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tv   News  Al Jazeera  August 26, 2022 8:00am-8:31am AST

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exposed to struggle if those who believe democracy is worth dying for we never know when an opening is going to come. when a fruit vendor is going to emulate themselves and say enough is enough. my life for democracy on al jazeera bowles journalism, the police violently dispersing protest. this, these are some of good tens of thousands of people. troy lee called inspired to program making. welcome to generation change unrivalled broadcasting. white people did not want black children in their schools. we have to fight for catherine. al jazeera english proud recipient of the new york festivals broadcaster of the year award for the 6 year running. ah,
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europe's biggest nuclear plant is temporarily cut off from the power grid as russia and ukraine. blame each other for shelling the facility. ah, ally money inside this is out. is there a lie from day or so coming up, a u. s. judge orders the release of the evidence that prompted the f. b i to search . donald trump's home focused on the edge is the international community to help us . reco monsoon reigns kill 900 people in less than 90 days and camped outside a ducked reception center. hundreds of sodom seekers are being left to fend for themselves. europe's biggest nuclear power plant is back online, ukraine's nuclear agency says it was cut off from the great off defies damaged
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overhead electricity lines, rasa took control of this operation plant back in march, but it is run by you crying and stuff and they're growing fears over fighting near the facility, both sides accusing each other of shelling the complex. the un has called for the removal of all military forces immediately and is urging that the international atomic energy agency be allowed in. i mean, what we seen today is yet another reminder of why it's important to get the i e, a technical team in there as soon as possible. we are continuing to work with dora partners who are in the lead. and i know there's an intense, intense discussions ongoing as we speak or early. and my colleague dan jordan spoke with on a goodness and a former nuclear industry executive. he says it's critical to get a team from the u. s. nuclear wants, don't go on to the site. the key is the world doesn't know what's going on inside
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that nuclear complex and the ukrainians don't know what's going on in that nuclear complex. so getting independent inspectors in is just the 1st step in understanding how d graded. that power plant has become in 3 months since the russians have captured it. the ukrainians had reported that the plan to twice lost connection to the incoming back up electricity supply, causing the to remain in reactors to shut down temporarily. does this indicate on that at the very least the safety systems are still working? well, this is a very dangerous situation. when a uranium adam split, these 2 pieces remained physically hot and for her years and radioactively hot for centuries. so when the reactor shuts down, there's no new fission. but there's trillions of these little pieces of radioactive
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material that are still physically hot. so in the plant loses power, there still has to be a way of cooling it. and they're relying when they didn't have power on old russian diesels that were actually scheduled to be replaced just this year. and you claims president vladimir lensky said today that we narrowly avoided some kind of radiation accident. some of the things that you're referring to that. but how close are we to the real possibility of some noble type nuclear disaster at zapper asia? well, the power line in and out, if it were to be cut, there's 2 diesels for each of the fix power plant. now they're old and unreliable russian design, but if those 2 diesels run, and if they continue to have diesel fuel and this radioactive rubble can continue
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to be cool. or if the diesels fail and the power line is not connected, it would lead to of fukushima style disaster. while ukrainian official say the least 25 people were killed in russian rocket attacks in the eastern city of chaplain on wednesday. and miss all landed in a residential area, almost hit a train. russia claims the attack, killed over $200.00 ukrainian troops and destroyed military equipments. i'll just, there is a hub alkahottie visited the site, the attack you saw about the hooked up look it up. the missile attack hit the train station and the residential neighborhood here in chapter a messiah landed in a place and completely flattened the house. the massage, the tech also destroyed a number of other houses in the vicinity. while 2 children were killed, industries mentioned neighborhood. and 4 others were injured. ukrainian,
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30 said messiah harder to this area. poor misses landed in the vicinity of the train station. journalists were prevented from reaching the day, being described as a strategic area, as it is called, didn't photograph record video during times of war. anybody here say that damage to the house was huge. william not ended the strange stage. there's a hub through which other culture products are being transported and to which the residence of area can travel to didn't bro, i didn't do you clean 30. didn't reveal guidance to 25 people were killed and others who were in the thirty's didn't reveal id where they were military personnel or civilians. it officials here have quoted a country seeing in a speech that green will respond. what has been described as crimes against the grand pupil was your presence ill and had also said that the russian attacks would prevent his country's authorities from doing their job and performing their duty
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and would prevent ukrainian army. and from working to restore the lands, russia had okay. and since february 24 shop looked on you come. russian president vladimir putin has signed a decree to increase the size of russia's armed forces. russia, media reporting staff will be expanded from 1900000 to over 2000000. that includes an extra $137000.00 military personnel. increase will come into effect from the 1st of january of next year. u. s. judge has ordered the release of the evidence that sparked an f. b i search of donald trump's home. federal agents entered the former president's florida state on the 8th of august. the justice department has until friday to disclose parts of the affidavit. it used to gain approval for the onset, at least 11 sense of classified documents were retrieved from the property. my
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county has more the story. what's important about this affidavit is that it is the evidence on which the request for the search warrant was based. it will contain details of exactly what the f b i was investigating. it's concerns, but what is likely to be the main point of reduction is whether there were any witnesses involved to possibly even somebody with in the, in a trump ring. who gave the if the i evidence at that sparked off the search at the former president's home. this also the possibility that this document will reveal the timeline and basically indicate how many times the form of precedent was approached to return the documents. heavy rains are showing no sign of lessing up in pakistan, at least a 100000 homes have been destroyed since the downfall was began in june. 30 say nearly a 1000 people been killed and many more still missing st. as ravi reports from
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karachi rainfall over the south of the country has been so severe. survivors describe what is happening in pakistan. as the end of days. one government estimate says this monsoon season, there has been 500 per cent, more rain than the seasonal average. suffering greatest in the southern send the province the lucky ones who lived through the storm. now wait out in the open on small tracts of land, spared by the floods. for now, waiting for help for more rain worries turned to disease, thirst, hunger, i heard now can you hear? what are we going to eat? we are completely lost. i am very worried about our children. they have nothing to eat and nothing to where i'm telling you what the bonnie meant. we lost everything in the floods. there is water all around us and we are empty handed. so that we
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don't have tense, no shelter, no food, and no one is here to help us. at 1st sight, it looks like a seaside waves crashing on a beach. but these are flooded fields and farms deep inland. last harvests destroyed crops. a food crisis is now inevitable. efforts to hold back the flood waters seemed no match for the extreme weather. countless community submerged some completely washed away. the rescue efforts are underway, but there is just too much need of living to one of them on the death of the word we are at this point. ground 0, the front lines. the sting whether been focused on leaders or calling for help from the international community to deal with the floods. it's been one of the worst, if not the worst monsoon season to hit pockets on in recent memory. here in the
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provincial capital of karachi, it is perhaps easier to count the number of roads that have not experienced some kind of rain and flood damage. adding to the already miserable situation or swelling rivers in the north of the country. more water is expected to reach already flooded areas. in the next few days, the in basra of the old 0 karachi local media in mia mall reporting that the former british ambassadors of the country was arrested on wednesday will appear in court on september 6th. vicki bowman runs the me, i'm all center for responsible business. she. anna husband were detained and young goal in charge with violating immigration rules. she served as in busta from 2002 to 2006 was been 5 years since a melissa cracked down in me on my forced hundreds of thousands of mailing must them were hanging to shelter in bangladesh. olden half
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a children who like access to proper education aid agencies, a warning they could become a last generation. tanveer chatter reports from cox's bizarre refugee come over 400000 ro hang a children who should be up school. instead, leaving the congested refugee camp of cox's bazaar, they've already missed years of formal education. now the informal classroom inside the camps are been shut down. don't tara just calling them illegal with, nor kirby is a teacher who is to run one of them before it was forced to close and rising esparza. and it is our responsibility to raise the children with proper education so that they build a better community. so we have to educate our children in whatever possible ways we can, but whether at home or in learning centers, 12 year old. so my account on aspires to be a doctor. she attends plus at at formal learning center and takes out her big lessons to i want to be a doctor as they are hardly any fema physicians among through india community. it
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is mostly dominated by male doctors who take care of health care issues, banned from learning the bungalow language and with no prospect of formally recognized education inside the camp. many are turning to religious schools known as mother asa dale and thought than others. bascom, it makes a big difference, having an education and not having it to about i put a lot of thought, an idea into how to educate these children for them to become a doctor or a teacher or religious scholar under the current circumstance to them around $30000.00 growing our children are been born every year in the camp, according to bangladesh. officials over 50 percent of the total growing our effigy population. our children providing education is the biggest challenge facing the community. now, the un and its partners are offering formal education based on the me and mar curriculum from kindergarten to grade 9. they're currently around $3200.00 learning centers, but they're not formal ecker dated schools. starting from december last year,
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the children are learning based on the national kitty column off my and mom taught out there are $300000.00, showed that and built in rule this in the school, out of at so for about 140000 of them shifted from the previous get a column to the column of man, more kitty column. why that he meaning that the process is ongoing. hundreds of thousands of ringo children are desperate to study. but are at risk are missing out on crucial years of learning to no fault of their own country children. i'll just ada cox's bizarre bangladesh still ahead on al jazeera filling out could see mean charging up california pre supplier to scrap the sale of me. cars running on fossil fuels less ah, females that will fan celebrates in iran. they allowed into stadium and on sunday, the fed times revolution.
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ah, with, here's the thing, the winds are shifting around around the gulf heavy one. so here's what's going on 1st. so water pitcher of the middle east on friday it's our typical weather pattern here. so do you say go in for a closer look around the golf? imagine it as someone just put a fan in the middle of the golf and turned it on. it's scooping up all of that moister and humidity and shoving it right into the shore line of cats are, see those winds there. so for doha, a big increase in the humidity are certainly going affiliate on friday. cross pakistan, we know more than 900 people have died in the monsoon rains that have triggered flooding. this is in punjab province. one of the hardest hit areas here, same goes for sin and baluchistan as well. this is a man to depression. we had swing through, but the bulk of that activity peter, in, out on friday, heaviest falls will be north and west of islam about up against the foothills of
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the himalayas. got some energy crossing over the g. m. pushing into is stumble, so, thundering, downpours here and off to central africa. we go right now, it's our usual scattering. a plentiful showers in storms, especially soft sudan, spilling into uganda on friday. calmer weather for south africa, but a big drop in those temperatures for durban. just a high of 20 degrees on friday. that's a drop of 10 degrees that show whether at the bye for now. ah. what is the ocean witnessed plainness. witness difference this witness? change? witness, happiness. witness? not witness. sunlight. witness de la. witness. last witness. charity witness. confusion. witness clarity, witness, family and witness. friends. witness the beginning. witness. the end. witness.
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life. witness on algebra. lou ah, you're watching al serra reminder on top stories this hour the russian occupied zap region. nuclear plant is back online. equations, nuclear agency says it was briefly disconnected from the power grid out, a fire damaged overhead electricity lines. a u. s. judge has ordered the release of the evidence that sparked an f. b. i search of donald trump's florida home. the justice department has until mid day friday to disclose the affidavit. it used to
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gain approval to such heavy rains have devastated large parts of pakistan. at least a 100000 homes have been destroyed since the down pores began in june. 30 say nearly a 1000 people have been killed or heavy rains and plots of also brought chaos to the streets of turkey's biggest city. its stumble were so set. our reports from their lives broke their standstill in turkey's larger city. for large fellows created by heavy downpours husky that through the streets you stumbles most populated this with a sun. you was among the worst affected mold lion and with poor drainage men of its roads. and some residential areas were full of those less affected struggles to clean up their homes. and what am i going to do? it's enough, does my house i lived there, room of this end enough is enough. despite forecast of heavy, don't pose many people's sake. little have been done to stop the fellows. in many
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parts of the city, drivers were left to commit on roads that looked like lakes. it is the 3rd time to summer that torrential rains. how flooded his tomboy, the city's population has grown nearly 3 fold in the last 3 decades. but critics say, planning and infrastructure have failed to keep off. going to the largest city has been hit by heavy rains once again. the government says that the mon spell, if you're, if somebody that's controlled by the physician, didn't take proper measures. the fight warning, but 2 positions as the previous may, is from the running party, didn't in west, in more than i think the cities infrastructure. many of those effect to say the blame game must end as solutions the phone. this, instead of that, i'll just stumble. the outgoing you and human rights. she says despite huge pressure from all sides. she still hopes to release a report and john is treatment of it's. we get minority before had time ends next
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week. i'll just there is hush him or her bad. i spoke to michelle butler who defended her trip, dishing young province in may. as part of the report. she says she was supervised by chinese officials, drawing criticism from human rights case. i joined this and when you say this was not an investigation, but by the direct discussions with a chinese officials. but don't you see the same time that this is something that could cost you your credibility high commissioner? well, my current ability is related to what i think i have to do, and i have to do is to engage with the governments with society and to do whatever it is need to done to ensure that human rights are protected and respected. so explain to us why it took him that long to release the report on the alleged atrocities in the chin young region. well, as you are wearing nearly marked, we written agreement with go to china for a visit to the country. so this is something we we wanted to prioritize and because
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it was important, as i said before, to visit the country to engage with the authorities and senior officials on human rights issues. and direct me to raise the concerns with them. following my visit to china, we'll continue to review that final us. are we likely to see the report published by the end of this month, for example? well, as i said today earlier, we are working on it. i had fully intended for it to be released before the on monday and we're trying a china been using its political influence to bury the report. i will have to say i have received pressures for public and not to public, but from every side, but i have to say any decision on anything that will happen, it will never if i will not publish or publish it due to any such question, i will never do something like that. i can assure you. precious will not affect my decision. and you can see a full interview with michelle bass lay on talk town to sarah. that's this friday at 1630 g m t a hundreds of refugees and migrants are sleeping
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outside an overcrowded center for asylum seekers in the netherlands. a camp in t a pow which can accommodate 2000 people has run out of space. agencies say the conditions, inhumane for those stranded outside priyanka go to reports. sleeping rough in a hot dutch summer. these men, women and children have escaped war, hunger, and poverty. but here, at the mean asylum reception center of one of the richest countries in europe, there is little shelter or dignity. about $700.00 refugees are camped outside while the staff are struggling to process applications. we're going to see because we are outside with we within, into and the firm we, we don't have been mission tool to enter lisa inside earth and you
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know, for mission, rope or future 80, since he say conditions of dire and the treatment is inhumane. for some of the most vulnerable, why in 40 years of our existence in the netherlands, we are for the 1st time apps, if in a crisis like this in the netherlands. how did it come to this? i would say government neglects not enough investment in capacity for refugees. the government describing to fight emergency shelters after the death of an infant in the overwhelmed facility. but plants to give asylum seekers temporary accommodation has angered some residence there in the nation. got laid off last. mm hm. so, so we'll protesting, as we've had enough of the nuisances like the stealing and shops week people are threatened or people are intimidated. and now we see the people staying outside in front of the asylum center. we say real refugees are welcome,
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like the people from ukraine or the people who are escaping from islamist terrorism . but those are african young men that we cannot tolerate any longer. you sauce. 80 since he see local governments and not doing enough to welcome all refugees, there's about 60000 of ukrainians in municipalities that are being housed there. and there you can see it was possible and, but when it comes to non ukrainian refugees, people here are mostly drum syria, turkey, afghanistan, municipalities still look the other way. a housing crisis in the netherlands has made it difficult for new asylum seekers to find a home. many a forced to steam reception centers that are already overwhelmed with no immediate solution in sight bronco kupta altogether. i'm girl is whirling party holds a solid lead of its main rivals in the presidential and parliamentary elections.
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the countries election commission says around 97 percent of votes have been counted from wednesdays, pole, and piano ahead with 52 percent of the vice commission says the main opposition party. unity has around 44 percent, but the party has dismissed the results as on reliable columbia. as new left us government is the spending as strikes on camps run by armed groups where children off forcibly recruited officials say they want to avoid the deaths of civilians who could be harmed during military action. the decision is the latest step and president, gustavo petras, pushed and decades of conflict with armed groups in criminal gangs in a state of california has approved the ban on sales of new petro powered cars by the middle of the next decade. could spock similar meshes in other states, speeding up the transition to alternative fuels, but as rob reynolds reports from los angeles, and he questions remain ah,
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in what may be a huge boost to the electric car industry, california, the largest state in the us will ban sales of traditional internal combustion engine vehicles from 2035 will be the 1st jurisdiction in the world to require all new cars to be sold to be alternative fuel cars. and here's why it's significant. besides being a game changer in terms of our climate and our energy leadership, it's a game changer. and another respect that the car manufacturers themselves are celebrating and embracing, including toyota to day, not just ford and gm. california is often a leader in the us and more than a dozen states usually follow it's auto emission standards that may help create uniformity. within the complex electric car market,
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automakers will have to gradually phase in alternative fuel vehicles in their new fleets. beginning with 35 percent of all new cars in 2026, but it won't necessarily be easy. electric cars are expensive and the network of charging stations will need to be vastly expanded. i think the 3 largest challenges for adoption are, 1st of all, affordability availability, as well as infrastructure. from the affordability standpoint, e v 's are typically more expensive and we definitely don't want to put low income buyers out of the market. electric vehicles will be required to get 240 kilometers on a single charge. some californians, sir, about global warming, are right behind the decision. i agree if anything's gonna reduce things like buyers and, and a natural disasters, i think why not? the new rule was made by this states air resources board and is expected to get the
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required federal approval. a spokesman for a group representing the u. s. auto industry says it would be, quote, extremely challenging for the industry to adapt in order to meet these deadlines. rob reynolds, al jazeera, los angeles, novak doc of it has pulled out of the final grand slam tennis tournament of the year. the u. s. open, which begins this monday form a tennis. well, number one has not been vaccinated. and due to coven 19 restrictions in the us wont be able to travel to new york to compete at flushing meadows. the 21 time grand slam champion may be announced on twitter and wished his fellow plays good luck. women in iran have attended a men's football game in the capital to hon. it's only the 3rd time they've been allowed to see a major match since $979.00. fever has ordered round to allow women more access, but progress has been slow. and 10 monahan has more. the
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iranian women are celebrating a rare chance to cheer for amend football team. in person. tickets were hard to come by. the stadium seats 100000, but only 500 spots were reserved for women. demand was high, local media reported to dollar tickets going for 70 on the black market. and of course, one point here. this is very exciting. i have been covering the iranian premier leave matches for years and i have been craving to see such scenes. you can tell from the excitement and eagerness of the men to enter the stadium, how important this milestone outside the stadium. those not looking up to your spot were still eager to show their support. and how we are very happy when we heard that girls would be allowed into the stadium, i was so excited that was crying. was that we can't go inside, we couldn't get tickets. the fans are touring on s to go. it was the favorite team
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of so har khodiyar, a woman who was detained in 2019 after sneaking into a match disguise the man facing a possible jail sentence. she said herself on fire and later died of her injuries. widespread outraged, led to pressure from fever. let women attend matches, but progress has been slow. in 2019, shortly after cody or a death women were allowed to attend to match for the 1st time. and in january this year, they got the iran be the rock to qualify for the world cup, but plans to allow them to see another major international game in march were reversed of a last minute. this concession is on a smaller scale, a domestic match rather than a big international game. hundreds of women instead of the thousands permitted on the previous 2 occasions. but the female football fans hooked their presence will become a more permanent part of the game, didn't. and mullin al jazeera.

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