tv News Al Jazeera August 1, 2022 7:00am-7:31am AST
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ah, we have more cameras than they do because where the people, a bigger rug with regular peaks on a just, you know, we understand the differences and similarities of cultures across the world. so no matter where you call hand out is era will bring you the news and current affairs that mattie out is there. ah, a oh, the rocky politician looked at us out a just more people. the joint protest is occupying the country's parliament, his pro iranian ship owens states against the state.
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ah, hello, i'm darn jordan. this now does he are alive from to hell. also coming up, hopes that a grain ship could set sail from ukraine on monday. the 1st since a deal with russia to ease the global food supply crisis, remote communities in danger from a while, find the u. s. state of california with emergency cruise battling to save homes and lab. i won't touch tight when it goes crenza right now. kelly didn't mind england's football fans finally have something to celebrate maybe 60 years. is that come to last one? a major ah, iraq, she a politician, looked at a sudden, is asking all iraq is to join protest us what camped inside parliament. on saturday,
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thousands of his supporters stormed the building in baghdad for the 2nd time in a week. they are demanding a complete change to the political system, but their pro iranian ship, opponents accused them of trying to stage a coup, torso jabbar. we report somebody, rocky parliament in the capital, baghdad. the morning after the remnants of what's taken place here. this is the area outside iraq's parliament building now home to demonstrators for the foreseeable future. they come and go under the watchful eye of security personnel belonging to the man they follow. she a leader, mother of sutter ah, known as southerners. they're fed up with the political system. they have come from all over the country. 27 year old ali arrived in baghdad on wednesday and took part in the 1st storming of this building. the odd to say good look that the saga you promised look the dos other to stay here as long as it takes we reject the
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government and want the cra politicians to be punished, including former prime minister maria molecule. we are waiting for orders from our leader said what for the souther was leadership represents reform and let me get to what the law jawad could whom who jamie is a cleric from now jeff. he's also been in the capital since wednesday. he teaches in one of the seminaries in the holy city, belonging to this other family and says he's helping mac federal sutter fulfill his wish for a better iraq, oklahoma out here. what the me, this is what we want a united iraqi government. we want to achieve one solid iraqi government. we don't need anything other than that. we're staying here because of demands that were presented by the representative of the iraqi people. so i had looked at our solder little so these protestors are making themselves comfortable worried if they leave and peace could hold an unannounced session to approve the candidate nominated by the wrong back group. well, how much i also donnie. this is iraqi, close to,
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to said, it was passive by the americans in 2003, and it was really between like, 2005 is one of the main reasons is industries are here today until this document is amended fundament, i susan maria, back as my son for turkeys president says the 1st ship carrying grain could leave ukraine on monday. abraham cannon says the joint coordination center in istanbul will finalize export route soon. the senator will monitor the shipment coming from ukraine's ports, russia ukraine, major global, wheat suppliers. you and broker deal day sign in july could ease global grain prices, which have climb since the russian invasion. john henry has more from odessa. those ships carrying ukrainian grain might leave. as soon as monday,
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turkish presidential spokesman says, if all is well, if there are no logistical problems, and if there are no security issues, those ships are expected to sail tomorrow. he says there's a high likelihood that that will happen. we'd al jazeera talk to one of the captains of a boat at church mores loaded with grain. he said he was told to get ready to leave on monday to follow a pilot ship to istanbul, and then to places unknown. he said he has not been told that grain ultimately will go. but there could be security problems in one reason for that is there was a loud boom audible from near the port in odessa where we're standing right now. and that could signify a russian strike if that is the case, it's possible that those shipments could again be postponed. and just to give you an idea how dangerous the situation is right now. in nikolai of a challenge that the russians have struck multiple times. the head of a major grain concern called alexi about a tour sky of
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a company called nebulizer was killed along with his wife in one of this strikes there. in another instance of farmer in eastern ukraine drove a combine over and explosive and was injured. so from the harvesting to the port, it's a dangerous mission and then going through those newly safe channels that were brokered and in agreement with the united nations and turkey is also perilous because the waters in the black sea have been mind. so the effort here is to try to get those ships to their destination and to make sure that their grain can get out to the world at a time when there is a threatened global food shortage. president vladimir putin has signed a new naval strategy which identifies us and nato military infrastructure as its main challenges. who to made the announcement during russia is naval day ceremony in st. petersburg. if it russia with protective maritime borders by all means necessary. but he also said the delivery of new hypersonic cruise missiles will
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happen within months. lucia was visiting it, there was motionless device. key thing here is the capability of the naval forces. our navy can respond with lightning speed to all of those who infringe on our sovereignty. and freedom, it honorably fulfilled strategic tasks on the border of the country and in any part of the ocean in the world. it has high readiness for active operations of its coastal surface air and submarine forces. and it is constantly improving like with the latest zurich on hypersonic missile systems, which have no counter types in the world. yes. and no barriers. dear comrades, their delivery to the russian armed forces will begin in the coming months. well, anna, to leave them as a research fellow at the quincy institute, he says, the russian navy will face challenges in competing with the u. s. and nato feeds the russian navy. the surface navy, at least, is out numbered for to one by europe's nate. nature's european members alone, and of course by far more than that by the american navy. so in terms of
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numbers, there is really no contact where, of course, russia is, the quality united states is been nuclear weapons, which is why president putin repeatedly emphasizes russia's missiles technology. because this is the one area in which russia is still a super unlike the army, the navy has not for an equal, but we do know that suffered heavy losses in the, in the black sea, in the ukraine war. that may well simply illustrate the power of american weaponry which has been supplied to the ukrainians. the russian navy has always been considered to have had comparatively high morale and good commanders. but it cannot
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realistically fight nature the only area where the navy is actually in action is in the black sea and russia kind of reinforce the navy in the black sea. so it's not really clear what the rest of the surface navy is. therefore, of course, the submarine navy is there to threaten american the west with nuclear weapons. but she have me and marz military genta has extended a state of emergency for another 6 months. it was 1st declared to be military, depose the government of ang, thanks to tea in february, last year suits. he remains detained and has been charged with several offences. monitoring group say, more than 2000 people have been killed and 15000 arrested. and across, down since the 900 i went out on their team, we made up most efforts discharging the state duties with might but internal and external terrorists. and their conspirators are committed to the utter devastation rather than the flourishing of democracy in myanmar and the legal committee. the
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parallel government and terrorist organizations against the government, which is formed in the constitution, commit various ways and means to distract the security. peace and stability of the nation. number of a 2000 residence in northern california have been force on their homes by a massive wildfire. the mckinney fires the biggest in the state this year, and it's for the governor to declare an emergency my kind of report. it's called the mckinney fire. it started on friday, grew from one to 160 square kilometers in 24 hours and is now covering well over 200 square kilometers and continuing to spread. a mandate. free evacuation order was issued. an estimated 2000 people lift their home saturday, and another 500 had been evacuated in the course of sunday. many, leaving behind their possessions like this 81 year old. my house has gone all my furniture, all my clothes, shoes out. everything's gone. some decided to leave before the men de tree
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evacuation and managed to save some of their belongings. yeah, we got out before the fire, actually there was a red flag to get out of it. we don't want to be there to when they do to get out have 15 minutes to get out and figure out all are so packed every to goes to get out there. soon as possible. the swirling winds made the course of the fire impossible to predict. i mean, you know, from any angle at this point, it's just a matter where the when take it. over 60 hikers who are on the popular pacific chris trail were safely rescued. they had about 20 feet of visibility on the trail at the time that they chose to call in and try to get some help. the mckinney fires by far the largest, but across the west of the united states, small fires, of flaring up, erratic weather, threatening to bring dry thunder storms with dangerous lightning,
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but little to no actual rain. and above all, the soaring heat is creating the ideal conditions for fires to start and spread my cana ouch as era. and we'll have more on the extreme weather in other parts of the united states. torrential rains trigger, flash floods in the us state of kentucky, leaving a trail of devastation behind. and why it's getting more and more expensive for young americans to keep a roof over their heads or not. stay with us. ah! the journey has begun. the fee for world copies on its way to catherine group. your travel package today. hello there. now unseasonal weather has kept things very unsettled to southern areas of the middle east. you can see the cloud lingering there across some of the gulf states as we start to we, we are expecting more rain. we've already seen flooding. who likes the u. e o mon
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yemen as well as southern areas of iran, and that's where the showers continue to fall on monday, line showers as well pulling down across saudi arabia. that rain expect its full heaviest in western areas, trickling down into the mountainous areas of yemen. now, temperatures in south are below where we expect them to be. for this time of year, it has felt slightly cooler, but up north, across hill event, where they will be on the up for the likes of lebanon and syria, as well as churchy weight and iraq. and it is a story of extreme heat across north western areas. of africa, thanks, were ferocious heat wave that's affected morocco and algeria temperatures here continuing to rise. but it went to whether we have to look to that central. but we are expecting some thunderstorms to break out in gambia, stretching all the way to cameroon. heavy falls here in the days to come and southern areas of namibia seen some heavy rain that's edging into southern areas of botswana. we've got some fierce winds blowing about mozambique with some warnings,
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but it's an improving picture for cape town. official airline of the journey. new voices heating up the airway. lot of chinese listeners who, kimberly here, where they really think in their own country shifting paleface is the rise of citizen. journalism has changed everything. how do you happen to happen on social media? and the undeniable impact of the mainstream narrative australians with holes with those images front of mine who would of very much going put her in the media as well as on the battlefield. their listening post dissects the media on al jazeera. ah ah,
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welcome back to mind about top stories here, this our iraq, she a politician, looked at a santa, is asking all the rockies to join protest as a camp inside parliament is support a storm the building on saturday for the 2nd time in a week. and demanding a complete change to the political system. as watson for turkey's president says, the 1st ship carrying grain could leave ukraine on monday. the deal was broken by the you and in turkey. it was signed by russia and ukraine in july. it's intended to ease global grain prices and of a 2000 people in northern california had been forced from their homes by a massive wildfire. the mckinney fire scorched more than $200.00 square kilometres of land inside a national forest in just 2 days. is the largest place in the state so far this year. and at least 20 people have died in floods in the southeast and us state of kentucky. the numbers expected to rise as a search for survivors continues. flash flooding as destroyed roads, bridges, and disrupted cellphone service. hampering rescue efforts in one of the poorest parts of the country. saint was robin reports. torrential rains and flash floods
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sweeping away homes, uprooting trees, tearing families apart. at least 4 children are among the dozens killed in the us state of kentucky. siblings, the oldest 8, the youngest, just to mother nature's fury has left behind. little more than debris and destruction. mm hm. all right, so even say, are there any mail yet? no key as dennis weather forecasting models that governments have used for decades are obsolete in an ever warming world. this is what the rainy season is going to look with each flood. it keeps getting harder with each flood. we hope
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that's the biggest one, and it never seems to n s people try to come to terms with what they've lost grim predictions and more warnings from the governor. i'm worried that we're going to be going to be fine and bodies for weeks to come. as people in these areas are looking at the next couple days, make a plan for sunday afternoon through monday. when the storms leave, make sure you are in a safe place. i don't want to lose one more person. we care about you. it's not fair, this going to rain again, but it is a search and rescue operations continue repairing infrastructure remains a problem for another day. thousands of people don't have power, shelter or clean water. the appalachian region is home to some of the poorest communities in america. extreme rain has wreaked havoc on their doorsteps. people who didn't have much to begin with have lost everything, is in basra,
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v ultra 0. so sports news now in england, a beaten germany and extra time to win the women's euros for the very 1st time. as england's 1st major trophy and football, since the menu on the will cut in 966 catalogue has had a young asthma, a dramatic win for england, and it goes from joy. gotcha. i can't think of the winning goal by chloe kelly during extra time. crowned england 02022 champions. for the 1st time. the final score 2 to one against germany. scarce is history may before $87000.00 fans in a sole del wembley stadium, the highest attendance of any european championship final, men's or women's whom outside the stadium celebrations echoed across england,
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including london's trafalgar square. it just shows what amal sideways we've had. i was saying, keep guarantee winning more tre, phase atmosphere man was so nice. it was warm. it was half a fancy, the sport, suspense, and victory has united the nation and inspired future generations. and players are soaking at all in our i now i enjoyed him. i ran all the time the home enjoy the moment is going to when again my this again. so. yeah, enjoy every man of him. after multiple championship winced, german fans were shocked at their loss. but face no other option but to accept defeat. it was in a meeting like 9 times, so it was very exciting me to meet you.
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the queen has congratulated the inspirational lionesses on their historic when adding their success goes far beyond the trophy. now the new year champs are enjoying that success for their team. country no and or sport. oh yeah, that's the loop is leanne dizzy. so let's explore the broader impact to this tournament with lisa de vana. she's in australian professional footballers joins us live now from perth, in australia, at least a great to have you with her. so england, when they're 1st ever major women's championship in dramatic fashion, i hope you stayed up to watch the game there in australia. i mean, the magnitude of this achievement for women's football is just huge, isn't it? ah, it's, it's massive in patch on the way she's gone globally. you know that success is just fantastic both for the school and women's board in general. i mean in, in terms of the football itself, lease, i mean there wasn't much between england and germany in terms of the teams on the
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pitch. these were the 2 best performing sides in the competition. what does it tell us? do you think about how far women's football has come for the players and the fans? of course. oh, it's massive. i mean it's all start. so with that, the professional is with the legs. you look at the top will change there in europe, other, the full talk team, team legs in the, in the competition. and now when you said professionalism and you'd primitive marketing and now you crate crate, you know, a great athletes. this is what you get. you create this great atmosphere where people want to in tune with, with women's football. let. let's talk about some of your own personal experiences . because football has traditionally been a man sports and many women may feel the school isn't white for them. in your experience, lisa, one of the obstacles that women like herself face when tried to take up the sports . ah, look, you know, when i start off mockery, you know, i, i didn't have
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a proper dia, you know, we would always get handouts from, from the men. you know, we went hides particularly myself, who comes from perth. you know, you have to be extremely talented. all gifted or have something about yourself to, to be saying that term for them to invest in new, to fly to the east and co tice where it's, you know, the most of the players from sydney and melbourne and brisbin plight. so, you know, you had to go with those obstacles and there weren't any programs. grassroots, nothing came, you know, as tom went by, you started to say the generation change, not all became massive when you started to invest and sponsors jumped on board to think to think there's always going to be a back lisa in terms of pay for women footballers and, and, and men, i look a little bit, i do. ah, but it's, we're not too far off. i think, you know, you know, physically tightly and technically, you know, we've gone to a new level and i think are, you know, the game. now people wanna invest in that,
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um and it's great that when now that the game is slowly becoming a whole men and women, you know, juniors know the way a working together to create this because there's no other global sport right now that can match it. lisa, what do you think this win means for the future of women's football? more broadly, i mean the australia, new zealand host, the women's world cup. i think this time next year. what sort of grassroots legacy will there be following these big competitions? like the euro's like the women's faithful woke up next year. look, you know, they stop a competition. she and i will in supply young girls the petition participation rights who go young girls want apply and also lights, flaws. and for a future, korea, you know, you've got the now in your decline, your is, you know, you've got the european, you've got, you know, the champions league, you thought the women's woke up, you've got a lot of, ah, major competition. you can compete in. so it's gonna be absolutely massive and i think it's just gonna get bigger and better as, as you go on listen on
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a really good to get your thoughts. thank you very much for talking about his early so thank you. thank he now housing costs are surging. around the world and renters are feeling the pressure new york singapore in london us. some of the cities with the biggest average increases so far this year. across the u. s. monthly rental prices are up 15 percent compared to this time last year. rental costs in cities like nashville and cincinnati has climbed by more than 30 percent. and in austin, texas, rents have increased by nearly 50 percent. and as kristen swimming reports from new york working class, families are taking the biggest hit. so this is the master bedroom. you can find apartments with amazing views, but affordable housing is hard to come by in manhattan. average rents recently topped $5000.00 a month here, and the increases are spilling over to neighboring communities like jersey city, new jersey, $3400.00 for it. buffalo too much already. that's where this man took to social
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media to vent about his 2 bedroom apartment, jumping up more than $1200.00 a month. this last one here is a $37.00 more than 37 percent increase from rent. he's hardly alone. new york city has historically had high rents, but now everybody's having historically higher rents, you know, in the se, in particular, where there's been a lot of growth in it. atlanta, charlotte, nashville, texas. the corona virus pandemic said many city families looking for larger places to live while supply chain issues and rising costs have slowed down new construction. a study by the u. s. census bureau in june found that more than 13000000 people nationwide were behind on ranch or mortgage payments, and there are signs of rising homelessness. michael de luca ended up on the street when he could no longer navigate the stairs to an apartment. he was sharing with a friend. now despite a fixed income of $2100.00 a month, he can't find a landlord willing to take him the media again in the palm of the studio,
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the $1500.00. i have that $42000.00 income. i don't have it, i need a co signer. i go to the people, they have to make 84000 who signed to me. they want to make sure they're going to get their money. he's getting emergency shelter from the city wanting it. but advocates say that's a costly short term solution. we need government support. we need public private participation to help incentivize private capital on private partners to come in and help solve this problem. they're demanding plans for a luxury tower to be built here in lower manhattan, on public property, be made 100 percent affordable for working class families. we have lots of luxury. we have luxury apartments, if they can't fill a building right behind you. that was i went to foreclosure because they couldn't sell these luxury apartments, but we don't have affordability developers under pressure have committed to making 25 percent of it affordable for those. currently looking for
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a place to call home. it is too little too late. kristin salumi al jazeera new york, an increasing number of to nas ins. i heading to europe in such of better opportunities. a coven 19 pandemic hit the economy hard leading to job losses. but leaving for europe can also mean risk in your life. as racial said, our reports from tunis at 1st glance, they seem to be resting under the shade of trees, but not because of hot summer sun there embarked on what could be the most dangerous journey of their lives. they quoted haga, it's the word, yankton is his use for colon dust and crossing over the mediterranean to europe. abdulla is just 17 years old from cardon, a city in central tunisia for the past 3 months. he has been coming to this park to look out for containers as ships that he can jump on to each of right to europe, poorly. i have to evolve a thought, my father's out of work. my mother is old and see. i have a sister studying. i studied after drake 7 then dropped out to help my family. i
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tried to get training for a job, but i couldn't find one. i have to help him. i know it's risky. i don't have any other solution but to go abroad and get a job. wife's waiting, sometimes 4 months. they said they are often arrested, beaten, and even have dogs set on them by police several times. 19 years of a tiff shows the scars on his leg where he sees put his dogs bip him, wheeled about that last year my mother sold the land that she'd inherited to pay traffickers for me to cross to italy, off the coast guard round and sank. our boat, i nearly drowned, even though i'm a strong swimmer to his. he has a beautiful country, but only for those who have money for had some money. i'd start my own business here. we've lost everything. i can't afford the traffickers. i have to do harker. i just want to work and live with dignity, nearly 40 percent off, 20 just youth or unemployed every year. many of them come to this park alongside the port of la goulet. every car dealership or laurie presents an opportunity off the days of watching and wait him under the code of darkness. these to kill these
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walls and store board one of the ships. and if they are lucky, they make it to the next port. but for many of them that journey and before it has even begun, these we do shows those who hid themselves inside trucks being caught by police. however, these young men are undeterred and for now the patiently watched the skyline to catch the next right. rescue said that al jazeera tunis, senegalese president marquis sales ruling coalition, says it's one majority in parliament after some days election. but local media reports they turn out, was just 22 percent. opposition. parties are angry, as some of their most popular candidates were disqualified from running. their worried that sale may try to change the constitution and run for 3rd term. critics of accused him of trying to break the 2 to him limit and one again in the presidential election in 2024. now these startrek actress michelle nichols
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has died at the age of 89 where you knew would be failure to be careful what you wish for me getting nicole's portrayal of lesson and to horror on the 19th. sixty's, sy fi tv show, broke color barriers, redefining roles or black actors. her son posted on facebook that she passed away from natural causes. nicholas had planned to quit star trek out for just one season . but martin luther king junior convinced her to stay on and african american sporting icon bill russell has died at the age of 88 russell became the 1st black coach in the n b. a. in 1966, the boston celtics, they won 11 championships while he was with them both as a play and coach. russell was also a civil rights activist, and 2011. he received the presidential medal of freedom from barack obama. ah.
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