tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera August 12, 2022 9:00pm-10:01pm AST
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with brand new restaurants like zoom and billionaire joining no boot nasir at chefs alan jackass and guest on a curio. and we cannot inspire beach club mammals. i could typhon and alma islands do all of that while enjoying out warm hospitality. when it comes to shopping, you'll find everything from local craft, to world class shopping malls. and for the adventurous take part in our adrenalin fueled exclusive experiences, then relax or tranquil beeches counter has everything you would want in a destination. in fact, it's the obvious choice for the faithful will cut 2022. so why go anywhere else? ah, this is al jazeera. ah,
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i'm carrie johnson. this isn't use our law from don't or coming up in the next 60 minutes. a controversial office, salman rushdie is attacked on stage in new york. his condition is unknown. the deal itself was fundamentally flawed. the iranians had violated it repeatedly. former us national security advisor, john bolton tells al jazeera or the international arrangement. nuclear deal should not go ahead. a drought is declared for parts of england as temperatures continue to soar, and millions suffer from the lack of rainfall. thousands hope protests in support and opposition of the rocky shiite leader macarthur al serra and support there is 100 days to go until the fif. a well cut begins in qatar. football shape piece is getting underway a day earlier than originally planned with the host kicking off the tournament against ecuador. on november, the 20th, ah,
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author, solomon rusty has been taken the hospital after being stabbed in new york. he was being introduced for a speech where he was attacked, his writing that led to death threats from iran in the 1980s. let's get more on this now with christian salumi who's in new york and kristen, what more can you tell us? ah, well we know that salman rushdie was stabbed in the mack. he was taken by helicopter to a hospital and the man who attacked him is in custody. that is all we know his condition at this point i can tell you that he was speaking. 8 about to give a lecture at a place in rural new york, the western part of the state, an area known as the chocolate institute, which is a nonprofit education center slash rewards. people had gathered to hear him speak and he was being introduced sitting on the stage when
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a man jumped up and attacked him. law enforcement officer was there at the time he intervened, arrested the man and help was brought to salman rushdie rather quickly. already we're hearing from leaders around the world, boris johnson recently tweeting out that he was appalled by what had happened. he said that he was doing something that we should not have to defend, exercising the right to free speech. but of course, rush is a controversial character. his 988 novel, the c panel versus was widely seen as heretical blasphemous. in the muslim world, it was banned in countries like india, pakistan south africa and bangladesh. and then a year later, a ron's ayatollah khomeini condemned issue issued a decree calling for his death. because of what was written in that book for 10
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years, some rush, she lived in hiding, always continuing to write, but lived in hiding and continued to produce works here in the united states and in the west. he was seen more and more out in the open appearing and television shows and interviews at events. it seemed that he had put that controversy behind him, but in the, in the muslim world, certainly, he remained a controversial character. someone looked at unfavorably for his portrayal of islam . we also heard in the last couple hours from the governor of new york. she described them as someone who would speak truth to power. the muslim world probably would see that a bit differently, but certainly many here in the united states concerned about his well being. and it should be said also that the speech that he was about to give the lecture
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that he was giving was on the united states as a haven for artists to are being exiled or prosecuted. and local organizations say that he was recently advocating for ukrainian authors and looking for residency for them so that they could continue their work and escape prosecution ok from now on this moving story. kristin slew me in new york. thank you very much. indeed. we understand in fact, that some man rushed. he's currently in surgery in the hospital, we're having reports on that with that, stay with this now and speak to was on the she could, she's an associate fellow at chatham house. he joins us now via skype for more petty. yes. so why is c so controversial in the muslim world? even today? what is your as your importer indicated?
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i mean, much of the controversy centers really on claims that some on recei committed an act of blasphemy in his, in his novel, the satanic verses in which he is meant to have insulted the profit. and of course, as, as we well know that the lead to a fatwas a ruling by law many in 1989 calling for a roof see to be put to death for this, this act of insult and, and blasphemy. and how did the fact were on him changed the perceptions of islam in the west? he think well there's. 2 no doubt that at the time there was, there was an impression drawing of an extremely divided
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world, the west and, and the misson world. and the mister world was seen in some sense, or by, by many in the west, as still stuck in what might be called a medieval world view. that still a privileged religion in ways that you know were misunderstood or poorly understood or in the west. and which of course, at that time projected itself very much as you know, an advanced civilization which are held values such as freedom of expression, particularly the freedom of create an expression. now of course, since then since the late 19 eighties, things have moved on and things are simply no longer as a black and white as they perhaps once were if ever because even back in the
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1980s, there were many in the muslim world who while dismayed perhaps by, by receives or by rusty's work in his novel. i did not believe that a, that it m a was, you know, amounted to an act of glass to me, nor indeed did many in the muslim world believe that he deserved to die for it. but those voices of moderation, and indeed those voices are more of more secular dispensation well crushed because the momentum had built up in the way of humanity's thought law in ways that became extremely difficult to contain. and which led to this, this is boring polarization between
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a so called a west committed to the freedom of expression and a so called muslim world, a lot in some kind of medieval, a theological discourse. neither of these stereotypes. of course, you know, we're, we're section of the true picture of 2 entities that were actually very, very deeply divided internally was on a secret very much appreciate your time and analysis here on al jazeera. thank you . thank you. now former us president donald trump says he won't oppose the publication of the warrant and allow the f b i to search his home. the u. s. attorney general says he personally made a decision to search trumps florida state on monday, marik garland has asked a federal court to release the warrant, calling it a matter of public interest. i'm involved ripples. he's described the f. b,
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i search of his florida state as an, an american unwarranted and unnecessary and breaking what donald trump says. he's encouraging the release of the warrant. even though it was drawn up by what he describes as radical lift democrats and possible future political opponents. the request to unseal the warrant is a rare move by the u. s. justice department. good afternoon. and according to the attorney general, that's because trump himself disclosed the search. i personally approve the decision to seek a search warrant in this matter. second, that apartment does not take such a decision lightly where possible in a standard practice to seek less intrusive means as an alternative to a search. and to narrowly scope, any search that is undertaken. if the motion is granted, the water will be made public and could reveal what investigators were looking for . its reportedly connected to allegations,
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the former president removed sensitive files from the white house says once usually remains last fight during expending investigation. let's say the public interest is mounting along with fear the violent responses from some of the far away supporters claiming that things may have been planted by the f b. i. and extraordinary allegation that matter what the circumstances out with donald trump, no matter what he has done, he is always able to present himself as the victim. on thursday, an armed man try to breach an f b i field officer systematic. he was shot and killed in a stand off with a police pulse on trump social media platform from an account bearing the suspects name mentioned the attempt to storm the f. b i office and encouraged others to prepare for war. the man is also believe to happen part of the january 6th attack on the capital one or just as cross over to my honda now in washington
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d. c. mike, what's the latest on this ongoing saga? well, the interesting point is that donald trump says that he is happy full the document to be unsealed, but he has some power himself to simply unseal the document along with the infantry of what was taken from his morrow law. go home without any form of legal process whatsoever, but that legal process is continuing, and the next hour is the is the timeline for trump's lawyers to reply to the d. o. j demand that the documents be unsealed. if they refuse, then it's likely to go to the florida judge who made to be a warrant available in the 1st place. then it gets a bit complicated because they off 3 articles in issue here. one is the affidavit o, which the department of justice used to justify the warrant. second,
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b is the warrant itself. and thirdly, it's the inventory of the items that the f, b, i removed when it searched are the moral law. go home. now the judge should there be the matter, be contested, could decide whether to unseal one or all of these particular documents. and i must just that as well that the wall street journal has just reported that it's viewed the infantry compiled by the f b i. it says that there are some 12 sets of documents for of which it says are marked top secret and meant to be read only at a special government facility. so that is the wall street journal. we should know within the next few hours or whether or not that reporting is correct, but i must add as well that it may not be immediate. the judges, i will take the own decision about how to release the documents. should he decide to do so. marianna live for us in washington dc. thank you for that. now the
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former us national security adviser to donald trump has described revelations of an alleged plot to kill him as very serious from bolton that says the evidence in the case is overwhelming. us justice department accuses iranian revolutionary god and the moment for sophie of being involved in the scheming prosecutors say it was likely in italy, ation for the american strike that killed ron's elite. could foresee that because some sort of money in 2020. i spoke to ambassador bolton the short time ago and asked him about his reaction to the recent revelations of an alleged plot to assassinate him. i think it's a very serious matter. i think be charging documents that the u. s. department of justice filed last week and were unsealed a few days ago presented an overwhelming case that this is the government of iran targeting a former government official in this case may to, to try and attempt to assassinate. and as the charging document indicates,
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and as others have said, this threat extends well beyond me. a former secretary of defense mark esper, former secretary of state, mike pompei, when number of other people whose names have not really become public are targets of the iranian government. and i think it's, it's very serious, it's can, i'm out really to an active bore by iran against the united states. at the same time that the, the, the us government is being urged to get back into the 2015 nuclear deal with the ra, which i think is a huge mistake. but why should this alleged plot suddenly make any difference to president biden's position? well, i don't know that it will make any difference to president by and i think that's a great tragedy. i think the administration is pursuing re entry into the nuclear deal like they're going after the holy grail. it's an obsession. and i think it
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ignores the very real dangers to the united states. if iran gets access to frozen funds around the world, gets free of the sanctions and continues and finds not just its nuclear weapons program, but its support for terrorism, not just in the united states in europe and throughout the middle east. it is the most of the single greatest threat to peace and security in the region, but many countries came together to agree the iran in in 2015. are you saying that all those leaders us simply role? yes, they are wrong. the fact is that a government like that in iran who's commitments don't get honored, whose word can't be trusted, should never have been allowed. any ability to enrich uranium to any grade even to react your grade. which by the way, amounts to 70 percent of the work necessary to get to weapons grade uranium. the
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deal itself is fundamentally flawed. the iranians have violated it repeatedly. they have excluded the international atomic energy agency from the military bases where the nuclear work is really being carried on the whole. the whole thing was a colossal fraud, perpetrated by the ayatollah, as are you saying that iran has an active nuclear weapons program at the moment? then i'm saying that's exactly correct, that continues to enrich uranium. it's engaged in work, but the would point toward weapon is ation of enriched uranium continues of a vigorous ballistic missile program. there's no evidence whatever and never has been that the government of iran has made a strategic decision to give up nuclear weapons. don't get me wrong is why was freedom from the economic sanctions? and it will pledge almost anything to get that. but it's,
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it shows no sign of doing the serious work necessary to give up the weapons program when it, the sanctions very much the population didn't don't them. and you've been in politics a long time. you know that if she's all into connected now, israel has been building relationships with the gulf states. does that help or hinder the suffering that the palestinian people face? well, i think if you're confusing issues here, if, if, if you try and equate what's happening in iran with what's happening between israel and the palestinians. i think the real tectonic shifts in the middle east come from the growing realization that gulf arab states and israel have a lot more in common, a lot more to worry about from the threat from tehran than they have in opposition to each other. that's where the historic agreements to exchange full diplomatic relations with bahrain and the new e morocco,
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sudan had come from i think other arab states will join that in due course. i certainly hope that that's the case because they see the threat from iran similarly, and i think that's why it would be such a terrible mistake for the united states to ignore what its best allies in the region are sang and go back into this nuclear deal. let me ask you a domestic us question. if i may want you make of the f b i said show of donald trump's heglum. is there any conceivable reason why a former president would be holding a documents related to nuclear information has, as has been widely speculated at his home? well, i think you put your finger on it right there in your last comments. there's a lot of speculation here. there's very little hard evidence and speaking as an alumnus of the department of justice, i think that the department does its work in an honorable professional way. the
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search warrant was approved by a federal court, wasn't just executed by the f b i. but i think the fundamental point is, we don't really know enough to have an informed opinion. the justice department, like most prosecutors in the united states, does its work in court, in its court filings in the appearances by its lawyers and court doesn't engage in public commentary on investigations or prosecutions. so right now we're having a, a, we're in a very heated political environment. a lot of rhetoric is being thrown around, but there's very little knowledge underlying that. i think it's possible in the coming days. we'll learn more. and then we can all have more informed opinions and in that heated environment, as he said, you think donald trump will run for president again and you think you should? well, i don't think you'll run again. i think i recognize that's minority position,
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but i think he knows he lost in 2020. he fears losing and 2024. he does not want to go down in history as a loser, and therefore he will, as usual talk incessantly about running right up until the last minute. but at that point, he will try instead to be the kingmaker for the republican nomination. and i think, i think that's how it will turn out. i hope he doesn't, ron, i hope for the sake of the country, and i, po, for the sake of the republican party. he does not run of 20 more heads on the news hour, including earning a crust. how argentina's oldest bakery is coping with soaring inflation, cows under quarantine, indian cattle farmers, race to control an outbreak or potentially devastating disease. but in sports half too difficult. start the season. we'll hear from the manchester united boss that's coming up with jack ah
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berg stream dry weather conditions across europe, a hampering trade and raising concerns about food supplies. a drought has been declared across large parts of england. none of the last 12 months have been dried, the normal across the u. k as a whole. and the national farmers union is a warning that up to half of the potato, carrot and onion harvests are expected to fail. meanwhile, in germany, larger ships and barges can no longer pass in parts of the rhine river because of the low water levels will cargo owners are having to pay for multiple shipments to get their goods delivered because vessels are sailing with reduced loads. and in france, while fires have forced 10000 people from their homes, the ease at satellite monitoring services blazes in france, spain, and portugal. i've already made 2020 to a record year for wildfire in south west europe. missouri challenge has more now from southwest london. this is usually one of london's i see that kind of green
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islands in the middle of the concrete jungle and look at it at the moment. you can see how dry and parts to is. this isn't ready grass anymore. this is basically straw. and where i'm standing is usually right on the edge of rush me a pons. it is much reduce the moments this water level as it was a couple of months ago. well, you can follow me and i'll show you how far is now have to walk a good. i think 15 meters also towards the rubber disgruntled ducks and geese. they're not very happy about it. this is happening all over the country basically. ponds like this drawing up resume was drawing up. i was out reporting a month ago or so on the day where he's reco sets in england, where the temperature smashing $340.00 degrees. since that time, there's been no need of the barest smattering of rain there is a drought announced across much of this country. what it means is that it gives the
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water company's license to start putting in restrictive measures measures that would stop people say, yeah, sort of taking particularly long showers or you know, water in the gardens, that kind of thing. some parts of the country already have made these announcements . yorkshire water has announced its 1st hose pipe back in 27 years. that's going to be coming in on the 26th of august that you've got south eastern, southern and welsh with the companies. they are also announcing restrictions as well, and there are absolutely going to be more of these coming. meanwhile, dominant cane is in berlin with more on those shallow waters in the right. the main concern in germany and so far as these temperatures are concerned and rivers will, it's the rhine river and let's be clear. it's not just germany which is affected by the level of the rhine, switzerland, france, germany luxemburg,
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the netherlands. they all have a role to play in working out what is happening with the rhine. what matters in one sense is that is now so much lower than it has been in recent months that certain types of ships can no longer apply their trade along this very large waterway. to give you an example, certain tankers of liquids like liquid gas, and that sort of thing are now charging 5 and a half times more money per tonne they transport than they were back in june. and the thing to say here is because there's so much less water physically in the river, it means that the depths of the river should have 4 ships to pass down. well, they're not the same depths anymore. so now companies who are transporting particular goods are having to transport perhaps 2 or 3 boats, because the one boat they would use which could be fully load laden cannot be or
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they're 1000 to fire fighters from across europe are battling a major wildfire in southwest france. historic drought conditions and reco temperatures are making it difficult for fire cruise to get the blazes under control. when it smith reports from austin's in the john firefighters in southwest france, using everything they can lay the hands on to beat back these rapidly spreading fires. 75 square kilometers of the year on region looks like this. drought and extreme temperatures have created an easily combustible mixture. lateral navies good at the de risk being complicated, because the temperatures are going up and precipitation is dropping firefighters from across europe. these are remaining and have been drafted in to help fight the flames. this is an area that already caught fire caught fire again to the fire fight is about to come back and douse the flames. one of the challenges for them is because the temperatures are so high and the ground is so dry as soon as the water hits the ground, it evaporates. so it takes a lot more water and
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a lot more effort to put out the flames. the risk of new fires is very severe. according to the local authorities. 10000 people have been evacuated from their homes. will know he both, so fires are still active along the edge of the 40 kilometer perimeter. they're advancing little by little so we are trying to keep the same priorities we had at the start of that is to protect that people have been evacuated and will keep protecting all these homes. villages here know they've had a lucky escape. the signs are everywhere, thanking the fire service for saving their homes. how to load up, what is the 1st time i've seen a catastrophe like that above all, a catastrophe for the bio diversity. it's an enormous catastrophe. we're not going to have enough forests left. it's really serious, i said, oh oh god, i'm clearing away. burnt trees from the roads so that fire fight is in volunteers and farm workers can get through and puts out as much of the fire as they can. the
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forests will eventually recover. but as the planet warms, an extreme weather becomes more frequent, it might not be long before flames. licking up these trees again, bernard smith al jazeera in the durant, southwest france. so the head here on there, a hostage standoff in beirut, turns a lebanon's trouble finances here from the lebanese administer of the economy and trade. i'm joan holly in edinburgh, whether world famous fringes back from fan demick hibernation, only to confront a brand new crisis. the spiraling cost of performing here. i'm going to take you to school on the walk you through the doors and sit down in class. i'm going to stick on you and i'm going to teach every single lesson you need to learn. schooling hoof 2 boxes prepared to enter the ring almost 30 years after the famous fathers. ah
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ah, you're locked in for your world's weather update for both the middle east stand africa beginning in the middle east and those winds are shifting around. so for places like cats are now coming in off the golf, so that means much more humidity. we go in for a closer look. there's those winds. anytime it comes off the golf, it's basically scooping up all that moisture and humidity shopping it rate into the city of the house. so high humidity, it will feel about 55 on saturday, or it's a pockets done. they've had some big storms here. this was a scene in karachi not too far away from the clifton beach area, had the windshield wipers going up full blast. they're much of the same in the forecast on saturday with this disturbance spinning around the arabian sea. chuck and rain there. so from grouchy to jacob bad, some pretty big downpours seem likely. turkey looks like this on saturday. no real
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change in the weather. some cloud showers never really too far away from its stumbles. so got to put the risk in there. and for central africa, it looks like this eastern portions dry, but pretty much west of nairobi is where we're going to get into some showers and storms. and a number of weather makers marching into south africa's cape province is over the weekend. this is the 2nd wind, rain and wind, so cape town, wind gusts of 55 kilometers per hour. bye for now. ah. on counting the cost of the un urges tax on the profits of oil and gas giants couldn't help ease the energy prices. biden signs a bill to boost of chip reduction is winning the semi conductor rate. and video game fails. death is it game over for the pandemic? boom. counting the cost on out there. we understand the differences and similarities of cultures across the world. so no matter how you take it will bring
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you the news and current affairs that matter to you. it's time for a memorable holiday with pegasus. it's time for turkey. set sail for new discoveries. enjoy. have new experiences. hit the shops, make wonderful memories. travel to turkey with pegasus, and with direct whites to istanbul, and tribe zone. book your ticket now for a memorable holiday. c y p g. yes, for our best prices. lou . ah, he watching al jazeera, a reminder about top stories. now or 3rd,
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salman rushdie has been attacked or giving a speech in new york that he said he suffered a stab wound to his neck and has been transported to hospital. former us national security advisor john bolton was told al jessie, that revelations of an alleged plot to kill him very serious. bolton says there is clear evidence that iran was behind the thought that it is tantamount to an act of war against the united states. u. k. government has declared a drought and parts of england. it's seen that dr. july, since 1935. some regions have already announced water restrictions, banning people from watching lot or washing cars. supporters and opponents of influential shiara lee, the mc target are center are rallying in iraq's capital. both sides have gathered outside the green se live parliament. there has urged his supporters to keep up their demands for political reform. for months of deadlock, lockwood, the white has more from just outside the greens or the 1st scene here in jed re
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a neighborhood near baghdad. the green zone not very far from the other protest. and these are the a supporters of the coordination framework. they've come from civil cities across iraq, there in the sergeant as you can see right behind me. and this, they say that they are chanting against the other supporters, the chanting in favor of the former prime minister in north america, the arch full of j at later looked at that i saw that they say that what is happening in the parliament is a violation of the state at sovereignty of the state legitimacy and that they are calling on the or in fact demanding the some other supporters to immediately leave the parliament had quoted so that they can give opportunity for state offices to operate. once again, on the other hand, as you know that some supporters i've been staging to sit in inside the green zone in front of the parliament, setting up dozens of tents. and they say they will not leave until the demands are
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achieved. the demands include the problem, be dissolved and analytics as be held as a way out of this current political impact. but meanwhile, other supporters, i've been calling for the colleagues on the colleagues and other cities to take those threats and to sign a petition to, to sell the pot of southern recently have been at, in a way or another have been alleviating the intensity of his rhetoric. calling on the protested here in judea to keep it peacefully. and meanwhile, security forces have been deployed in the area to prevent any possible flesh between the 2. but i even brought many lebanese people are calling a man who held employees hostage as a bank in beirut. a hero, he was trying to withdraw his own money to pay his father's medical bills. he surrendered peacefully to police after at 7 hour, stand off on thursday. people accuse the banking system in lebanon of misusing
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funds. then holly reports from by route a peaceful and to an hours long hostage crisis in the heart of the lebanese capital. but sam hassan laid down his gun and left the bank, escorted by security forces after a deal that gave him back some of his money. like millions of lebanese hassan has not been able to access his account since lebanon's financial crisis took hold nearly 3 years ago. what is my right? what is my money? i worked on many, many, many millions of liberties. people. they worked abroad, they worked and really bad economy. they saved their money, they put them in the bank, the legal they are not with us. the politics is not with us. the bank has not lived outside his relatives, friends and depositors gathered to show support to a man they say has been driven to the brink and had no other choice witness to say . the armed men visited the bank several times in recent days,
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demanding $5000.00 from his account to pay for his father's hospital bill. the bank refused to give him the money i. banks imposed limits on withdrawals in dollars and withdrawals in the local currency or at the rate far below the market price. a significant cut in the original value of deposits. thursday stand off is not the 1st of its kind. in january, a depositor withdrew $50000.00 from his account. after holding bank staff hostage, he spent a few weeks in jail. many feel they are paying the price for the financial collapse . i have some money, i don't have all the full. sometimes a but i did with banks have been major lenders to the government for decades. they say they are not at fault. blaming politicians firmly managing
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the economy. but people know many politicians are bankers, and they have been protecting themselves. instead of taking action to reverse the economic collapse than who their elders. eda paid it. i mean salon is at lebanon's minister of economy in trade. he says, a series of economic reform laws need to be signed before steps can be taken to ease the banking restrictions love on on as really going through a very, very difficult economic crisis. reforms major need for 11 on to be able to stop the bleeding and the economy and began looking at development and recovery. i have been a member of the negotiating committee with i m f we a, we have been working diligently to find the best exit really to secure the money of the deposit. first, none of the scenarios that we really worked on was an easy one. most of those laws
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are in the parliament waiting for the parliament to issue them once we issue those reform laws including the capital control that really puts a structure to the whole bank. in fact, once we issue the restructuring of the banking sector, the secrecy law for the banking sector and the budget 2022. then we can really start talking about serious next steps of opening up more the banks dealing with the deposit, hers giving hope that the deposit can begin having access based on a, on new laws that are out. com has returned to sierra the own after days of nationwide anti government demonstrations. there's an anger about rising cost of living. the testers are demanding 1st and to this other step down at least 20000 people have been killed, including security personnel. the government has imposed
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a nation wide curfew. interest has more from the capital free town. on a regular day, the streets of free town would be chalked with human and view killer traffic. that traffic is currently scanty. this has to do with a fears expressed by several unions. a lot of them are keeping of the streets and even away from the market, fearing that things could erupt once again. now, shops that are supposed to reopen have not actually operating. i'm not actually operating at maximum capacity. i look afraid to stay home, fearing that opening their shops will result into losses when be violence or when does violence. europe. now the government tries to address all of these concerns by members raced by villa street just over the past few days by trying to reduce the costs of petrol, a petrol stations. now some of these petrol stations are refusing to sell to members of the public simply because they will lose the prize is being set by the
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government. remember, this is a country that has not fully recovered from the civil war. the boiler crisis and like many other african countries that are dependent on import, this is a country that is struggling to find enough food to feed it. now whether or not the government will be able to address these challenges in the next few days. it's difficult to say for the time being, but people are watching close me, how the government tries to assuage the feelings and concerns of federal union and keep the peace of viral infection has killed thousands of cattle in india. some states have banned the transport of livestock and canceled animal affairs in response to the outbreak. has limited reports from dr. the bishops is disinfected every few hours. at least a dozen cows quarantined here sick from a virus can disease. this rehab center, the state of roger pon is home to nearly 1700 animals. many are infected.
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authority said the 1st potted symptoms 2 months ago. at iaapa, she had to see how to be exit and you get a lot of calls from the city. some have been in accident, even though you see it in garbage on the streets abroad. we check for symptoms when they're right. even those without symptoms are kept to be from i heard 4 weeks. he, lumpy skin disease is spread mostly by flies and mosquitoes. lumps like these start appearing on the skin, animals become weak and get fever. it's spreading fast. thousands of animals have died across india. most of them are cows. rogers state is the worst effected. the disease emerged in zambia a century ago in recent fossil asia have reported cases here in india it regularly infected sheep and goes. this is the 1st time that thousands of capital have got the disease. the lovely baby family owns 15 cows,
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like millions of others, their livelihood depends on cattle. she says she hasn't left them out in weeks. the model drag link could obligated if a forsake it will impact the milk. we can also fall sick and our incomes will also fall on top of that. the treatment will cost us a lot of money efficiency that testing animals regularly. the gold box vaccine is been given across india. but some districts are reporting a shortage of medicines and doctors mid production has also reduced in some areas. i'm gonna call me back if i'm not doing the party pharma depend a lot of capital. use them in fields and for milk of low make production of the economy and the incomes. we want the government to promise them. pre medicines will read such checking on the capital and the treatment is free. even here, the government is funding the treatment. ah roger sounds government is asking for
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donations to help fund the treatment efficiency. they plan to vaccinate as many animals to prevent future outbreaks. pardon him at the al jazeera jap or in west in india. and australian court has find google a $42000000.00 for collecting location data from android users without their consent. the suit was filed by australia, competition, and consumer watchdog. in july 2020, they said a google setting allowed to take john to collect, store, and use personal identifiable location data. well, google fix the issue through a software update in december 2018 argentina's. msn stations for july was the highest in 20 years, at 7.4 percent. that means accumulated inflation for the year, so far, is more than 46 percent, and is projected to rise above 90 percent by the end of 2022. daniel shamela visited the countries august bakery to find out how people are coping.
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luca bakery and lucon about an hour's drive west of one osiris, was found in 1875 by marcus, his great great grandfather, angelo. an immigrant from lombardy in italy is overcome several economic crises and marcos. his confident it'll survive the one now unfolding it out of him. do you know if he's a heart into millions or perhaps very good at coping because we're used to living this way and maybe because our grandparents have managed to survive every one of these crises, they had to face some of the sun disorders. but it's tough. he has to be alert to increase isn't the price of almost every thing, especially flower fuel plus the argentine pace are weakening against the us dollar while keeping his 30 plus staff and his customers happy. bread is one of life necessities, whatever the cost, it was in $1875.00. i continues to be at the heart of the battle to keep price is affordable, and the community functioning. the bakery workers light these ovens at 4 am,
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7 days a week. there have been many changes in the past 147 years, but some things remain constant. the scales, for instance, made in london even before lucre was founded. and of course customers with an appetite, but less and less money to spend a $1000000.00 the yeah. look what we do now is consumed less. we don't buy as much as we used to. so we keep costs down. or we take advantage of the promotions hyperinflation at more than 3000 percent, hit argentina in 1989, then social and economic catastrophe in 2001 is asia, is the results determine. it's like when you have, when you're sick, you're a fever, you measure fever, you're measuring phase, but it's not the call. the cause is the underlying monitoring interest upon which brig jared is in fish. so sergeant tina and the luca bakery of victims of
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crippling foreign debt and the war in ukraine. we saw the price of flour rocket in bond issue. $99.00 in a bread is something that's been around for hundreds of years and will continue to be sold for several more centuries yet because it must and is difficult to lose his food this good. whatever. the price that you show there, al jazeera luca, argentina, the edinburgh fringe festival attracts acts from around the world and gives virtually unknown performers a chance to hit the big time. that's a sharp rising cost for accommodation. venues is threatening the very essence of the annual gathering. from enbridge and how reports to me, who has brought working cause grid to the stages of the edinburgh fringe for a decade. this fragrance was the, the hardest for me to afford
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a big come up to the fridge since 2012 believe in this quarter. the cost of living crisis, and if you don't know what the cost of living crisis is, kind of like, like a look awaited sequel to the recession. which is kind of like a spin off the credit crunch. the rising cost of everything from performance space to accommodation means his days here may be numbered. so you do so it's a place rust, shall we be here, do you? what are you going to help us get here? when you ask that question, you do think, am i going to be in a chip for artists like tom who pay their way and often lose money in the process. the promise of being discovered at one of the world's best known arts festivals is fading. with the times. with half my life in immigrant exile spent in home is no place one of 2 shows by her on board scottish and george this year she explores her creative roots a 30 year veteran of the friendly. she says, minority voices are also being squeezed out. what seems to happen is that there's
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a narrowing of the types of stories that we hear in theater because of the type of people who are doing it, the lack of diversity amongst the people who are being centered. and so, theater is going to become irrelevant to those audiences that come from those communities, the, the survival of the edinburgh festival, and the fringe in to killer after a near death experience over the last couple of years demonstrates that come rain or shine or pandemic. the show must go on, but the wider cost of living crisis is feeding into a cost of performing crisis with the seen at risk of being diminished forever. the life of a fringe known can be in the mouth experience audience is, are increasingly drawn to big name productions, while the vital voices of diversity are drowned out, the fringe,
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as he was some say, he's no longer about money. looks at the hopelessness of young lives. earning poverty wages. i think we may not seem like much, but not all i want to show was is other turns as it is mostly about the money. jonah, how al jazeera edinburgh. well, the sports is next here on al jazeera, including the latest on the fif, a world cup with post nation cutoff. now schedule to play an opening game. ah ah.
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several sports news now hyster. carrie, thank you. the well cut kicks off in $100.00 days. a couple of fixtures have been rescheduled to insure house nation. kathy will now face ecuador in the opening game . vittorio gates and b reports. the countdown clock on dough horse cornish marks the final days, hours, minutes and seconds until kat or 2020 to kicks off. now in the final stretch organizes say they're ready to deliver. you realize that there's a huge excitement. it was building up over the last 12 years, but under days to go, you can feel it. you can touch it, you can taste it. i think it's, it's, it's matter of just, you know, the final count on for the 1st time the competition is being held in the middle east and they'll be plenty of other firsts. the 1st will comp to be played in november and december, female referees in the men's tournament and ambition to make this the most
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sustainable tournament of all time. cattle. 2022 is also set to be groundbreaking because of this air conditioning. the majority of stadiums will be artificially ventilated to keep players and crowds cool. fans here in doha welcomed fif is decision to start the will comp a day earlier to allow cat or to feature in the opening match. the hosts will play ecuador al bait stadium on november the 20th to very rec, apple to lucas, to every one, even though heartily. to be here on the live this, sir. all this exciting. i'm very excited to see as this is my 1st time i when i come down events like the fun happening, lay the day, the excitement is building the fans in the 33 nations. he qualified and had the, the move say here in the, hey, 50 degree gaily out there though. huh. well,
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any respect to sports marketing expert, simon. brian's, he told us why the date change even by only one day could prove problematic for tournament sponsors. is useful to explain a little about what spawns house from shit works, which is basically, it's not just about the perimeter boards and the branding that you see. but sponsors like to do a lot of what we call activation around it. so they book, advertising, create special events. and one of the biggest impacts could well be the fact that they'll have a lot of hospitality with b r p guests coming in from around the world. and that could be quite disruptive if you move everything a day forward. it's going to be very hard to be shed your hotel bookings for people, even, even with a 100 days notice, you know, if everyone has books that, that will be very difficult. and also all the flights, you know, they're, they're going to be mainly 1st class flights from around the world. so depending on
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what arrangements you have for changing tickets, that could be expensive. so you know, the cost could mount up and the logistical tasks are going to be significant. i think it's fair to say it could cost millions. and i mean another area is, is print if anyone's, printed posters and leaflets promotional material, which has the exact starting date of the world. how then they may well on to shred all out when and redo it. so, you know, again and some, some fairly significant cost. well, as for the teams and players to watch out for the well cut brazil at the top ranked site, it is hard to look past the defending champions, france, they beat croatia in the 2018 final in russia. prawns have killian and by pay and perhaps the most informed player in the world right now? he bins. emma, this week out is there. a spoke to, one of frances woke up when is from 1998. david trista gay,
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who's backing them to retain the trophy, was amazed, would have gone to see that front to the team to beat because they're the whoa champions. they got great quality individually and as a team, i see them getting to the final even though the competition will be intense. the tournament will be pride in december. so players from old countries will be in very good shape. but as i said, i think fronts will be very difficult to beat opinion buffy shampoo and coldly, man killing him. buffy. is that fig? ahead of that same, even if this quality throughout the whole squad, he's going to be the player who will really show his qualities. i think he's going to have an exception, a well cuppa, her born of hans. beside france, the still germany, spain, brazil. let's not forget argentina and africa, which is an upcoming consonant with teams trying to get to a high level on away from the well cub majesty. nice and boss eric 10. hong is confident they will bring in some much needed new players. he's already under pressure of to watching his side lose to want to brighten in that premier league
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opening game last week. they played britain fit on saturday. the chancellor window closes on september. the 1st and 10 hog says they have no choice but to add to their squad. we have to and i am conference to be real life. i know we have to win a free game. i know the defense, every one expect that men united when is winning a free game, so that is we have to do with it and all of and i can do is to prepare my team as good as again. and i'm focusing on that. nick carriers produced another scintillating performance at montreal busters a day after illuminating wild them one terriers, brushed aside fellow australian, alex domino. 6263. he reaches the quarter finals at its tournament for the 1st time, and ensures he'll receive a seating for this month. the us open carriers will next plate ponens, what hookups, incredibly off. you know, for yesterday's be who i always claimed an ellen and the crowd was,
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was amazing. you know, today we never forget and that i was really hard mentally. me to go out here and why alex was us with room or even having such a good career so far and carrying this joy lag, sorry for so long and there's just off mental res. inquire for. i'm like, got essentially, 3rd after i and i, and i just got out here and got a job on, you know, i like the way to played. i get hold of wyatt. be playing through strength. he's, he's one of the best best players in the back in the game in any softball. so, you know, you can have a healthy now cast your wine back to the 19 ninety's if you can. when these 2 were some of the biggest rivals in boxing, nigel baron and christine bank fought each other twice with their re match, watched by half a 1000000000 people worldwide. and now nearly 3 decades later, their sons will step into the ring. chris, you bank junior, will face connor ben in a fight in london on october the 8th with both fighters, continuing the feud between families. now i'm going to be his fatherly figure ah,
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during the lead up to this fight and on the night. excuse me. one second quiz used that was the old me i now korea how korea, i'm just, i'm just saying, oh not nina. i'm viewed though. i'm glad be. i'm going to be your father on the item. i'm going to take you to school on the walk you through the doors miss, sit down in class, and i'm going to stick on you and i'm going to teach every single lesson you need to learn. all right, that is i guess for, for now it's back to kerry jerry, thank you very much. indeed. my mother will be here in just a few moments. mona websites as well. i'll just there dot com, stay with us. ah, ah.
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life a robust debates, a lot of folks when they hear the word refugee think stranger, they think other law literally stuck in these camps. it's regardless of your raise the way you're coming from. and he said, give everybody safety from global issues to those that need to be heard. human rights and land defenders and brazil, they live in a circumstance of permanent violence and intimidation. the st. claire, a global audience, becomes a global community on al jazeera, the 19th sixty's, the decade of change across the middle east and north africa. in the 2nd of a 3 part series, al jazeera world explores the explosion of arts and culture of intellectuals were building new dreams. an idea that because the revolutions of the 1960 s were non political, but all the mining from music to t v. the poetry of protest and revolutionary for making the 60s in the arab world. culture. oh, now jazeera, under cover reporting. and for me,
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