tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera August 27, 2022 4:00pm-5:01pm AST
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official line of the journey. ah al jazeera, as a you ah, all the news this is al jazeera. ah, hello, i'm carrie johnston. this is a news our live from dough are coming up in the next 60 minutes. chaos and destruction record monsoon range, cause extensive damage across large parts of pakistan. nearly a 1000 people are dead. 7 people had been
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killed in libya and several others injured during fighting between rival malicious . unicef says a kindergarten was hit in friday's air strike in ethiopia to great region. the government denies it. targeted civilians and the win for diversity. nasa gets ready to send its 1st native american women into space. and as for historic, when for argentina's rugby players, they've beaten the all blacks and new zealand for the 1st time ever. in we begin with the unprecedented floods that have devastated large parts of pakistan and neighboring afghanistan. nearly a 1000 people are dead in pakistan where a national emergency is now in place. the prime minister has asked for international help who nation has received record monsoon rainfall this year?
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at least half a 1000000 homes have been damaged. roads washed away and nearly 150 bridges destroyed nearly all provinces are effected. the south western rochester region has now been cut off after floods, washed awaits roads and railway tracks. the debit. yum logo gay again. go glee. the river was short trust by these people to have no fear of god. there is no such thing as humanity. if it was a river, why was it sold to us? here was my house. my entire life savings are gone by the of a southern sin, the province has received an excessive amount of rain and it usually gets at this time of year and in the mountainous north. west range have triggered landslides, more now from st. louis, who's in st. the a pause in rain, a chance to survey the disaster that has unfolded in pakistan. 2 months into the monsoon season, the country is declared a national emergency focused on leaders,
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including the prime minister himself. seeing the floods up close, promising to mobilize more aid. but the skies have dumped so much water. no amount of help seems like enough. driving through the water logged interior of sin province, you'd be hard pressed the spot, a single rescue crew. but death and destruction abound. who will save us? when will the waters recede? what happens now? people in floods stricken pockets done left with questions. but little else marty. no one comes here, not the landlords. no one from the government. no one comes to us. everyone is just lying here, starving children, little ones. the poor don't have anything. where should we go back to our village? it's not even there any more. houses sank in the water. we're dying from hunger, we have nothing. everything is gone and we've become beggars. we're starving. we're
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starving. everywhere in sin, desperate testimonies, and please for help. for the moments the human suffering, the devastation of people's lands and their home. it is worst fear in sin province . but just in the last few days, the flooding from milk and glaciers and rainfall in the north of the country has gotten so bad that even though it is quite difficult to imagine what is happening in the north of the country could overtake what is happening here. flood water, cascading through the swath valley in hybrid boston, while province is moving swiftly south, cutting down anything in its path down stream, flash flood, warnings, and evacuation. orders are in effect, volunteers pulling the dead from the water or warning people to stay away from the rivers. levels are rising faster than expected. it is time they say,
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to get to higher ground. where we have to correspondence in the pocket down, come out hider is in the north in now share in that kind of pack to inquire province 1st to name was robbie in the corner in send province zane. can you give us an idea of what the situation is like then now? well, there are millions of people across the country affected by these floods. most of them live here in interior. same province. we've been driving around meeting with people speaking to them. and the situation is desperate dot condition that people are living in. they are truly dire. we've had children with skin diseases. we've met people who are suffering from dehydration due to a lack of clean drinking water. hunger is a real and present problem, and there is growing anger and impatience among the people here survivors of the flood. they say they're not getting enough help quickly and local officials say
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that they are doing the best they can. they are still in the assessment phase, but people need to be patient. we've already seen process beginning in quite a and neighboring baluchistan province, and there is rising anger here in sin province. we continue to hear from local officials and local volunteers is that help will come. it will take time and they're going to have to take it a week at a time. now the conditions are, of course going, are expected to get worse incoming days if the rain continue or more flood waters had this way. we've heard from the un that they will be making an appeal for emergency relief funds to the tune of 160000000 dollars to begin direct intervention to try to help those that have been displaced by these floods. and saying, as you say, getting help to those who need it is extremely urgent. but what are the challenges? well, so far, the monsoon season began 2 months ago. the major challenge has been a national political focus on the problem of climate change and of this climate
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crisis that has been happening to people because most of the political attention of leaders and political parties has been focused on a political chaos, in lieu of the ouster a former pakistani prime minister in ron khan. so since then, in the last 24 to 48 hours, we have seen public displays by leaders of all political parties coming sort of joined together by this climate crisis in a sense, sort of focusing their attention. refocusing their attention on what is happening to people that will begin to really refocus the resources from the government that are required to begin meeting the moment to try to get help the people that need it. most. ok for now. same for rob, eat. thank you for the facts. well, that come all. hi, there is life for us in the town of now share in the northern parties. come out, what's the situation where you are? well, you can see behind me and the river called rowland. it's extremely high flag,
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according to the gum estimate. 350000 cubic feet of water farting through our shed off, was donna dead over florida to bang the religious surrounding the river. more of the area and now under water. however, the local administration was able to evacuate tens of thousands of people on our short notice to high ground saving their life dog, and also moving them to school and college that have been set up at the camp. now the big challenge of god says that these people have left all their belongings at home, all their value, but now waiting. if they really get any compensation from the government and waiting for the rent, they will be able to go home by the emergency. drove off,
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this is the spell of an up not in the mountain. it boarding rain even now. so the trash, i've gotten that door water from the not really floor down and a big low lying area. this war did that. you're behind me really? ginger that ever in and read in the next few days, it will have all down south in southern fund job and where then, but right now and a proven ok come i'll hide a live 1st in now share. thank you for that update. we're going to stay with this now, dr. job dot com is the president of the pocket on society of internal medicine. he's in the hall and joins us live now. thanks for joining us. so with so many people displaced, what can be done to try and help, what's actually happening little difficult situation. i think the worst human that
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when a crisis that we are, i will be more than 1000 people already dead and still counting on. but generically, the worst i don't think is over, as spartans distorted us. i think we had already seen a lot of water born diseases, a lot of skin diseases, lot of yesterday and tried to especially amongst the young man because of the scarcity of clean water up at the relying on the flag, the water which is obviously contaminated, all over and then we have extreme danger off diseases like dang, d and still we s not work forward. so because people are very, very crowded situations in the tensor a make shifter a mess in the schools or something like that. and also we struggle with chronic
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diseases like losses. so this is very difficult time for respond and park is funny and i think not only need victims, they need a lot of support from local people like me. so we are going out and, and building their policies and providing them with the medical care that began. this is going to be just across the ice both. so i think the international community, we haven't heard anything from them right now, and i hope that the rake up to this disaster and before it is too late, they act. and i think the support, our goal, me and the radius. and again, she's like, got her own society that is working in the field on what pakistan and trying to provide as much medical assistance as we can. but more than medical assistance, they will also be ready soon, requiring that route on their on the top of the parent is in the family and then the houses need to be rebuilt. the whole infrastructure needs to be built,
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the public health water supply at the see system is all gone now. so i think it's going to take a little while, but it will definitely need many more resources than what we have right now. right now it's a very, very difficult situation that we are people are getting into and mind you, this is 15 to 20 percent of our population, which is trapped in these living areas. and it is obviously then we have to think about long term solutions because we cannot afford this coming every year and devastating the life of so many as you say, a lot of support is needed. but logistically, what are the challenges of trying to get that support to the people who need it the most? i think the immediate german gives the free enough but clean water food, shelter, and then their medicine for chronic diseases because there are people out there
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with me. unfortunately, every 2nd parker funny. after middle ages, i pretend to we have 25 percent. the relation which is diabetic, obviously, when we go out and we see their blood sugar in 400 and recreation in 205120, then they are more and more complication on the long term. obviously they were relying mainly on the farming and all of their farms have been white gulf. and then there is no livelihood at all because the cattle is gone around and they were selling many trucks, something like that. so everything needs to be rebuilt. me as a society, we are making $500.00 houses near the yukon and of course mine and we are asking for be we had only doctors, we're collecting our money and some with the, some farmers because companies helping us. but this is just a very small tip of the ice, but obviously we need much more support from the international community. we
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must mobilize international energy because we already are in a really bad political situation. and also i think it's really a bond to me is down, you know, very, very badly it before this at worst medicaid in crisis that we didn't know. so i think the government government, although they're trying to do something, but i never, i don't think it will be enough for all the world bank. i didn't see it must step in. and as we have been helping other countries and crisis dying, we expect them to help us who i see and the stomach development bank and development bank. and then again, sees must step in and the trees must steppin our friends like china. we are looking towards china, u. s. and other countries to as soon as possible because we are losing light on most on every are based is not ok. we'll leave it there to contrive it across from
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the whole. thank you very much for joining us on that. well, for more on the what's happening in focused on net spring in our, whether presenter jeff harrington, who joins us here now in the steve. jeff, just how bad has this been? well, you know, kerry, for some parts of cindy providence, this is historic. never before have we seen these amounts of rain? you know, about 5 hours north of karachi, almost 2 meters of rain has been registered in 2 months. and of course, we know there's still another month for the monsoon season to go. now if we talk about bucket stones largest city karachi recently picked up 500 millimeters of rain, but kerry for the 1st time in 55 years that happened. the forecast is calling for potentially by the end of september, that karate could very well have a meter of rain. by the time the monsoon season is all set in done. so as we're seeing these images, every province somehow, some way has been hit with this flooding,
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it's impacted tens of millions of people really top to bottom rate across pockets done. and why has this year been so much worse? so we've tracked a number of monsoon depressions. kerry, basically what happens here is you get a batch of what, whether it moves west out of me and more. and then in the bay have been gall intensifies. we've got warm sea surface temperatures from there. it continues to slide west rate across northern india. so of course, northern india has also been hit hard by these reins. and then at some points, we've seen these disturbances go out over the arabian sea and cook up even more before slamming into pockets down. but the big problem here is carrie. they just sit over the country and bring out the moisture as we're seeing that this is now historic in some parts of the country, but just widespread devastation everywhere. it's incredible. the pictures that we're seeing it is indeed incredible. jeff harrington, thank you very much for that. you're welcome. a fancy more ahead on the news our
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including we meet members of crime is taught a community. we've been forced to flee because of russian attacks. hope frances prepares to name new cardinals, who may eventually play a role in choosing his successor. but in sports, will him at rough and at our has to say about the absence of one of his greatest rivals at the usaa. ah, ukraine says it's exported a 1000000 tons of agricultural products so far under a deal brokerage by the u. n. and turkey. last month. an estimated 20000000 tons of grain and foodstuffs had been stuck in ukraine since the russian invasion in february cave says it aims to ship 3000000 tons of products in the next month. last month on the ocean, which is one of the additional, the 1st 1000000 tons of agricultural product were exported since to february 24.
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does a victory. by the way, 44 ships, b, green and agricultural products have already been sent to 15 countries. we have 70 more applications for the arrival of ships for loading. the goal is to reach a volume of 3000000 tons of export by sea every month when that says speak now to, to raise a boat whose life 1st in kids. so teresa, what's the latest about these? all important shipments? well, what's called that the green initiative, if for many, if not the only success story of the wars with a landmark, a deal that happened last month between russia and ukraine. it happened with the help of turkey and the united nation that consist of establishing a humanitarian chord or out of the black seats. the black fee is currently, mine is extremely difficult to get better out. but there's a whole strategy in place. extremely cautious strategy base to get better out so they can explore ukrainian grain and take it to the rest of the world. so far over
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40 beth, those have been able to leave a, using this whole deal that's been in place at food that being carried for other countries, but also humanitarian aid from many countries in africa, for example, among other things. so this war, you know, continue, even though here in the capital case, you can see people walking around, et cetera, in the southern eastern part of the country. there's a still a war on going there. so this strategy suddenly helps this country financially. and it helps the world much needed food. and theresa, what more can you tell us about the latest fighting and the situation around this apparition, nuclear while that's suddenly a major concern, not only for ukraine, but also the international community. and i said before, the fighting is still ongoing in the east, but also in the southern part of the country and in the area of support each. and that's where you are,
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the largest nuclear power plant is located. there's been lots of fighting and shelling around that area who queens are saying that the russians are shelling the russians are saying that the ukrainian shelling. so there's been lots of a big conflict going on around that. there's a lot of concern that the plan could have been damaged. in fact, the authorities around the area are saying that they are distributing the peals indifferent hospitals in case something happens to help protect the population. and that's why it's important to get teams from the united nations nuclear watch doc, the i e, a, they are as soon as possible. we're hearing that that visit could happen in the next few days. now in the southern part of the country, there's lots of talk that you crane may try to take back some of the cities. it has lost among them is the city of had a phone that's currently on the russian occupation. there's been report from this day back to a some truck, some trucks, some tanks are more vehicles are being moved into the crimea and pending flat. that's where the whole tends to take. the 1000 part of ukraine happen. so there's
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lots of talk that there are, some are more vehicles in military equipment being taken to the crimean peninsula. this is crucial crime, you know, was the legally taken and occupied by russia back in 2014. and president, lindsey says that any type of piece agreement right now need to include crimea law, members of the grey, me in touch, our community gather every friday at this mosque just outside of ukraine's capital . keep. many of them have been living here since russia next crimea 8 years ago. no, we live here, but no child families still living there. he says people in crimea are struggling under russian occupation. what rush and brings to the territory where they come, they bring nothing. but crime, destroying mother cry, orphan children. we saw this in crimea. we saw this in syria,
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and now we see the trying to do this, including ukraine. in the past weeks, there have been a few ease of attack from the creamy and peninsula, even though ukraine has not acknowledged eats behind them. an attack on the saki airbase destroyed a fighter jet from russia, the black sea naval aviation. i further drawn attack, managed to put russian ground forces on high alert. the attacks in grey me a show ukraine's capacity to strike russian targets deep behind the front line. press involving me to fill and he says he will fight to recover all occupied territories, including crimea. crimean to tars were deported from the by the soviet union. in 1944, and thousands of them were forced to flee in 2014. when russia occupied the peninsula, people here are hoping that when this voiceover may be able to return to the land. the reason, even though my moves have not from crimea, he says you need more help to win the war. ukraine is
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a free people. it's not like russian people, we want to live independently. we don't want to be with russia and all we need from actually worked in congress. it's weapon. if it had the weapon, we will fire till the international community has repeatedly condemned the annexation of i'm yes, yes, somebody that me let that sheila says the peninsula plays a crucial role in the conflict in ukraine. fans russia use crimea is a military base. hans, her president lansky, as a say said her 715 sales strikes a against ukraine from our crimea peninsula. it's a lot. doors as a, as the war goes on, ukrainians insist they're fighting for their freedom fully for crimean satires. this is also about returning to where they belong. very so i'll just eat at keep at
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least 7 people have now been killed in fighting between rival malicious and the libyan capital. violence broke out early on saturday in a heavily populated part of the city. in the past week, tripoli has seen a build up of rival forces who had jostling for power his latest threat to 2 years of relative peace after cease far between allies of rival governments. well for more on this now that speak to ma katrina, who's in that trip the what more can you tell us about this outbreak of violence? well, at around $130.00, a local time this morning. classes erupt in between. a rival aren't groups with those one that is affiliated with the parallel government . that's led by fed, he bush and, and, and the other that's loyal to the internationally recognized prime minister abdel,
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how need to be the classes. then ensued a cross tripoli in various areas. it paused for quite a few hours, but then we started again about about 2 to 3 hours ago and it's been ongoing. and really just just highlights how fluid and how fragile the cease fire is. and here in tripoli, it's the civilians and the residents that are pain, the price. i just, i just want to go back to last month where the rival militias, class violence erupted. it lasted for 2 days. 17 people died, dozens were injured. and there hasn't been any accountability, no one's, no one's been charged with these crimes that have, you know, that have left people dead and injured their homes destroyed. so, you know, we've seen statements from the us from the us. you know,
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saying that this is unacceptable, but really, there hasn't been any accountability for or for these aren't groups that are causing, causing harm to the civilian population. live in tripoli for us. malik, china, thank you. while friday's as try can, northern ethiopia killed at least 4 people, including 2 children in a surf says a kindergarten was hitting a kailey, the regional capital of t dry. the government denies targeting civilians conflict between the rebels in to guy and the government forces began in late 2020 a. ceasefire was agreed early this year, but the fighting resumed last week, katya as her young reports, an air strike in the capital of ethiopia as t gray region could signal a new phase of renewed fighting local media, say the central government is responsible for the attack in an area control by
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rebels from the te graham people's liberation front, or t p l f. that to distill calories pony. i mean, i think the s drive kid around noon. a neighbourhood is a residential area, sir. only civilians live here. so the neural alley, the fighting which began earlier this week marks the end of a ceasefire. there was agreed to and march it also derails efforts to negotiate a p still between prime minister abbey augments government and t p l. a fighters. it's important at to have some insight about why this war resumed right now to guy was under the shit. deep siege are receiving no fuel, no electricity, no communication. no banking to guy forces are been weakest point right now. the fighting has made an already dire humanitarian crisis. worse. millions of people have been displaced with more than 3000 reportedly fleeing from the region every
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day. the u. n. and other agencies have been able to deliver some made in the past few months. earlier this week, the head of the world food program accused t. p l. s sliders of stealing food and more than 500000 leaders of fuel, humanitarian aid men for civilians never reach its target. all the parties needs to do whatever they can to protect. to protect civilians and also very poorly, i think, to ensure the unimpeded passage of humanitarian goods. the latest round of violence is raising concerns. they could put even more people at risk in te grey and the surrounding and horror and afar regions. patsy, a little piece of the young al jazeera was just off to be strikes the head of the world health organization to join us at the mac addresses whose from to dr. 3 to this saying horrifying images for mckayla children killed in the kindergarten.
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today's s struck into guy while the 21 month star of asian deprivation and death of children continues. the siege by ethiopia must end and unfettered humanitarian access, restored urgently. fennel get to to is an independent journal fence. he joins us from the european capital artist of the how concerning is this new fighting? well, it's really concerning, not just for the people. so if your parents are suffering as a result of this ongoing conflict that's about to reach its 2nd year, come november, but the un as warning that famine is becoming a reality into this country of 115000000 people. this is not just happening in to guy, it's also happening in our far and in our regions, it's a conflict that has been defined by sexual violence to begin with. so with millions of people facing famine and the displacement of millions of ethiopia,
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and some hitting to the sudan, some even come into the capital at the end. you know, if you're listening to the un and even other donor organizations, the resources that are coming to save lives, per se, into this country is not enough. it's the millions that are suffering in this conflict that the field and government is saying is insisting was provoked by the t p. a left is going to continue to affect millions of ethiopians within to guy and far away from some you get a chance. thank you for that sir. bring in, come out. she moved. he's a member of the european parliament and he joins us on z from i thank you for joining us. why was there an air strike in the to great region? oh, thank you i. i think it was very clear that go ahead and
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get some really need to go after there has been no i t p left to style what i gained by putting aside the piece negotiation at the yellow with a shot of fine airplane carrying between one to 2 to one of them. finally back so. so, so that a pc negotiation as being the big question mark in the government. how think it was me that if even other comes i guess she didn't have any clue? yeah, he's so so was it, it doesn't. and he makes clar heading to that they were kind of in a. busy middle proper care of themselves, low properties. so it's not something that keeps happening. unicef says
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a kindergarten was struck in that strike. can that be just to find him? so you need to come in. yes, unicef says a kindergarten for children was hitting the strike. can that be justified in any way? i know what sort of staying with who was the one with the damage i think it's on him is the issue. and i can see is having that happen also claiming the own a company with who is you know, what happened. but anyway, the government is not planning to that in any kind of law as you be as well. but as a whole, inclusion mitigation is, will consume. and we know that, what is the government doing to try and restore the sci fi?
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was the only way to restore the cease fire? what is the government doing? want to know, do to do or sorry, i can hear you clearly. yes. what is the government trying to do to stop this fighting to get back to a situation of a cease fire? oh, well they didn't. i didn't want to go on those days off. if you have to, the, was that it was a lot of young to have staff is from one of you to a b, r to a meters. that piece and the only way a course, and they say no. and then there were other nissan calling for the business issue has been a banner. that's unfortunate to how to stop the walk in, even after a while to get with the focus new she, she's a, it's a to want to do a session saying
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a you and the kind of a negotiation to started. i understand why it comes with, i mean, the idea is with me a lot then usually won't happen. well, i think for one to be from vision data, you see i would go, but they're coming with dental and vision. go even a 2nd. i don't see a vision because she she, i live in the world for one of the gal who's come out. hash mahmud, thank you very much for joining us. you will go was to the head here on al jazeera, growing food emergency. we look at why millions of children and chad are facing hunger. the f b i sites, evidence of obstruction. it's investigation into the former president donald trump storage or classified documents and support the major league baseball player,
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safe going home and then international anti corruption excellence award boat. now for your hero. oh, a he washing out a reminder about top stories now. unprecedented monsoon rainfall has submerged large parts of pakistan, killing more than 900 people. the government has declared a national emergency and this calling for international health ukraine. this says it has exported 1000000 tons of agricultural products so far under a deal broken by the un and turkey last month. grain has been stuck at jack's the
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port since russia invaded in february. at least 7 people have been killed in fighting between rival munitions in the libyan capital. in the past week, tripoli has seen a build up of forces who adjusting for power is latest threat to 2 years. so relative peace. pope francis is set to name 20 new cardinals nature. on saturday. the appointments will be seen as a sign of where the roman catholic church is heading, and the cardinals could eventually pay an important role in choosing the punches successor. for more on this item, reiney joins us live from the vatican. so adam, how unusual is the timing of all well carries the 1st time to have such a conference in 200 years or more in rome and august, mainly because rome and the vatican shut down at that period. so it's not
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a period in which the church tries to show itself to be hard at work preparing for the future. but that's very different this year which spurred a lot of rumors that perhaps francis was going to retire. he's been in for help. he has problems walking, fabica. this is secret he's, he didn't set himself that it was help gets to a certain point where he can't continue to be productive that he would step down. but in the time of may until now, when they 1st announced this consistory, this conference, he has said many times reiterated. he has no plans to retire, but keep in mind carry. this is one of the most important and political events on the calendar for the catholic church every year. when you create new cardinals that let people see, hope francis is thinking and he keeps naming cardinal, particularly from the global south, particularly not from urban areas as a way to show. he wants to keep the church more open and, and respond to the changing world as we show in our report. hope
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francis will repeat this scene from 2020 on saturday, the vatican when he creates 20 new cardinals. in st. peter's basilica, the consistory is a chance to see the direction the pope is pushing the catholic church. that it can watch a franca, john, so that the says it to wait for francis to make good on his promise to focus on areas far from the churches center power in italy in europe, but only for the input on the cell in the number of european carter nose is going down while the number of latin american, asian, and african cardinelli is on the rise. when francisco says he wants to construct a church from the paraphrase, he is doing that at the heart of the leg, her body that would choose the next pope no more than a normal course. when the church announced the consistory was to be held in late august and event rarely, if ever scheduled in the summer, many vatican experts predicted francis was going to retire due to declining health
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. but in recent weeks, francis has reiterated many times, he has no plans to step down. yet. this is the 8th time. francis's name, new cardinals. 16 of the 20 new cardinals are under the age of 18. the old joined the exclusive group of electors who choose the next pope. after francis dies are retired. in fact, francis, his named 2 thirds of the current cardinal's eligible to elect his successor. his hope some say is that whoever succeeds him will share his vision of a more inclusive church. of course, conclave are always a little unpredictable. the cardinal's substantially share the vision of friendship . but of course, they might elect a successor, who wishes to change slightly, the direction or somebody who really wants to continue strongly in the same direction. me over the next few days,
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new cardinals will mix with more experienced ones. it's the perfect opportunity for the cardinal, who will elect the next hope from their own ranks and to size up the competition and prepare for coming vote. that is closer every day. let's speak to andrea collier did she? he's an italian journalist for the catholic news agency and the vatican analyst for actually stan, but he joins us live from the vatican. welcome to the program. so how important is the smoke? do you think? well, this ceremony zoning is very important because he said i could see sorry, messaging of you. so it's been here that for francis was not somebody that consists research and the east. skip one here because yes, one can see slippery. b b r since was elected that and that it will see sort of that comes at the end of our reform process. so it's kind of important because we're gonna see what we're francis must say, it's not, not just the commission on the garden hose today that other courses sit in
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a meeting that last 2 days on monday and tuesday. and that will be the moment when coming out, we speak to each other. and thank frances has always been keen to have representation from developing countries. is that likely to continue with this then? yes, it's one of the criteria for francis uses because you know, generally your most he have some so called the cardinal. i shall spot please. this was his shots, but who francis never, never looked up from that. so are you doing this in this policy? so you have a key issue, a new cardinal from mongolia and mobile is not even that you know, a notch dicey. sort of dicey seats and apple studies because because that will be poly mongolia to tell dixon what got you. i bet a fuel a human less than that, but on completion i would say then that is the 1st gotten of what you are, lester saw, eats. it's always the same crating of what the friends is able to search web. as many cardinal says they can't be presented at most of the war or the church. the board ontario duty yeah. thank you very much need for joining us from the vatican
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city. there are conflict and drought have left more than 5000000 people in chad desperately short of food. the government has declared a food emergency in the hope other countries deliver aid, but its been slow to arrive. the morgan reports from lake chad, north of the capital llc. when i mean how many gave birth to her daughter 2 years ago, she said the child was in good health, but a lack of sufficient food for am in a family in lake chad. north of chad in capital, in germane, has now left to mar, malnourished. i bid it though, i didn't. there are so many types of food she needs and we don't have them at home . we have to go buy it from the market and things are expensive. we buy what we need, depending on the money we have available. i mean, and her family represents some of more than 5500000 people facing food shortages
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across chad. that's more than a 3rd of the population. and more than 3000000 of those are children. the highest number is in lake chad, where hundreds of thousands of families trouble to get nutrition. while some people in chad can get the food they need due to climate change or conflict here, both factors affect that lake. chad is one of the main sources of food here, but has dried up to about a 10th of its size in the past 50 years. and the presence of the militant grew broke. her arm has cut off many from their livelihood. hundreds of thousands have been displaced because of the violence around the lake. fatima ibrahim and her family fled to this side of the lake for safety. but she said 8 has dwindled to nothing in the 8 years they've been here. can you come a montana in a day if we're lucky we get meals, but our lives are hard. if we have breakfast, we don't have lunch. if we get dinner,
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then there is no breakfast the next morning. it is extremely hard and there are no jobs for us for you to come. earlier this year, chat government declared a food emergency and urged national and international organizations to assist those in need. there in, in yellowstone, we need about 100000 metric tons and the government has secured 6000 tons and distributed it to the markets with people to be able to get it in some countries have donated. but others and some monetary bodies have only pledged to stand by the people of chad, but they are yet to keep their promise. and while the government waits for aid, those in need continue to suffer. i mean a fierce, she may lose her daughter. he but morgan august 0 lake chad. the us justice department has released a heavy, sensitive version of the documents that lead to f. b. i. agents to search them trumps this month. the search was part of an investigation into whether the former president illegally removed classified documents from the white house. trump says
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the search was politically motivated, calling it a breaking. and fisher has more from washington d. c. it was a remarkable moment, an f b. i read on the form of a former us president donald trump revealed the search at his motto: lago property earlier this month on social media. it provoked outreach among supporters. now the department of justice has released the affidavit, used to secure a search warrant, signed off by a judge. trump and his team had already handed over 15 boxes of documents he took with him when he left the white house. they should have gone to the national archives, going through the boxes. investigators found highly sensitive documents. in the 30 page affidavit which is highly censored, the f b. i laid out its case for further search, claiming they believed there were more sensitive documents of moto logo, which could injure the u. s. if they fell into their own hands, that despite assurances from trump's legal team,
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all documents had been handed over. that these sensitive documents were being and properly handled and that the material possessed could mean 3 possible crimes were being committed. is pretty hard to make out a case that is a which ut, when it has these kind of elements to it that the entire united states is being endangered by this kind of recklessness. and i do believe that he definitely is in criminal jabber. reacting on his trip, social channel, donald trump said affidavit, heavily redacted. nothing mentioned on nuclear. a total public relations subterfuge by the f b i in d u a j or, or close working relationship regarding document turnover. we gave them much in the white house briefing room. there was a determination to keep the cotton president out of the political fight. we feel that it is not appropriate for us to comment on this. this is an independent investigation that the department of justice is leading. that's something that the president finds is an important thing to do for the department of justice to have
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that independent. we're just not going to come in. but he did just a few minutes later, dismissing the former president's claim, he declassified all the documents. why this one ought declassified everything in the world? i am not gonna come out because i don't know the detail at all. i want to know like the former day, it's unusual for such an affidavit to be released before charges a lead. if charges are to follow, that will be discussion at the highest levels of the department of justice in the days to come. i'll in fisher, i'll g zillah washington. mexico's truth commission has implicated a military commander in investigation to the disappearance of 43 students in 2014. it says 6 of the students were kept alive in a warehouse for days before being handed to a local army commander who ordered the execution. is the 1st time the military has
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been directly linked to the case. last week, former attorney journal was arrested and warrants were issued for another 80 officials now nasa is getting ready to mark another milestone for diversity. the leader of its next mission to the international space station will be the 1st native american woman in space for to modern oppose. nicole man was a veteran fighter pilot before she was selected to join the elite ranks of nasa astronaut. now, after 9 years of training, she's finally getting your chance to play higher than she's ever flown before. as a member of the why, like you, the round valley indian tribes, this man will be the 1st native american woman in space. it's important that we celebrate our diversity and really communicate that specifically to the younger generation. because i know there's kids out there that live, you know, perhaps in a community where there are barriers. and i want them to know that these barriers are being broken down. although she is proud to represent her people,
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talent and competence, she says matter, far more in the us space program than any one's personal background here at nasa. it's really great to be able to say it really doesn't matter. we don't highlight or distinguish based on gender or race or religion. we distinguish based on your ability to execute the job, man flies to the international space station october. but even bigger things may be in store for her while she's on the short list for artemus the mission to send humans back to the moon for the 1st time and more than 50 years. nasa says it will and the 1st woman and the 1st person of color on the surface of the moon. as early as 2025 and mountain al jazeera, i still had hair on al jazeera australia hit back against the well champions. nearby championship santa will be here with us and a
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for your hero, lou. oh, what's time for all the sports news now has sauna? thank you very much. kerry. argentina had beaten the all blacks in new zealand for the 1st time in their history. argentina, move top of the rugby championship at a table, a thanks to this 25 to 18 when and christ church is a 3rd straight home. last for new zealand. only once before have argentina beating the 3 time world champion. that when came in australia, 2 years ago, after reco defeat against argentina last time out, australia continued and 9 year on beaten run on home soil against south africa.
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they scored 3 tries during this 25 to 17, when against the world champions in adelaide. south africa are now bottom of the championship tables. i to see united have secured their 2nd street premier league victory after beating liverpool on monday. united were one nail winters away at south hampton, sooner fernandez that were the only goal of the game. united moved up to 6 in the table for now. while found the dal says the absence of no back joker, which is a tough breaker for the upcoming us open joker, which is unable to travel to the united states because he is a vaccinated against coven. 19 the pair lead the way on the all time list. for man's grand slam title wins, thou hast 22 cham bishop victories or jock of a task 21. it's always a shame when the, the best plaza of the walt are not able to play a tournament because of because of injuries are because of different reasons. son,
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in this case, i'm not having one of the best lawyers on the he story in, in the drop of granite lamb is always a unimportant and miss. we saw it in wimbledon. she didn't play many tournaments this year. he came there he wants. so he's just such a champion and their rivalry go against raphael. really? i feel like he did not in a way not 20 to 21. just a joke of a number. so i feel like it's a beauty is not a year. it would be a great her story. i would think 14 you sounded tennis wise, but of course it's not asked any squares. it's american golden rule. so it's completely understandable also raining women's champion m or the carnal insist she is fully fit to and ready to defend her title. in 19 year old, i stopped her practice session on friday twice, and seemed to be struggling with the risk injury by the connell is due to face of francis alleys going in round one on tuesday. i think you guys are probably
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thinking about prussian ranking more than me, but i i, i think that, you know, defending it's high. it's always just something that the press makes up bar and i'm just, you know, taking it one match at a time like every single player is very capable in this drawer. and i just focus on what i'm doing my, my own trajectory. as i said last year, like i'm, i'm just going to do things my way tennis, tennis, tennis star, cocoa golf, a says that the example to rina williams was crucial and her development as a player to its 3 time grand slam champion williams is set to retire from the schools after the us open williams place her 1st round match on monday. i was say before i was born, there wasn't many. and before serena came along, there wasn't, you know, not really an icon of the sport that looked like me. and so growing up, i never thought that i was different because, you know, the number one player enrolled was somebody who looks like me. so i think that's
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the biggest thing that i can take from what i've learned from serena. and also on a more personal, personal level, i got to, you know, have a couple conversations with her on later on in life in. i think it's just the way that she handles her herself and she never puts herself down. and i love that she always elevates herself and a lot of times being a woman and in the world, a black woman in the world, you kind of settle for less. and i feel like serena just taught me that from watching her, she never settle for less. i don't, i can't think of a moment to her in her career in her life as she settle for less. tom brady looks said to return to action for the tampa bay buccaneers said the 7th time a super bowl champion briefly retired on the nfl earlier this year before deciding to carry on the 45 year old, then missed 11 days of his team's a training camp. for personal reasons, people clear. so we'll take on the indianapolis colts and a preseason game later this saturday for important for game continuity, you know,
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we have some new guys on the old lawn. we have some new guys at receiver. so other than having practice together, we need to see him and again, with certain situations and just the flow of it, no matter how long it is, we just need to see south africa fight him back in the 2nd test match against england. jimmy anderson that took the wicket of south african captain in alba, early on that day, 3 in manchester, south africa began at the 2nd innings training england by more than 250 runs short time ago. they've reached a 126th street and take a look out one of the best catches we've seen a major league baseball this season. caesar klein of cleveland, the guardians at diving into the stairs to help his team out in this game against the shackle mariners. one crash straight into the seats, but he did avoid a serious injury despite his efforts, the guardians until slipped the 232 defeats yourself that impact and that's it for
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me. carrie. amazing. santa thank you very much. indeed. that's it for this news. i'll be back in a few moments say with more of a dazed about the status ah, in south korea, new generations tightened the stage shaking up social media fashion in a time. when our ace needs the world's oldest influences on al jazeera, september on al jazeera jillions go to the pose in the vote, the could redefine the country, but will the people approve the boat, the constitution up front returns baltimore hill top through the headlines to challenge the conventional wisdom, the u. case, conservative party alexa, new leda to become the country's prime minister. amid an impending economic
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recession, the listening post examined and dissects the world's media. how they operate, and the stories they cover. with rising prices, causing hardship and discontent across the globe, we report on the human cost and national attempts, a tackling the crisis. september on al jazeera pro democracy activists risking their lives fighting autocracy. i know that i might go to prison, but so i will join the run. democracy may be exposed the 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, both jen and use him, the police violently dispersing protest. this, these are some of good tens of thousands of people try to lee cobble inspired to
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program making. welcome to generation chains and rifles broadcasting. white people did not want black children in the schools. we have to fight for catherine. al jazeera english proud recipient. the new york festivals broadcaster of the year award for the 6 year running ah 7 that people have been killed in libya and several others injured, doing fighting between rival malicious ah carry johnston. this is al jazeera live from doha, also coming up chaos and destruction record monsoon rains cause extensive damage across large parts of pakistan that the a 1000 people that.
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