the indigenous people here in canada and making that apology that they have been urging and requesting for years now. he did apologize at the vatican in rome months ago and was pushed then by some of these indigenous leaders to do so on canadian soil, saying that that would make the apology much more palatable for many here, really
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a mixed bag. when you talk about the response to this trip by indigenous people here in canada, some very appreciative that he is here and making this effort to begin some type of reconciliation. but others as you just heard of feel like they've been excluded from the process. and that these words should have come much earlier and should be followed with some real action tools to help bring the community and the church together, including some say compensation from the church. though there's no indication that that will be the case. the postman 6 days on the ground here, visiting and apologizing to those who say they have family members who were abused by catholic missionaries both physically and sexually. they may have also accused the catholic church, or of really cultural genocide here pulling children away from their parents
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and camping them in the schools for years and, and at times being very brutal with those young children in many different ways. and j, do all indigenous sat groups with gods, the pope's visit as a positive thing. well, no. i think some people of feel that it dredges up old memories that it is a, a button pusher if you will, for, for many who have seen relatives go through this, or survivors who were enclosed in those residential schools. something that, that the words won't do anything that they need more substantive action and that they need really for the church to be held accountable for what was done so long
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ago. not just to make the public apology, but to be held accountable in ways that will help them move forward as people hear . and b, c, j gray in and, and thank you very much. first of brazil's presentation stage, both sonora has launched his reelection campaign, but faces an uphill battle. he's trailing in the poles behind his main rival. leftist for presence, there is not here that the silver of both scenarios was criticized with handling of the pandemic. brazil has the world's 2nd highest death toll on a inaccurate reports, not from rear edition era. ah, thousands of supporters lined up in front of this gym next to rio de janeiro iconic modicum of football stadium. and i saw her inside crowds wearing the colors of the brazilian flag. cheer for president, valuable sonata,
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calling him the messiah in the mid. oh, bulls are not his wife, michelle and ivan jellicoe christian spoke 1st. she made an emotional appeal, especially to women, given the president needs more of their votes. if he's going to be returned to the top job, she reminded them of the attempt on bull sonatas life during the 2018 campaign saying he'd survived to free the country. no, i always tell him j messiahs balsam, norah, do not be afraid. you have been chosen by god. both on out of been spoke but made no reference to guns or his unfounded accusations. that the electronic voting system is unreliable. he has been criticized in brazil and abroad for repeatedly claiming that the october elections could be easily rigged. experts say he is following former you as president donald trump, by alleging fraud to justify what may become an eventual defeat. oh,
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so loud or supporters here are extremely confident that he will be re elected, but paused, show him trailing behind former president, who is in us ruler the seal ho. earlier this week, former president mueller, the silva was officially nominated candidate by the left wing workers party. according to recent polls. he has the support of more than 40 percent of voters. ah, well, sonata remains in 2nd place with more than 30 percent, but it's too soon to predict an outcome as bull sonata has just approved an emergency aid package, allowing him to spend $7600000000.00 until december, when his term ends. monica and i give all jazeera rio de janeiro california's largest, while far so far this year is spreading fast. the oak fire started on friday and as it burned through thousands of hectares of land in and around my repose,
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county and thousands of people have been forced to flee their homes. brianca group to reports the destructive wildfire its burning. everything in its pallet thousands, the fire fighters are on the ground by the flames. are spreading fast. jerry cal has been ordered to leave the area, but he says he doesn't want to go lose our home. ah. whose feel i get? i feel like we're gonna do what we can to to at least i have a chance. but sam didn't have that chance overnight. the fire destroyed their homes and years of memories. i have for my grandmother the lord's supper. she, her cushion, brooklyn i t 30 poor wolf still do your it needs. okay, well,
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like i said, the papers in the states was drought in decades and an intense summer heat, a fueling the flames racing through a large, dry land it's. it's really heartbreaking because it's been year after year, you know, and just to think about the entire state here and everywhere else, neil, there's been so many fire to so many homes. the cause of this fire is still be investigated, but signed to say it's climate change. that's made. wildfires in california, more common and unpredictable. bianca gupta, r dizzier. now thousands of kilometers from california climate change is also making its mark on the island of fiji. where sand is literally disappearing under people's feet during wolf reports now. plenty to jail. one of these children listened intently to what the head man of number to kula village has to say. jose bought on august the coolest says he fears the next
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generation won't be able to cold. his place, their home, the hub is being a, you few move to another, say it color the. it's gonna be a do from lifestyle or together. maybe when we moved to another said maybe uh we wanna move with a new culture. so we're going to lose all culture. fiji declare to climate emergency last year with a small village on the islands, coral coast deemed at risk. rising sea levels mean the 600 people who live here may have to relocate inland or to a higher ground, but the community is determined to stay put to protect their homes, ancestral history and culture which has produced an unprecedented number of international sport stars. muskogee believed so much, not only for laser sports, but for we can only contribute really just her. and also for the development bill or barbara of oregon. i cds, phos,
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unpredictable and exciting style play is said to be deeply rooted in the islands cultural motto of vancouver. now which means the way of the land, some se, playing on these speeches is what sets them apart. but what was once the training ground for aspiring rugby players has now been washed away. the blizzards rather used to play rugby, little normally sandy, beaches for 100 meters and 50 new this one. normally with blue. i came across it during the time that we blame those beaches, but today it's gone. because of this climate change and increasing see little rugby is a national obsession. in fiji, nearly 10 percent of the island nation's $900000.00 people are registered rugby players, one of the highest per capita in the world. but rugby is more than just a game here. it's a way for men and women to earn a living wage. climate change is expected to displace nearly 1700000 people across
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pacific islands in the next 30 years. and for many fijians, the risk of losing their ancestral lands would be too much to bear vehicle what vehicle was more lesions you should with me. you know, because as jose bottleneck, as a cooler says, there really is no place like home, join wolf, al jazeera l animals at a zoo in china's at wang, you city are playing it cool. the heat waves sweeping across the region giant panders having given blocks of ice to play with zeal. capers of also installed fans around trees to combat the heat and quarters, and bears hippos and tapers are being fed watermelon to keep them hydrated. now for some spectacular pictures coming out of australia. well, this is sydney shrouded in early morning fog out. some were able to enjoy the view
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. others face travel delays at the cities airport. it eventually cleared by mid morning. now then chess is a game of strategy concentration and most certainly non violence. but in russia, a 7 year old boy competing in a torment had his finger broken. or this was his opponent a robot and didn't seem to enjoy the child's swift play. as a boy makes his move, the robot immediately snatches his finger a bystanders had to rush into free him. he played on the following day in a cast. organizers say the incident happened by coincidence, but it's led to a debate that the safety of human robots, interactions are. mark onstar is a specialist in artificial intelligence. he says the robot probably made a mistake and registered the boys finger as a chess piece. this chest playing robotic arm is actually very similar to the kind of an industrial robot that you would find in a factory arm. so they're actually very powerful. i'm so the fact it was able to,
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to break this child's finger doesn't surprise me. but when a robot makes a move, it needs between one to 3 seconds to process the image of the piece and make that move. and really what i think happened is that child's finger looked very similar to a chest piece, a queen or a bishop on the child kept his hand there. and that's why this unfortunate accident happened. you know, the fact that a, i is even moving into a child's test tournament to shows how this technology is, is now pervading site. and um, you know, this was, you know, quite a serious accident. but, you know, we're also gonna have software which is with, you know, remote control autonomous cars and drones and factories and everywhere we're a, i goes, there are going to be software glitches. and so this raises the question, you know, do we need to have some kind of, you know, a, i standardization, do we need to have some kind of regulation to ensure the public safety going
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ah ah ah ah ah, what's time for all the sports news now? his sirens thanks very much carol. there's winning small there for almonds appliances showed why he's one of the top names in the athletics right now. he broke his own wall rack or 2 in the pole vault title at the wall championships. it was one of 2 records full on the final day in oregon. they were stokes has the
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latest, ah way to bring down the pit on 10 days of competition. omen de prentice the flying sweet . easily kid. 6.21 meters to break his own pole. vote will record. he's only 22 years old, but it's the 5th time he's landed a reco jump, and he becomes the 1st po both ever to have one all major senior and junior titles, including the olympic gold in tokyo, last year. the world record from the greatest po volter, how sport has ever seen. the most important thing was to try to come out here, man, today. taking the 1st day after title without a title. so in other, the will record which is an after honestly a, everything that happened i did, it's pretty, pretty crazy. it was another world record on sunday in the women's $100.00 me to hurdles much areas. toby,
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a new sun cross the line in 12.12 seconds in the semi finals. and she actually went even faster to claim gold in the final. but the time didn't count because of excessive wind speeds. germany's mo i can become bo did enough to retain her well title in the long jump. another gold medal to go with the one she won at the olympics in tokyo. jak having a britson made up for his runner up finishing the 1500 meters earlier in the week. the norwegian took a convincing when in the 5000 meters instead with olympic champion, joshua chapter guy, finishing way down in nights. things were a lot closer in the women's 800 america's olympic champion. nothing moved doing just enough to hold off britain's katie hutchinson. she's the 1st american woman to win the world. 800 meters title with different things going on. i definitely mean to lot to me it shows how strong i am and how much space i have. and so i'm just really happy that i could do this year. ah,
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who had the honor of collecting the team award for the u. s. a clean sweep in the 4 by 400 me to release. gave them a record $33.00 metals overall. the 1st world championships ever to be held in the united states. the next edition will be in august next year in hungary capital budapest. the baby stokes. oh, jeez era. the head of old athletics about co says this is championship will go down as the most universal edition of the event. 81 countries had at least reach a final, which is more than ever before. because does think he says that the competition needs to be shorter. i don't think we should end the feel. the existing format are absolutely sacrificing foods is not a criticism of here or any other championships. we just know the existing challenges of having 10 days morning sessions. you want flow, you want content, you want people in the stadium, the are actively engaged and may be looking at 10 days. you're not going to
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arrive at that easily. i'm not sitting here saying, you know, there's an eminent change we have championships are contracted and an agreed out until 25, but that's sort of where my head is at the moment. but i don't have a tightly prescriptive view that mike finished off and extended his lead in the formula one will championship off to winning the french chrome pre ferrari's child the class salts from pole position and was needing to be crushed on lap 18. stop and took over the front and was barely challenge. read bull drive a one by more than 10 seconds. taking a huge step towards conflict. the wall titles hamilton finished 2nd from the sadie's and his 300 comb free. i had a teammate to rustle in 3rd. now the stop and now leaves the standings by 63 points. he's also $17.00 of the 12 races declared remains in 2nd despite retiring 3
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times this year. well, let's hear from her stop and, and a very disappointed look for once i was in the lead to the end result of managing the fives. but you could see in the beginning was very close with 3 my call from charles. fortunately, because he dropped out the yeah, i'm a very happy with the when, but really, you know, there's a little bit of work to do. it's my home. and if i keep doing, you take that, then i did have to multiply, which i mentioned the level is very high performing to high level, but i keep doing those mistake then it pointless to be available. i couldn't really be much happier. of course, if one be another step but definitely didn't expect that result today. i was praying and hoping we could fight for podium 3rd, but i believe we have a 2nd. this is, this is huge for us and it's been ego says it feels incredible. the claim is maiden to france. title. the danish young bovis mariah sealed his victory in the mountains earlier in the week before securing the yellow jersey and the ceremony of final
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stage on the shore. in a, in paris, i have finished chop of the general classification. few minutes and 43 seconds ahead of 2 time winner said they forgot you're broke henderson has become the 1st canadian male or female when more than one major goals title. she started the final round on the championship in front of the 3 shot leave was officer a poor opening 9 holes. she found herself in the chasing pack and stormed home with 3 bodies over the last 5 holes and needed to think this part. the 18th, secure a one shot victory. definitely not been today, but yeah, just tried to stay patient and kept trying to remind myself that i was still in it . and i just needed some birdies and just needed a little bit of momentum change to stay in it. and i made some clutch, puts in shots down the stretch, which really helped you know, i'm just super excited to have my 2nd major term chip. when i told wins on tours.
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pretty cool too. and i'm just really excited for the rest the season holds. and will finish with an incredible catch and major league baseball. this was the los angeles dodgers against the san francisco giant. judges paid trace thompson track the fly ball and showed incredible decision to catch the ball over the railing in the fall area, tracy younger brother of golden state warriors and b. i saw thompson that just went on when the game at 7 was for now. but i'll be back later. thank you very much indeed. well, that's all for this nissan. i'll be back in a moment with more of a taste development here on stay with the me. ah,
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and a thousands of migrants set out for the city of dublin schuler in the early hours of monday. there's numerous nationalities among them, but the vast majority or from venice with 0, one to reach the united states. it's already been a long and difficult journey for most. there are many of us migrants here. we need help. i just like this woman. many people died in the jungle on our way here. it's the largest migrant care band to set out from southern mexico this year. bill rest for now. but the plan is to take to the road again after midnight and make it as far as they can before the heat sets in. once again, inequality corruption, repression and re, to political. it just decided to cost to the piece of cake. i'm sure it won't be
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a documentary explores the desperate, the states of democracy in lebanon a through the eyes of those who are losing hope every day our dreams are becoming blue. democracy maybe democracy for sale on al jazeera, around one percent of electricity globally, is consumed by data centers, many of which provide promote storage facilities. a what is also known as the cloud . i'm in no way to see how one center is harnessing the entity of these fuel woods to stole our digital information without a heavy comp in foot traits. i'm russell viewed off the north coast of the u. k, where the global green energy revolution is taking on a new element thrice. oh no jazeera ah .
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