Skip to main content

tv   The Stream  Al Jazeera  August 23, 2022 7:30am-8:00am AST

7:30 am
says had we got 12000 biles of vaccine that would have been some 60000 doses that we would have had. the monkey pox virus has spread quickly in the united states. the 1st case was reported in may. the cdc says there are now more than $14000.00 confirmed cases. the by the administration says they're working to secure millions more vaccine doses, but helped experts say that create other issues. really need to be partnering with our global partners and colleagues around the world to make sure the vaccines are just made available to high income countries that you asked in an in europe. but also that, you know, it's just, it's pretty alarming and disgusting that. now, there are still no vaccines made available on accounting of africa. the maker of the vaccine says it will take months to expand its production capabilities. but experts say the window to contain a broader outbreak could already be closing. paddle haine al jazeera washington. ah,
7:31 am
this is all just here. these are the top stories moscow's blaming, ukrainian secret services for the suspected car bombing that killed the daughter of a pro crime than commentator russian security services are released this video, showing a woman base say, is the assassin to describe her as a ukrainian in her forties and that she escaped was stony, i'm after the blast, and moscow came says it's not involved. ukrainian government band independence day events. this week president vladimir zalinski is wanting that russia could launch attacks and the lead up to the celebrations. wednesday marks the 31st anniversary of ukraine's independence from soviet rule. australia's government says an inquiry is needed into y, former prime minister scott morrison secretly held 5 ministerial posts. the solicitor general says morrison didn't break the law, but his actions fundamentally undermined responsible government inquiry will know to examine what happened and how it happened. it will also need to examine what the
7:32 am
implications, ah, for what occurred. whether there are any legal issues that arise, which is why we will be looking at some mom with i serious legal background to undertake the inquiry. and then thirdly, it knows to look at future reform, how we can ensure that this doesn't happen in the future. former us president donald trump is trying to temporarily block on f. b. i. investigation and lawyers have asked a federal court to hold the examination of documents seized from his floated hold by f. b. i's agents until a neutral official can decide which ones can be released. and these 2 people have been killed and have a violent anti government protest. crowds have been setting up burning barricades. they're angry about escalating violence and the rising cost of living. a federal
7:33 am
prosecutor in argentine as requested a 12 year prison sentence for vice president, christina kirsten and she's on trial on corruption charges relating to public works during her time as president between $27.20 was the headlines coming up next to the stream. goodbye on cali, recalls rose, drawing up and crops parched, could drown worse. europe's cost of living crisis was delaying. the global recovery of youth employment plus can retire. lavarne thinks of gast as economic crisis a year after they took power. kathy, the cost on al jazeera, i hello, welcome to the strain i semi ok. it's been 100 day since out a 0 journal issuing apple. i clay was shot and killed by israeli sniper fire. no
7:34 am
one has been held accountable for her death. we will update you on what's happened with screens case and also talk to palestinian journalists about the challenges of working in the occupied territories. ah. so what i want to do is start with a look back a what's happened in the past 100 days. let's start on may. the 11th, that was when out a 0 issue in our clay was shot and killed by so many sniper fi in jeanine. the following month, june, united nations concluded that israel was behind the shooting. in july, the u. s. state department prob said that the bullets origin was inconclusive, and that is really gum fi was unintentional. and then this month out 0 and our atlas family continued to cough an independent investigation and justice for sharing. joining us now issues. nice, lena, apple. i play in
7:35 am
a welcome back to the stream. i want to ask you about a trip that you and your family made to washington dc. we have some pictures of that trip. what was the purpose? what did you get out of that trip? hi, i've thank you so much for having me. again. we went to d. c as a family. well, president biden was visiting power right before our trip and he eat with our family even though you was 10 minutes away from where shooting grew up, where she was born, where she was raised, kim. so as a family, we had to go to to d. c. to call for justice it was very frustrating that we are the ones as a family and going after the u. s. administration when i should have them the other way around. we went to d. c till to meet with president biden. however,
7:36 am
that does not. that does not work out. we ended up meeting with secretary lincoln. we wanted to get answers, we wanted to understand what are their next steps moving forward. we expressed our demands and our concern to the secretary, and we continue to call for us to lead to investigation that baron dependent. we also were able to meet with a dozen the members of congress and representatives and senators who joined the call for us investigation and also express their disappointments in the way the us administration has been handling of one of their own citizens. you know, i've got an example of that right here on my laptop. this is representative andre carlson. he announced the justice for serene act. that is a bill required the us to investigate israel's murder palestinian american john issuing at play. so there is
7:37 am
a lot of support within the us for finding out what happened exactly to serene when you came away from those meetings in d. c. did you feel helpful? did you feel that something was going to happen? well, of course i was filled with hope i was very encouraged to be honest, after leaving the head with so many allies, you know, over 80 members of congress have joined our call for us investigation that lead to accountability, including representative andrew carson justice pushed in to and senator don hall in continuous efforts in the senate, calling for answers to a lot of questions they have raised. so it is clear that we are not shooting from me and the only one was disappointed and who's calling for investigation. but it's also senator ref, senator is representative and that shows
7:38 am
o d u. s. administration have to do the maximum. so knowing that we have that support is definitely encouraging. and hopefully i'm also looking at more support online have a look here, my laptop honoring shearing. apple clay, you keep pump, you try to keep up with all the honors that have been showered posthumously on your aunt. isn't award for media excellence, academic excellence and journalism and media. the june i will play award. i know there's more than one. it goes on and on and on. there's a whole essex like movie credits at the end of a film. and behind me, even in this very studio, we have the screen of who street a street named after your auntie. i wondering what it is like, and this happens to many people and families who are thrust into a tragedy that they then become an activist. you are now an activist. what is that like? you know,
7:39 am
i thought it was very good at 1st because i never thought that i would be in this because i thought that i will be advocate for the tilling of my on 1st it was that it was definitely the right thing to do. and it's something that not only be calling for accountability, but it's a way to keep her memory alive and make sure that her legs be, is honored. and all the, all the awards ceremony is honoring shooting. life is a testament to to her work and to her exceptional to or exceptional legacy. so for sure, i will continue our fight for justice. our fight for accountability because this means that ensure other journalist, no other palestinian are killed and there is accountability and there is just
7:40 am
continuing to speak truth to power and amplifying the palestinians and their conspiracy amounts were for freedom like shootings reporting used to do to honor her exception of a legacy nina, thank you so much. i really appreciate you being here with us on the stream and wish you and your family every success as you search for accountability and justice for serene. moving on now. i abraham is a senior out, a z o, a journalist, and he's, she's talking about the impact assurance killing since shitty as death, it's been a reflection of how difficult it is for pasting is to live the daily lives. since may 2021. there were protests about residents were being moved, evacuated from their own homes in east jerusalem and shift july
7:41 am
11 day assault on gaza. there were protests about restrictions on past. indians are going to press the lock them off. during ramadan. we've seen increasing numbers of hosting is being killed. there's huge home home and commitment to making sure that this does become a turning point to try and make sure that that what happened is not repeated. what does it like for palestinian genius working in the occupied territories? now that one of the most famous palestinian journalists has been slain. that is the question that we're asking is we're moving on with a show to day. we have 3 palestinian journeys with us. some you will recognize and one will be a new face for you. hi, out. welcome jalal. i am welcome back. nice to have all of you here. i've told him
7:42 am
what you're jenny, so you can tell us where your beats are, what you do. hire festival, please introduce yourself trusting audience. hi, thank you for having me tonight. my name is high up and i'm a journalist in the city of hebron. i bright future stories and produced their so stories as well. so from the west bank from to palestinian reality get to have you welcome bye hello. so lovely to have a we always appreciate your insight on the stream. remind everybody you'll beat what you day. hi, i'm jealous. i'm very happy to be back here again. i'm a writer and freelance journalist space in jerusalem. ah, yeah. thanks robin me. and marian always get to see you on the screen. these tell everybody who you are, what you take to be here again. i met in better with dan, i'm the senior palestine correspondent for mondor lives. i was thinking, yes about how you go about your work. now. we're still talking about showing up at
7:43 am
clay, talking about the work that she's done and then you continue with your work in journalism and in writing. but i'm going to go for how are you doing that now? how are you continuing by? we have outa who spoke to was a little bit earlier. she makes a really interesting point. i'd love you to react to it. he, she is festival. i think that getting close to donors sheila is meant to and emma didn't, but it didn't. journalists do not cover anybody can give you what it is. not even if that a little bit ation in west bend or even an article, but event this journalist the door does come in and a violation against civilian that could be committed by is the army during gets ablation. i think that getting or she, you know, walker is aggression against the human rights and it is in the freedom of the breast in remedies. i'm gonna ask you all to be super honest higher. i,
7:44 am
you scat. going to work now? yes, of course. i mean, the violations against policy in general, they have been going on even before the killing of should be in a box. and i've always thought because she was well known and i thought she was protected then, now that she was killed and she was not an exception and she was not protected. i feel like each one of us is subjected to killing and to all kinds of human rights violations, including you know, like arrest, borrowing from covering or borrowing from travelling or other kinds of violations. so it does make me afraid, but it also makes me more like i want to cover more now i am insisting on covering more now i feel like our voice is important matter and that's
7:45 am
why we continue to do this work despite everything that happens around that marianne i'm really glad you asked that. it's hard. it's really difficult. i remember, you know, one of the 1st assignments i was to do was to go back and cover me. you know, part of the story of where sitting was murdered and you know, you think twice than 3 times and 4 times and i have my past, i have my, you know, what the post to protect me from the bullets. but what protect the problem and emboldened bolger being told to shoot to kill. and that's kind of the policy that's been happening here. but yeah, shitty and lives on not just by sitting in a block place, she earned that title. earned that label by being involved by going to
7:46 am
places that many were afraid to go. many international journals here, very cheap from the new york times to reuters refuse to go to these locations. and i know that because i know many of these journalists, so the fact that she constantly went the way that palestinian community peak of her is one which really remind you of journalistic integrity that everyone constantly speaks about. you know, the duty as a journalist to remain, quote, unquote, objectivity is to really show the story. and yeah, it's scary. but nonetheless, someone has to do a, so you kind of tell yourself that. and you tell yourself that by to buying the it's a strategy of inflicting fear and noticed that she and oscar was not just targeted for being a journalist. she was targeted for also being a pilot,
7:47 am
any journalist and she can, any honestly decide that. and i think as a journalist, especially local journalists that are very familiar with this context. it's a constant state of defiance. i think that's really what's happening here and we can't afford otherwise. sheila, indeed i have to agree very strongly with marianne's. the last point there, i think, to me and to many other journalists and palestine, perhaps the killing of city was a very sobering moment. that reminded us that regardless, no matter who you are, how c mural or a great a for journalist you are, you might be the most famous face on tv. but then there's really occupation to that is really parts of resume to the really colonial violence. you're about us to mean no matter what you define yourself, no matter what your job, your duty is. this is something that all jernace impala same duty, allow them to think of very strongly when there is
7:48 am
a crack down when there is violence against palestinians and the journalist is going to report, the journalist will always feel that no matter what, in the nick of the moment the person is going to be a palace in in to the soldier to the rifle, doesn't matter what vest you're wearing. i susan jerusalem, i see the west bank. you cannot distinguish between between a journalist and palestinian, your target as long as your palestinian, as long as you are living in this space and covering the stories of the people we're always targets. and i think this is, this is what makes the, the work of a journalist patterson difficult. we can distinguish between being posted and journalist. you can't be mutual in this situation. you can't be sympathetic with the language. you have to report on the people that you come from and this is something when sober and woman to be honest. so i totally agree with i just would like to add something like for me because i work in the field and i
7:49 am
have so many colleagues who work in the field as well. photographers. and for the journalist, they have been telling me that they really forces target journalists. and one of my colleagues once told me that if dr. before he was shot in the face, he heard israeli soldiers or israeli commanders telling the soldiers to start with a journal. the before the processors. so targeting journalist something we have known as douglas and we know that we're not protected. and maybe on that, it's really important to know that bank is journalist and palestine. you're not just against one of the most technologically advanced, brutal military armies in the world, just in that week. so followed the assassination of shit in a ball play. you had the photo general of your head. the. i had
7:50 am
a not one of the national newspapers of israel blood, his pistol and shoot out a palestinian. and this is a photo journalist that supposed to be a journalist, building up journalist the config. ready. right. but it shows you also the mesh ment of these railey root, james, that there is no differentiation between settler and military commander. increasingly, we're seeing the arming of israeli settlers that are defined as civilians by the israeli official discourse. and that is only to alleviate accountability from systemically, shooting and carrying palestinians. so when it comes to journalists, let us also look at that, that double standard that offer c and the role of the u. s. that claims to support freedom of speech that claims to be the world police of democracy and it's complete double standard. it's completely leaving palestinians,
7:51 am
and americans and international journalists, unprotected to mar, you'll see israeli settlers shooting journalists from all backs and backgrounds and nationalities. it's not going to be reserved for palestinians, and i think that's what shitting story should also tell us. it's the black house. marian image, let me show this to out. it's, you know, this, but i'm gonna share this with an international audience. the journalist killed bice, when he foresees at least 45 journeys have been killed by 2040 since 2000 at least that's according to the pastor ne, posting the ministry of information. look at these names, these daughters, the sons, these moms, these fathers, these journalists, right? how has israel's approach to journalism changed in the last 100 days, july? in the last 100 days, of course,
7:52 am
we saw that or lent las campaign by the israelis and the defiance to continue and carry on with the violence, despite witness with shooting skilling and in a way they want us to feel this, this violence, they want us to feel the suppression and i think the thing that's what most disturbed me is how often we heard of people being killed, engineering and novice and elsewhere. and the fact when the assault on gaza started a couple of weeks ago with the unprovoked and senseless violence against casa and right in the weekend after the assassination and killing of human ability and nobliss, and other of his others of his comrades at gene goes the week we witnessed a very heavy and relentless campaign of censorship, of on piracy and voices on social media mainly on instagram and on facebook. it was systematic. anyone who's reporting on the killings of passing nobliss or the
7:53 am
kidding, the palestinian children and gaza was being censored. their post and stories were taking down and the accounts were being taken off the web. that was a very disturbing thing, where i felt as ratings would be shooting and killing over most famous journalists in the streets and the jews later. the social media company is the major companies met a companies or censoring and suppressing our voice completely on the virtual platform . so we're being killed in the streets and we've been silenced virtually. we're in this corner, we resist struggling to find a place to actually scream and yell and say we want to tell our story without being suppressed or killed and without facing the violence of their resume. it's a very, very difficult moment for us reporting from palestine on what's going on. please journalist guess i think this is really important. one of the extraordinary things that sharina has allowed us to do is highlight palestinian journalists trying to tell their stories. the important stories, i would spend a little bit of time asking you, what are the stories that we should be paying attention to that you are talking
7:54 am
about that you are working on? marry him, you start way. actually known as someone that's not on. i think it's really important to come back to the community as a journalist and as, as alice, any journalist, i think twice them 3 time before i write a word because anything can be used against you as an assignment in buddies, rightly regime. so you are not lane, facing the chance of being shot in the street and the, and the american government who i am a citizen of the american, the state at that is a colonial state. but technically the government is supposed to be responsible for me. and we see that it's not, but i know that if anything happens to me, that's that i'm and so you aren't just risking being shonda st. erased in grading
7:55 am
the stories of people. so when i'm writing the story but, but i him never to see. it was not even 18 yet, but we're handling him as this resistance fighter. and as, as commander which he was. which he rightfully was because this circumstance is dictated that he rides up to that, that we risked, you know, being imprisoned. you have so many palestinian journalists just yesterday last night to palestinian journalists were detained by israeli forces and arrayed that went from the my law to nav best, where they killed it with him because he was barely 20 and they were released later. but not everyone is that's fortunate and i think this is the biggest hurdle. and this is what we keep saying. you have people like cnn that gave out policy orders to their journalists to not say the word apartheid. you had
7:56 am
deutschen betel. it said that you can't say certain words like israeli colonialism, and this is a book tree of journalistic integrity. this is a butchery of the intelligence of the international community that has a right no, but a band were just people. i am one person sitting was one person and we should never expect of any journalist or person to do more than that. so i really think we need to start protecting each other and turn us as well. it is becoming increasingly the most one of the more dangerous professions in the world. and that's because we allow it to happen. so i think it needs let shitty and be the precursor and the precedent for holding accountability to laugh as one story that you want. i internationally has to pay attention to that system that you care about right now. what will that story? they just briefly i'll be very brief, but so smart so much bigger story. what i feel is that exists tensional earth
7:57 am
threats there to everything that is palestinian. i see a war from our identity everywhere in jerusalem, the west back and elsewhere. and this has been ongoing for, for the past year in a very relentless way. and only last night. the israelis have come to them a lot like as if it doesn't even matter. and if shut down and rated 7, palestinian non governmental organizations and human rights organizations, ones that are monitoring the killing of policy and children for example, and making sure and shooting. they are reporting that the human rights abuses in the territories so that she knows are doing all the account to suppress, not only our resistance already valid them literature stance. we are suppressing us globally, the suppressing our media. and it also said targeting our civil society now and there is that we're in palestinian identity and that's what concerns me right now. i'm gonna leave you with one last voice and that is the voice of ferris. i really we've heard from our journalists about the challenges that they're facing as palin
7:58 am
palestinian janice. this is ferris told us earlier that the international community has to come together to help palestinian journeys work with it is not a situation of impunity in nevada and where they never hire jalal mary. m. i'm send you a virtual box of tissues and so much empathy. thank you for being when i say today, we really appreciate it. thanks for watching. i think next time, ah, in australia, snowy mountains, thousands of wild horses, grey's own alpine plains, living spine, poetry books and fumes, creating an epic, me about these intelligent creatures and their place in australian culture. but today they're at the ha of
7:59 am
a bit of battle. by saying from the perspective of the country and they're not meant to be they, they're hard 15th, i see species, they're not endangered. yeah, there's no, any consent i was trying to have a horse on $99.00 i'd have on international time, especially ecologists want to circle brumby horses gone, saying they decimating a pristine environment, including the habitats of endangered native animals. but horse activists on lobbying hard to keep them arguing that their communities, lifestyle, and cultural identity is under threat. ah, 2 years held captive by i. so a life altering experience for any victim more so when 2 years is half of your life time a 4 year old. yes. the boys struggles to recover from the trauma of abuse and the
8:00 am
witnessing of unspeakable atrocities. i meds, childhood a witness documentary on a just either across the globe breathtaking efforts to clean up the planets. there are underway in milan. companies are turning to a radical solution, a bio dynamics, cement, toxic pollutants. so this really is a living building that's constantly interacting with his environment or thrice, visits the frontiers of the battle for the environment. scientists here in iceland, pioneering a new technique to reduce emissions. earth rise, looked at new ways of preventing air pollution on al jazeera. ah, ukraine says its secret services didn't plan to cobble mud, killed the daughter of a prominent supporter of.

26 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on