tv News Al Jazeera July 26, 2022 8:00am-8:30am AST
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much came forth out in the media as well as on the battlefield. they're listening to dissect the media on al jazeera, the heart wrenching goodbyes, loved ones, no knowing when they were united to get women and children heading west to relative safety. often leaving ben behind among them foreign is also trying to get out train rise of a free, but it's on a 1st come, 1st serve basis here at the bus station there only a few rides available, and that's only to the surrounding villages. so people like for me and rose, now need to find another way to get out of the city. but for now they like many others, would have to reach in hoping tomorrow is a better day. ah mm. mm.
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celebrations by supporters of 2 mizzi as president after referendum on a new constitution. but his opponents say italy to authoritarian rule. ah, i'm all about this and this is on to 0. live from doha. also coming up. hope francis apologizes to canada's indigenous people for decades of abuse had residential schools, one by the catholic church. rushes foreign minister defends a missile strike in the ukrainian port as he visits african nations badly hit by the blockade on green supplies. nobel peace prize winner and one of the architects of irelands peace process. david trimble as died. we look back on his life and his legacy. ah, there's been a low turnout production. is he in referendum of the new constitution?
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which opponent say will return the country to dictatorship? a state tv exit poll predicts the referendum will pass. present hi said says he wants to rein in a corrupt political elite. i saw some reports from china's a task the internship with the company going to the pools for a controversial constitutional ref random. thousands of police national guards and counterterrorism units. standing by many in tunisia, hoping that mondays referendum would help improve the countries in the middle. we have sheila jena. hi is katie, we expect the referendum to lead to a better life for our children's children to have a better life for us? it's over. why are we living under pressure? schools are a disaster. the situation is catastrophic. everything. the disaster but not all are expecting this water will bring change miss lucy, man. yeah. i'm not going to vote because we voted a lot of times without the results we were expecting. it's the results which forced us to not vote and not give any importance to it because the reality will remain
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unchanged. and i do not imagine there will be a change in the future. i mean, tunisia was hit hard by common 19th and amec that triggered nationwide protest in july last year. paven way for present case site greater hold on palmer to suspended the democratically elected parliament. dan in march, he dissolved it completely. this referendum is also being seen as a ward of confidence, foresight, while the opposition ers people to bore corporate site push for them to take part. that is despite electro standards, requiring him to remain neutral, santa berman b. so i the that we will build together with our arms ideas and determination. we will build god willing and you were public. and so we will build a new republic based on real freedom and real justice and national dignity. because there is no dignity for nations except with the dignity of its citizens, with the 5th of the workforce unemployed, and poet levels sorting to new highs. tunisia the comp da's spark,
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the at up spring uprisings across the region is once again at the cross wrought in 2019 during the presidential election. the turner was was 56 percent. and now, despite only around 28 percent of waters going to the ballot box, it will still be enough to ensure k sides plan to consolidate his power over condiment, the government and judiciary. and the fear here now is that this may paved way back to authoritarianism. russell said that o 02, this is early troops have rated the palestinian village of cato at bonnie, her son and the occupied westbank. they demolished the homes of 2 palestinians who being charged with killing a guard and april at the illegal israeli settlement of audio. since the start of this year is really forces of torn down several palestinian homes. but francis has apologized for what he's describing as the deplorable evil inflicted in canada's indigenous people, which seldom forced to become part of christian society through
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a policy of residential schooling. and what was coming out, what he's calling his pilgrimage of penance. article henry points. pope prince, a saw where children were buried, the remnants of the so called school where they were horribly mistreated by catholic officials. and then he told the survivors he was sorry repeatedly dusky. i've come to your native land to tell you in person of my sorrow and implore god's forgiveness. he said, i am here again to ask forgiveness. i am deeply sorry, sorry for the many ways christian supported the colonizing mentality that oppressed indigenous principles. it still is only that i am deeply sorry. be the better though. i mean the main thing, or if i ask forgiveness survivors and their descendants have been working toward this apology for decades. the pain of the moment, the pain, they still feel evident in their expressions. many of these were among the estimated 150000 indigenous children that were by law taken from their families at
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a young age sent to the schools stripped of their culture, sexual and physical abuse was rampant along with malnourishment and disease. more than $3000.00 died, but is more and more unmarked. graves are found at the sights of schools. that number is expected to climb. many of the indigenous leaders responded with emotion and expectations marked this day as a significant offense events. that a statement was made that the pope said he was sorry, that is a send a message across these lands. i see pope francis's apology today as only a 1st step in the church, making amends towards our people. after meeting with the pope and hearing his words today, i believe there's a path forward together there's lot of work to be done. the pope will have many
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more days the seeing the indigenous culture that his organization so deeply damaged, more days of apology and personal interaction and exchange of highly symbolic gifts like this war bonnet. the pope said this was just the beginning, and these activists are going to want to see that put to practice. they want the vatican to open its files for them. so they can finally begin to piece together what happened to their children with so many that never made it home. particle haine al jazeera harvey mclean is a survivor of one of those residential schools. he's given his reaction to the pope's apology to words, i am sorry. that's the one that brought to emotion and brought some piece of that myself and myself that yeah, i completely understand and allow a little more freedom in my body. i sold to continue the work
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person and i was yes, yes, i can get the camera in residential school from 1966, 68 and my mom, my dad went to the same school as it dumps up on my other one to the same school and i was only there for 2 years, but. ready actually changed my whole life, that school taught me how to get things done west south, and they want to wait that i'm going to be able to supply and live for an at the date was i didn't allow anyone close to me or ever an issue as a family would ever talked about. i don't know where my, my siblings experience nor do i know my mom and dad experience. but i do know now that it must been very difficult for mom attached to purpose. because some of my
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mom was there for 10 years, and my dad was there for 8 years. so they had some and claims about what happened in that school. and it must have been very, very difficult for them to bring their child to school that they want to. ukraine says that in the next few days, it'll transport its 1st shipment of grains. since the russian invasion, turkey in the u. n. m. struck a deal between cave and moscow to allow exports through black c ports, but russia fired missiles at odessa, just a day off to the agreement was signed. john 100 reports from keith. the 1st shipment of grain to avert a looming global food crisis are expected to leave ukraine this week, despite the war raging around its ports. under united nations brokerage agreement with russia, a ukrainian minister says the shipments of wheat, corn, and sunflower oil will leave their black c ports through the newly negotiated safe channels within days where they put a porch on the modest report and telling them all will be the 1st one or 2,
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then odessa, then pardon p d, and the overall in 2 weeks will be technically ready to expose out of all the terminals. all the above mentioned points you that is despite a russian strike on the port of odessa on saturday. russia's foreign minister says there are no barriers to the grain deliveries, but adds a warning. yes, the good, it's super. there's nothing in the obligation the russia took, including within the framework of the agreement, signed on july 22nd. in the stumble, which prohibit us from continuing the special military operation, destroying military infrastructure and other military targets. the saturday strike in odessa makes clear that includes targets in the ports. it also includes ammunition, depots, the russian military set on monday that it struck one in ukraine central command, litski region that housed us, supplied high mars rocket systems. ukraine's military says those precision multi
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launch rocket systems have changed the balance in the war, allowing them to destroy 50 russian ammunition depos since they arrived. and ukraine is asking for more to break through the russian line. sure. after all that, our people have gone through. after all that we've learned over the centuries, ukrainians will never give up their independence. both the russian and the ukrainian strikes were reported in western ukraine far from the front lines, leaving no safe haven in the country right now. as ukrainian forces pushed toward hair sewn in the south. foreign fighters continued a battle alongside ukrainian troops on the eastern front, near harkey. for every, every one of our boys it's killed. we have 2 of them. what is the ports plan to resume green exports on the front lines? the war of attrition continues. john henderson al jazeera ukraine is president of letting me, in any case again accused russia of restricting gas supplies to inflict terror on
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europe showed him a bunch of h, a v. but today we saw you guys threat to europe despite the north street turbine concession. russia is not planning to resume gas supply to european countries, as it is obliged to do. all this is done by russia on purpose. there is an open gas world. russia is waiting against united europe. they do not care what will happen to the people, how they will suffer from hunger to, to the blocking ports, or from winter cold and poverty, or for multiplication. these are just different forms of terror. still had an al jazeera campaigning, continues presidential election enters its final stretch. the leading candidates a promising change. a gunman in canada targets a homeless shelter and a casino, killing 2 people. ah,
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how are we've got some heavy down? pause in the forecast. the parts of the middle east over the next couple of days, we have seen fat rice recently into southern parts oberon sandy, some heavy downpours 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 at his 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 fund re showers farther north, it stays bone drive, 47 celsius theft, baghdad, fine a dry eye, which was east side of the mediterranean temperatures. creeping up around the 30 degree. my 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 down, pause and pockets of heavy rain coming into northern and central parts of nigeria
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may be down towards the south as well. gotta say some lively showers, a shower just pushing the way up towards mauritania over the next day or so. but not too many showers for southern parts of africa on game drought continuing canino rural relief here. similar with the parts of somalia, but showers are mozambique ah and egyptian dr. trailing and britain in the 1980s. shocked by famine, an injustice worldwide and risen to such up a charity to help those in need. that was, he strained to create an organization that would serve any money need, serving people of all regions and old yoga free across the world. nearly food decades later, outages are well meets the co founder of one of the biggest islamic agencies in the world. hannon, banana the giving business. on al jazeera lou
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. ah, ah! you're watching old, is it a reminder of our top stories? this? our supporters of chin is, is president a celebrating after voters approved a new constitution in a referendum box turned out has been low opponent, say the changes will return the country to a dictatorship. ukraine says that in the next few days, it'll export its 1st shipment of grain since the russian invasion. keep on moscow strike a deal last week to allow the shipments but a russian missile attack on the port of odessa through the deal into doubt. to po francis has apologized to canada's indigenous people for what he described as the evil inflicted in residential schools. one by the catholic church. more than
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a 150000 children were forced to stay in them. many suffered physical, mental, and sexual abuse. one of the main architects of northern islands, good friday agreement has died. david trimble passed away and monday after a short illness catch nobody on looks. but back at his political career, wholesale that he wasn't academic and a politician who for years took an uncompromising stance with hardline policies. but all that change when david tremble, surprised allies in critics by leading northern islands unionist pro british majority into a peace deal with nationalists and republican opponents. a towering figure in northern ireland and british politics. he became the architect of the good friday agreement. or it helped n 3 decades of sectarian and political violence known as the troubles were the gorilla group, the i r a was fighting british forces and pro british paramilitary groups.
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not just to bring about the ent terrorist, but also to end what has an effect been a cold war between the 2 parts of ireland over the course of the last 75 years, until lesser extent, a cold war between the republic and the united kingdom. the good friday agreement broke by the u. s. during bill clinton's presidency marked a turning point and in 1900. 98 as ulster unionist party leader tremble won the nobel peace prize share with his catholic adversary, john hughes. that same year, he was elected as the 1st minister of northern ireland in a new power sharing parliament, but animosity and criticism followed. many in northern ireland grew tired of tremble and his colleagues. he was eventually eclipse when the hard line reverend em. paisley went on to share power with chin fain the political wing of the i r a. despite a combative personality,
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trimble earned the respective many for reaching beyond religious and political lines. david trimble was 77 years old. when the yellow dogs, the editor of the irish boys, newspapers joining his life from new york city. thank you very much indeed for being with us. and i'll just say it's quite clear that david trimble was a polarizing figure. was that a reflection of what he was like as a person? yes, as a person who was very just difficult. i had many conversations with him and he was very hard to find a guy who didn't find lot of enthusiasm when a lot of things he was basically an academic and his snob. basically, he was very proud of his background as a law professor queens university. belfast pretty politically journey was quite extraordinary. he began his friendly career, an organization called vanguard, which is essentially a fascist group of lawyers, paramilitaries, which was bound to try and separate and keep the separation between northern
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ireland and, and the irish republic. and then he crosses right across the whole political met mainstreamed to become a nobel prize peace winner in 1998, which is quite nice for me journey. and he took great was, i mean, he came down to one huge gesture, more than anything which was his ability to, to side on behalf of his party. that he would take to great clepe into the unknown . and that he would commence negotiations and would encourage and feign which up to that point had never been attempted. northern ireland, he signed his own political death warned by doing that. and he probably knew that at the time. but in fact, it was a very brief step. but apart from that, his career was very strange. many ways because he was very militant, he led marches through catholic areas. hey, barely survived many leadership challenges. and he was an ottoman very, very difficult person to know. we're showing great bravery when de venue occasion
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demand. i want to ask you about his role in the, in the piece to cuz i was reading your, the article that you'd written about him. and you mentioned, there was one point that he nearly caused the collapse of the peace process because he ordered that the protestant order should be allowed to march to drum creek through the catholic neighbourhood. was this a deal? do you think that he felt that he wanted to make or was ideal, that tremble felt he absolutely had to make for ireland? i think he had to make his i think he knew that unionism and ronada role did run out of excuses, turned him into hidden reality is that the demographic numbers showed at national will have much larger numbers in about 20 years. 10 unions have in northern aren't and that he calls his own political catechism. so he was aware of all those things . he was quite as far guy. and he saw the opportunity to begin negotiations and create history. and in the process,
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create his own political legend because if you told me that well, so he was elected that he would be the man who are going piece, i would seriously doubt. and most people were who were in favor of the or is p process. we're in despair when he was elected headed union is foggy, but he proves every one of us wrong by doing the exact opposite of what everyone expected. to think the deal would have happened anyway. but maybe it might have taken a longer or did it take somebody like david trimble to actually pull that together and make it happen here sitting here, right. it's a bit like nixon going to china who yoni politician who could pull it off. it would take a real hard write his re wing politician to pull off the deal between nationalism and unionism. and david friedman certainly represented that nobody was to his right . thank on to the very end of, of his food and clear. do you think the david trembles beliefs and policies and
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thoughts still live on an island? how do you think ireland nowadays has been affected by the legacy of your like of david trimble. it's been transformed is gone from the troubles where there is an average of 3000 people year, been killed to basically 0 numbers. you have a political process that has its own problems, but nobody's killing anyone any more. and there is a, there is a sense structure in place. now, here's an assembly in place to the government and place to rest of the problems mainly cause actually not by the union, for by the british government. but i trembled. none of the hood a happened was no doubt at all. and i said out of the person who was never an admirer, especially at the beginning, but you had to hold a grudging was fact. and i think i was acknowledged to when he won the nobel prize . and for that one moment when he stepped outside, all the history in all the bad things that happened and said, i would, i would offer my hand in peace. i would go to piece with way of literally an
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extraordinary gesture, given that the situation that the u. k and ireland are facing i at the moment with, with brags it and so on. do you think that there is a place in modern day ireland? northern are now for a david trimble or do you think that he had his time and am history if you like, has moved on history and moved on mange. david trimmer was a man of his time. he was the man who had merged as a hard liner. as time of conflict, there is no longer any conflict. everybody knows to, to the end of this story will be the most likely united are and would in 2025 years . that's to big battle. now it's a very def about them to maintain the trend was fighting. he was fighting for a p seal, had ended a troubles to issue now the united ard and, and what are not going to happen or kind of happened. and i think that c h should
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has failed to buy and people had to moment really interesting to get your thoughts on the so thank you very much indeed sir. neela don't. thank you. thank you. students are back in schools and sir lanka, after the government said it would provide fuels for children, could get to classes, but they'll only be in lessons 3 times a week. shank and school supplies ran low months ago because of an economic crisis . delivery is only started again in the last few days. when fernandez reports from colombo, you have kids basically who are struggling to get to school. i mean, we've spoken to parents, we've spoken to school, van drivers, all of them echoing the same thing. i had one lady, she's not just a mother, she's also a teacher. she came with her daughter on a scooter. she said she spent 2 days, obviously for her, her fuel quarter in order to ensure that she was able to bring her daughter to school. now another lady, a grandma who brings her daughter to school, said look, we have been forced to use a 3 wheel, a taxi because obviously the fuel is,
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is so limited that even the kind of a family vehicle can't be used for that purpose. and essentially she said she paid almost double the fact that these are people on a day to day basis who are finding things really difficult. and as a result, you know, for the kids there's all that uncertainty and up over upheaval. so even school bands, i mean they're just not only dealing with the issue of having to q for such long periods, but also in massively increased prices. so all of these really, ultimately having an effect on the kids, members of the awesome regional trading block or condemning mere mars military rulers, over the execution of for pro democracy activists. b u n. the u. s. have also criticized. the military's and her protests were being held in the city of young, gone against the move showman, you and former hip hop artist point. yes they are for are among the activists who been executed all the forward accused of helping
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a civilian resistance movement. let's fall to military since last year's crew and the cracked on on protests. canyons had to the poles in 2 weeks to choose their next president's former prime minister dingum on the current deputy president william brutal other main contenders. both veteran politicians, a promising change. montgomery reports from king gallop. kenyans is struggling with rising food and fuel prices, but no expenses are being sped in election campaigns. deputy president william retail is one of 2 main contended political alliances, shifted dramatically after he fell out with his boss, outgoing president, who kenyatta group says among the candidates talking about the cost of living. so they're not always explaining exactly how they'll address it. we will organize the economy and reduce the cost of living. his main opponent, right over dinner,
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has run for president for times before. many believe he's been rigged out of some past election victory. some i this time the historically dominant political establishment is backing him or presenting. yeah. okay, good option is our number one, enemy canyon's money goes into individuals pocket. going presidents who re, kenyatta is among those backing. brian le activists say, can yet have government has been even more corrupt than those that came before it rail as promising change. retail held the 2nd most powerful of his in kenya for the last 9 years. so promising change many kenyon, the not convinced by promises to tackle corruption, it's a card that they play football next at the public and get ported by was the power we have seen what they do when they have power. and none of that convinced me that they have any real desired rupture. some previous elections were contested largely
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along ethnic lines. this time, the politicians are talking more about see, especially compared to the campaigns in 2007. those poles followed by ethnically targeted violence. more than a 1000 people were killed, you know how the main site or represented in the coalition. so because every vote counts i, the parties do not have the luxury of demonizing any particular area. the pity impulse to retail slightly behind railer, was enough voters still undecided to swing it. a significant amount of money is expected to change hands in the final stages of the campaigns. kenyon, the g to vote in 2 weeks time. malcom web al jazeera keeping gala kenya wanted to people and watch the listing of cell pablo to demand greater support for brazil's women of color. the protests say president jericho sonata has done little
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to help women during his job and office matter, encouraging people to vote for his rival in the upcoming elections most and not recently increase the social assistance program for lower income households. pretty, is argue the gestures come to late. japan's executed a man convicted of killing 7 people come here to kato, had rammed a truck into a crowd of pedestrians and took you in 20 or 8 before going on. a stabbing rampage, and other 10 people were injured or wounded. in the attack, kato was hanged on tuesday, but he's in canada. have shot that. a gunman who killed 2 people and injured to others near vancouver. police say the suspect 1st targeted a casino at midnight before firing at a homeless shelter, a bus stop, and then a highway. it was fine by an emergency response team the highway bypass. it's not non white county, the attacks, the final 2 contenders in the race to become britain. next, prime minister have faced often a tv debate. while the chancellor of the exchequer wishes to knock unfolding the
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secretary liz trust, debated taxes and the cost of living crisis was a spot of china on the war in ukraine. around $200000.00 conservative party members will vote in their final choice results going to be out on september. the 5th proposal is with me that we get the short term sugar, rush of unfunded borrow tax. but that would be followed by the rush of choices and higher mortgage. right. and i want to know my tax rate for 70 is how enough can you claim that that's going to drive economic growth and where have the growth policies been for the past 2 and a half years to drive investment into all towns and city, which is what i would do is i would realize the pace practice oppertunity. i would do things like change solvency to a method and i get on with.
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