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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  September 1, 2022 12:00am-1:01am AST

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is south island of new zealand, but most of the action contained toward the southern alps that you're up there. by for now. ah, chile is going to the polls in a historic attempt to change its constitution. 50000000 people are eligible to choose between a welfare state and strengthen rights or to keep a constitution adopted under the dictatorship of augusta. finishing julie referenda on al jazeera. i'm a law hold on one documentaries. that nice, i'm more ah, on al jazeera. ah, this is al jazeera ah,
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hello, i'm the of boca, this is the al jazeera and you use our life from london coming up. ah, un nuclear inspectors travel to zap maricia to check the ukranian nuclear plant for damage after weeks of shelling nearby you form. this is agree to make it harder for russians to visit the blog. this is russia shots, a major gas pipeline to europe again. world leaders remember mikhail gorbachev is a towering statesman, but his death gets a cool response in russia. ah, blood survivors scramble for aid in pakistan as was as were see, but fears of was about diseases grow in sport, singapore. ione olympic gold medalist has been banned from competing by his own government and leaders, arsenal. se perfect. and the premier league with 5 winds from 5 games.
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ah, welcome to the news our united nations inspectors of arrived in the southern ukrainian city of zap parisha. though on a mission to prevent an accident at europe's largest nuclear power site there, which is under russian control, the team traveled to ukraine after weeks of shelling in the vicinity of the power plant raising fee. as of a radiation leak to raise a bow reports from key if, ah, it took around 8 hours. but these international atomic energy agency team members to which they, somebody to region. their plan is to evaluate conditions inside europe's largest nuclear power plant for a few days. while we are a team of a experienced people, i've been here for the best and the brightest in the safeguards safety. we will have a really good idea of what i go along. shelling in the past weeks has raised
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concerns or the conditions inside the plant. it's a difficult task, as they will have to evaluate the potential damage the conditions of the personnel and whether the safety systems are in place of this event or go into market an expert nuclear disaster. and he says that even though they have bodies, nuclear power plant is nearly indestructible. there are many things that could go wrong, and other it can be destroy, probably only if it's shorter to very special purpose. reserve is very powerful. venetian acid kind of you ah, damage simply because offers some occasional a bumble rocket. it fall nearby. the visit is taking place as you quine. staging a counter offensive in the south trying to begin what press involvement is helen's . he says, is the liberation of territories occupied by russia. ukraine, save it for, says, have destroyed several ammunition dimple and all major bridges. i will allow russian troops to cross the jennifer river. everyone here knows that this is going
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to be a long fight, but almost every one is convinced that ukraine will prevail, armament le le armor, but expert like an equal lab, yellow scrub sales be offensive is a major challenge. and ukraine has bravery to make up for the weapons. it lacks offensiveness is quite a challenge and seen is quite difficult. complicated, seem unique to orchestrate the obligation all for a lot of manpower, a lot of equipment. so you need to, to do it, sir, to have a fact you need to, to breach the tactical depths of defense. say you need to more follow one actual on you need to interdicted the russian possible russian or counter moves still. ah, as i said, chances are quite higher. you creams, government continues to demand more weapons from its western allies to push it's offensive. soldiers on the front lines are fighting to defend their country and believe their time has come to regain the territory. they have lost betty,
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so i'll just cedar give off. his battles have been reported as ukrainian troops continue. they're pushed to retake the sudden her song region, which russia seized at the start of the war. smoke from shelling was seen in nikolai, of which a slightly north of her song. ukraine announced monday that its ground forces had gone on the offensive, and the south bolstered by donated western weapons. ukraine's military have been striking russian supply lines and ammunition style sites. the eastern city of crime, a tall says, a russian long range rocket had a residential area earlier damaging at least 9 apartment blocks death. so injuries have been reported. ukrainian officials are working to evacuate residents from areas in the east in battle. ground region of done yes. as well as other frontline areas, russia has repeatedly denied targeting civilian infrastructure and that's despite evidence. it's missiles have hit many residential areas across the country. you foreign ministers of agreed to spend a visa deal with russia, making it harder and more expensive for russian citizens to visit countries in the
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european union. member states with 2 divided to agree on a blanket ban though, it's estimated more than $1000000.00 russian citizens event of the blog, mostly food land border crossing since the beginning of the ukraine conflict. the foreign policy chief joseph, but paralysis suspending the visa deal will have a real impact on the knowledge was partially suspended for a special collect use groups of people ratios and the nurse and now was fully suspended. it means you will significantly reduce the number of new movies us issue video memory stage is going to be all difficult to be longer. but let's falling developments from the french capital paris. until now, russians wanting to travel to the european union were given preferential treatment for fees is under an old agreement between moscow in the you,
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but that is going to be no longer the case. after meeting in prague, the last 2 days you foreign ministers have agreed to make it a lot harder for russians to gain visas to travel because he is going to be a lot more complicated in terms of administration. and it is going to cost a lot more money now that you foreign policy chief bureau said reason for this. well, there were 2 main reasons. one, he said it's a question of security. secondly, he said that most foreign ministers agree that it was simply inappropriate. the russians were coming to the european union, a lot of them for leisure, for holidays, shopping to go to the beach when there are people dying in ukraine, when russia's war continues in ukraine. it seems that all foreign ministers were agreed on the point of making it harder for russians to travel, but they were some countries the baltic, say for example, they wanted
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a full ban on russians. obtaining visas for the youth. countries like germany and france were against that. they said it would be counter productive. they said it would fuel anti you sentiment in russian. that wasn't a good idea. i should just say though, of course, that all the russians that appear on the sanctions list, of course, already prohibited from travelling in the u. this is very much for other russians, mostly tourists. russia has again shut down all stream one pipeline. this time for 3 days. citing planned maintenance is the main link, delivering gas to germany and the rest of western europe. the closure is moscow's latest move to significantly reduce gas exports. in retaliation for sanctions imposed over the war and ukraine. dominic cane reports from rudest off a district just west of the capital berlin. this is the port dover compressor turn and only a st. petersburg where gas meant for german markets is ready for delivery. and yet
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in these pictures, excess gas is being burned off, which is odd because for months the volume of gas sent to germany via the gnawed stream, one network has been cut. and for the next 3 days, nothing will come through it. part of planned maintenance says gas problem, part of president vladimir putin politic ng says, germany, when gets we are literally paying a price. these stoppages have been bandied about in talk shows and political speeches as a rhetorical possibility over the summer in zone. but it's not rhetoric, it's a better reality for me. this is bitter abruptly trend that which is why ministers have spent months trying to find gas from other sources. feedback from the part of the german government's coping strategy depends on installations like this one, a gas storage facility at looters, doff outside berlin. here it's already almost 95 per cent full and 95 percent capacity is the target. the german government has set to be reached by the
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1st of november, but storage of gas is only one aspect of the solution. one analyst says in the short term, every one is being urged to use as little gas as possible. reduce demand in industry in households where you can and not only industrial processes, but also when and in heats and heating systems, but also when it comes to electricity, man, that's precisely why the government at the moment is trying to carts all consumers all sectors to reduce demand because that's what can bring down on the consumption . in theory, full gas storage will only cover german needs for a few winter months, which is why the government has been building new liquefied natural gas terminals on its north sea coast. so that the ellen g shipments it's been buying in can help cover any shortfall in the coldest. early next year, covering german needs in the longer term involves breaking with russian fossil fuels for ever. dominant cane al jazeera looters doff their
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western leaders have paid tribute to mikhail gorbachev. the last leader of the soviet union, remembering him as a towering statesman who helped and the cold war. but his death has received a cool response. in russia, the country is engaged in a war with ukraine to regain some of the power at last, when gorbachev presided over the union's collapse, he died at the age of 91 in moscow hospital after 2 years of serious illness. andrew simmons reports can we at 54 years old mikhail gorbachev became the youngest lever of the soviet union. and he was to be the last few would doubt that he changed the course of 20th century history. although he is revered and respected, more in the west than in modern russia, one of his biggest achievements was signing a disarmament treaty with you as president ronald reagan that took out a whole class of nuclear weapons. it earned him
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a nobel peace prize. joe biden cited this achievement in his tribute describing gorbachev as a man of remarkable vision. he said the result was a safer world and greater freedom from millions of people. antonia garish, the un secretary general said the world has lost a towering global leader. committed, multi naturalists and tireless advocate for peace. the u commission president ursula van de lion said gorbachev played a crucial role to end the cold war and bring down the iron curtain. it opened the way for a free europe. vladimir putin said gorbachev had a huge impact on the course of world history. he deeply understood reforms were necessary and strove to offer solutions. many russians see him as the man who stood by, as the soviet union disintegrated. his legacy is dead. he allowed, or the peaceful collapse of the soviet union. it did not use massive force for keep
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east in europe, ah, in the empire. and with that, he deserves credit. but it is not that this was sung, came in, trying to undermine the system. he tried to reform and gorbachev used perestroika or restructuring to reform, a stagnant economy that had seen people shorter food and consumer goose. and he used glass mills openness and freedom of speech that led to parts of the eastern bloc wising up against communism. it was the beginning of the end of the cold war, one state after the other broke away anglo merkel, former german chancellor spoke in her tribute of the fear in east germany with expectation the tanks would roll in, but quite the contrary. wasn't long before the berlin wall came down yet now 30 years on with rushes, invasion of ukraine comes the danger of further east west conflict on
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a horse lunk on status to president putin. russia. hundreds president, digging new trenches in europe and have started a horrible war in ukraine. it's now we think and mikhail gorbachev and realized what he did for our country and all of europe. gorbachev hailed as a man of peace has died. it's only when his country is every engaged in war. andrew simmons, how joseph in russia and countries of the former soviet union, there have been mixed reactions about mc al gore shops, legacy regions. easy for me. he has some kind of a literate politician who let such a great country fall apart and anything good he may have done has crossed out by that. so for me, he is just a traitor. he's deal cuz with here he is part of the history which coincided without coming of age. he induced high expectations but faded out pretty fast. i didn't know if this was because of a personal reason, internal or external,
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but he outlined a lot of prospects which went fulfilled. or joining us to talk more about his legacy is bella ruth opposition leaders? fred lana took an oscar welcome to the news. our great to have ye, uh 1st the you were 9 years old. is that right at the collapse of the soviet union? oh, can i start by asking you what mikhail gorbachev, what he really meant to to you and 2 other bell russians and the closing days and the closing years of the soviet union? so elena taken off sky, just checking that you can hear me? no, yes sir, a sir for these i you could, the question is 1st of all, as you say, i was too young to remember that but you as an addition or a person, i was only a few years old back then. but for there are some people, he is
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a white conservation figure, even now when the one hand is posted on mobile, nuclear disaster was a failure and caused many lies all for the regular sense. but on the other hand, he eliminated the threat of nuclear plants that for several of the case also he over lies to political life. and his rule, oppressions decreased people failed. what freedom is his actions and his pool is also led to the collapse of soviet union. so it gave open the door, but unity for us, there are some people and it says, gained independence and freedom because of this. and in 1990 and 99 to one, many people go to the streets and demanded for them. so people wanted the soviet era to and, and that, but you know, he didn't manage to stop this movement. so somehow he contributed to our
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independence. of course, there are 2 very, very powerful russian words that entered common policy in the west in the wake of war. gorbachev did perestroika rebuilding restructuring glass, not opening a sense. the gorbachev heard opened wide the iron curtain. is that now a sense the vladimir putin to the likes of alexander, look a chateau firmly bent on making sure that i couldn't returns again a lead in horrible times right now. you know, people are dying every day and i really hope that, you know, the new generation of political lead us and worse in europe forever. you know, i really hope that the new generation of leaders will respect people's dignity. that the new generation of lee just will be elected by reelections and will be able to reserve the power, you know, speaking about
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a good but you who all of them lead us from the civic pos. and i'm sure that they time is over about of use, of course, is often referred to as the largest dictatorship in europe for those people who are too young to remember growing up under the usaa. what is it like to live in all 13000000 country? one of the last in europe, you know, some people believe that bill or roost is the last piece, or the usaa know quickly after the collapse of the soviet union, their dictatorship in our country was reestablished. so people didn't have chance to enjoy freedom. the proper to embarrass was a nationalized game. and the rules like return soviet symbols, you know, could you be in bill is still cool. could you be a lead in the dictatorship means to live in fear?
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you are afraid to tell something wrong you are afraid to be in the teens. you don't have to but you need to choose parliament or president elections. i just, you know, and not that retail. some people i have to say like to leave and the dictator should because you don't have to decide on and then you just have to fulfill what people about to say to you. but after you leave in democracy, you will never increase for the day the ship again. or you of course, have laid everything on the line, challenging the dictatorship and bella reese, your husband is in jail, your exile, other associates, saw behind bars as well. it looks as if the opposition movement for the time being has been silenced. where does the opposition stand of con time? i have to say that for these 2 years, but there isn't, as you call us opposition, didn't mean,
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but for sure. we didn't fail because i didn't manage to turn over the page. he didn't manage to bring our society to the states or before 10 to 20 people in bill realize that something wrong is going on. they see people see how people are detained every day. there is no stability and because x as if a thousands of people are still on them, are on the square in front of his palace. so we continue our movement. we, our task is to release all political prisoners and to bring our country to new free and fair elections. there are people who hit to flee the country because of repressions continue despite in exile. we have a lot of people inside the country. still don't agree with this regime and they fight with. they means it's so difficult. so fights in the country. i contact the patient actually as a completion of the regime and on that, like
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a patient or 3rd country like russia and simultaneously we have to like fight for your brain because they understand that the face of your brain and fatal bills are interconnected. so i'm sure that sense expensive was absolutely different and our people will not stop until our full picture on our 2nd oscar leader of the russian democratic movement. key opposition figure. great to have you on the news. i think coming up on this news out from london flooding devastates law policy, done at least 100 people have been killed in thousands displays for you. and as far as for some hurricanes, me turn into the office and you report explains why handed sport andy murray. rolls bagley years to reach the 3rd round of the usaa.
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ah, pakistan's army is on high alert for more floods in the south of the country. the indus river has been swelling for weeks, threatening another wave of flooding. rescue as have spread out to some of the worst affected places where millions awaiting for help. while the $1100.00 people have died in the flooding, which has left a 3rd of the country under water from the village of per ana, abad and sidney province, zane bas ravi reports. oh. 6 this is the face of hunger in sid to describe what is happening here as desperation. trivializes the extent of the suffering we spoke to for santa she was headed into the fray. she says she had no choice, you know? oh that have you been with you on it? now?
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houses have fallen down. you don't have tickets. we count, shade our children from the sun. our houses have been submerged. i swear to god, there is nothing left. when our belongings have been washed away, we poor our children are sick. they had just sitting there with senior army officers leading this relief operation. tell us their orders are use a light touch, help every one. but making sure the weakest in the crowd, women, children, the sick and elderly don't get pushed to the back of the line. i often requires force that the armies arrived at this village. this much needed humanitarian supplies. food mostly. and there's been a scramble at the supply truck because people here know that there is not enough for everyone, but they are still the lucky ones here across the way where the road has been completely washed away. or people cut off from other villages. and they are just hoping that someone is able to swim some supplies over to them. who is the most
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deserving. who should go 1st? seems to be an impossible decision. i know we've got to canada and there is no reason to worry. god willing, a room. we'll get something okay, but calmly wait your turn, and everyone will get help. reassurances bring peace, but only briefly. as the trucks begin to empty, panic returns and people jump the key once again. that survivors say not to do, sir, is to choose death. if they don't get food, we'll get a dirt and die. what else can we do? i don't have any bread. i don't have any water. all the children are starving. bringing order to the chaos caused by floods is an unenviable task. and one that is only just begun. jane basra, the older 0 parents about village sind pakistan or the w h o as res,
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concern over the spread of water born diseases in pakistan. some doctors had initially said they were mostly seeing patients traumatized by the flooding for that now treating people suffering from diarrhea, skin infections, and other waterborne symptoms. as for the government to deploy further, medical teams, officials are also scrambling to provide clean drinking water to survivors. torrential floods continue to devastate villages in many parts of sudan with at least $36.00 in the eastern casala region. cut off by rising water. at least a 100 people have been killed when more than 30000 affected. and in the cause era, state are flood water has forced many from their homes as hipaa. morgan reports wading through flood water is the only way adam is mine and his mother can get to their home. they want to pick up what they can after flood waters wrecked the property in what the name in sudan 0 state,
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and their family was forced to seek dryer land for him in nominating in a more de hayden years. we woke up to water entering the homes, got out what we could to get every hour. there is a house that's fallen better than you or will it come down. there is nothing left one house and i wanted to show you all the other home in the village were also flooded. when heavy rains hid this, the 2 weeks ago, range and torrential floods in for them have killed at least a 100 people. and hundreds others have been injured. tens of thousands of homes have been destroyed. hum dantes with barricades, but his house still suffered major damage. why has it her inherited good it had didn't work. i should, you are viewed, we took out the children and what furniture we could, but the house has been destroyed. we built barriers and still draining out the water. now we're worried about the diseases, the water can bring like malaria, as well as other infection that the rainy season has been described by some as one
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of the worst they've ever seen. and the downpours have affected nearly the whole country. jessina is one of the states where the government has declared a disaster. dozens of villages have been submerged here since the beginning of the reno season, leaving hundreds of families homeless. many have sought refuge on dry labs, but they see there yet to receive any help. at stagen asian, i shall amazon another good luck for the day. you hide, we practically made everything because people lost everything shelter. she'd lose a half care. but the most important thing we need is for the water to be drain. so they can go back and i hear people cry him at night because of the situation we are in the afternoon, i should. oh, boy, adam says he wants the waters to recede. so he and his mother could go back and rebuild their home again. but after waiting for 2 weeks now, he has no idea when that might happen. he morgan august 0. what the name does the, the theme
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a toddler has died after being hit on the head during an intense hailstorm in northeast in spain, hailstones up to 10 centimeters in diameter, rain down on a village in the catalonia region. the local weather authority says the storm lasted around 10 minutes with the largest hailstones seed in 20 years. parts of the region remain on storm alert. local media say around 50 people were injured with many suffering, broken bones and bruising because a lot more still to come this hour with families, grieving baghdad after 2 days of violence over rocks, ongoing political debt book, justice officials say classified documents that donald trump's florida home will likely conceal to obstruct an f. b i. investigation. that is for this man is becoming unstoppable from anxious to city recording a 2nd straight country. ah,
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here's your forecast for the 1st day of september across europe and africa. so 1st day of meteorology, call fall and you can certainly see the difference. temperatures have lowered, we've got all these storms across the balkans. more storms are also enveloping across italy as well. take a look at the temperature and book rest for the 1st time since august 15th, you've got a day time high. a below 30 degrees in your temperatures will slip back even more periods of rain on friday, but you'll dry off on saturday. now there's spot, we've seen some cooler air, it's across scandinavia. got that wind coming out of the north. so stock home, just a high of 15 degrees for you on thursday of 2 iberia. it's fairly dry here. a few showers across northern areas spain. but other than that, looking good and off to the other side of the mediterranean, now still disturbed whether brown its stumble with the high of 29 degrees. keep in
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that heat though, of 4 areas of levant, including aleppo, with the high up 40 degrees across africa. torrential downpours moving out of gonna ivory coast. it's going to be a washout of a day in bama co is with foot toward the south wind still a factor across that northern cape province. the western cape is wall, but more calm, though for kazoo luna towel with a high of 20 degrees in durban. enjoy the 1st day of september, sir, later. ah, ah, [000:00:00;00]
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ah . 4 scientists, the evidence is the refutable. with america's climate change, denial stubbornly mistrusted the facts. ah, despite soaring temperatures, raging wildfires and shrinking water reserves the world's largest economy still splits along ideological lines. so can it ever reach consensus to avoid catastrophe? climate wars ought to on a j 0 lou . ah,
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welcome back. a reminder of the top stories here and al jazeera united nations inspectors of arrived in the ukrainian city of zap parisha, which is home to europe launch is nuclear power plant. they'll be checking the safety of the russian control plant once the gain access, which uses inspected to be thursday. the foreign ministers of agreed to suspend a visa deal with russia, making it harder and more expensive for russian citizens to visit countries in the block. the decision came was rusher, again, shut the main pipeline, supplying gas to europe, and pakistan's army is on high alert for more floods in south of the country, where the indus river is swelling. rescue is have spread out to some of the worst effect of places where millions of desperate for the un says many of the world's disasters over the past year could have been avoided. it studied 10 emergencies from earthquakes to droughts, floods, and wildfires across several continents. during 20212022 disasters took the lives
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of about $10000.00 people and costs more than $280000000000.00 in damage worldwide . the report says the causes of disasters need to be identified, such as erosion which can lead to landslides, like an 80 and sand storms and madagascar. it recommend strengthening governance and enhancing collaboration in order to plan effectively for risks. it says there needs to be more focus on implementing new and sustainable solutions with a focus on natural processes like restoring forest ecosystems to prevent land degradation. his stress is the importance of modifying consumption habits. also. so just reusing a recycling more materials and establishing safety nets to protect vulnerable people. the report also suggests better warning systems could have reduce fatalities during a heat wave in canada and flooding in lagos, nigeria, assa, driven, is executive director of the charity war on want switch campaigns for climate justice alongside tackling global poverty. he joins me now live from london.
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welcome to the news our firstly. do we mean by interconnected disasters of the kind described by the united nations? what's your understanding of what that all means? so what this report does by looking at these 10 different disasters from nist kick in haiti and floods, lake austin and the hurricane in either in iraq, in adrian, new york, 8, shows what the thread that connects the all of this age is that we have a toxic mix of extreme weather and he collides with poverty, structural inequality, weak government systems that fail people. and this is really a holistic way of thinking about crisis to try and really understand what are the root causes of these disasters. but how a, why do they overwhelm communities and countries? and if we better understand the drivers of what causes all that increase walden ability, we can prove place the why solutions which reduce those impacts. and of course, ultimately save lives in the core system that we are relying on. what do you think
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has prevented us from seeing the interconnectedness between these challenges, whether they be political, economic, or indeed environmental? what's the tipping point? now that means we have to re focus i mean, this report really echoes the findings of, you know, the latest i p c report from early this year and it just reinforces well, many in movements in the global science and climate experts long been advocating for the same look, this is a wake up call. decision makers can't see the crises in isolation, whether it's flood fires, i mean, lots of biodiversity really got to see them and connect them with. how do we protect our food system? how do we manage health or resources? and, you know, what's happened, i think for the last few decades is that the, solving these crises has been approach with really what is dated piecemeal approaches where is really required is a more systemic and a structural analysis. and then we can put in place met place, measures that really recognize the reality of these eval,
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worsening crises. so for example, you know, if you just take one example of like, you know, hurricane irene, new york, i mean by understanding the who was most impacted. well they were poor families often like, why would they most impacted? well, they were living in the porous eisen most wonderful eisen, but that recognize it, that actually they have no choice but to live that because they're a low income. so if you want to protect communities in new york, you have to also address the reality of income inequality and poverty, as well as building better a more resilient infrastructure. and that approach of, of trying to recognize that there is a connection between all of these issues. ultimately puts in place the right approach to so that you know, i mean, especially now when we can sit on a television screen on literally every single day and see a disaster happening all run well, often i think people think, oh my god, there is no solutions to this and we way we have to wait for some miracle,
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technological answer in the future. well, actually the solutions do exist. what it requires is decision makers to think better, more holistic to better connect and to rec, is it? there are some recalls as historically colonialism and an economic model that is really driven all the consumption as deregulation of economies that is prioritized profit maximization rather than thinking about people's well being or about that you know, how to build resilience in community. and if we did those things, well actually we do have solutions and they can really have an impact on ultimately we, we are in a will time when, without doubt we are going to see more and more disasters. but we can, what we can do is reduce the impact of those disasters. so unlike can pakistan, we're not talking about 33000000 people affected, or a 1000 over 1100 life lost and people's lives and livelihoods destroyed. and that's the approach that really many of us have been advocating for
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a long time in this later to and report hopefully is another way called called the decision makers. right. and what implications does this call for joined up thinking have not only on governments, but on, on the aid sector as well, on activists and advocates like yourself, will there be more cooperation? do you think in the wake of a report like this? well, actually many of the clean movements that's a long been approach. i mean, if you, if you look at movements in particularly in developing countries, they've never seen climate has been through a different lens than their work on poverty or income inequality or on corporate abuse. they've always understood that all of these issues interconnect with each other and that really you have to have a systemic solution. the system change if you want to address those, how do we prevent the over extraction on the state of extraction results is all the consumption. how do we ensure that we have good governance and that the historical legacy of our economic system can be addressed at that's now been recognized,
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i think by international institutions that actually to, to connect these to connect the dots. and i, it might seem like common sense, and i think most of your view is it be, well, of course the world is an interconnected place, of course, crises are interconnected. how can you not think about having solutions to one that also solve the, the crisis and these are things that are long been argued and put forward. and now we're seeing un reports really echoing what we've long set out. that actually solving the climate crisis goes hunted and we, tackling poverty inequality. but it also goes hand in hand with fundamentally changing our economic system, which, you know, has maximize profit against over the rights of people. and of course of our planet, vermont executive director of the charity war on want great to have you on the show . always a pleasure. thank you. the capital of northern ethiopia is to cry. region has hit been hit by another strike late on tuesday. the number of casualties he's from the during the attack, which happens near
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a hospital in mckelly is not yet clear. fighting in our region, south of rebel held to cray erupted last week ending a 5 month truce is now spread along the border with sudan. sam, you'll get to choose an independent journalist and has more from addis ababa be not so far as the children government hasn't commented, except to say that they are interested in some kind of peaceful engagement with a t p, a left in which they have already declared as a terrorist organization, but it came via an email that was sent by the head of a local hospital in mckelly mccully general hospital saying that a bomb was dropped in mckelly. i'm touching on that the compounds which shared the hospital in, affecting a few. i mean many people, but they haven't, we haven't been able to verify exactly how my, how many people have been killed or how many have been wondered what we know. busy
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so far is that some of the victims are being treated in either hospital. one of the biggest hospital sit mckelly, which has been suffering since this conflict began almost 2 years ago now. in sudan, a protest who has been killed after being hit by a tear gas canister and run over by a security force vehicle in the capitol cartoon. demonstrators were marching against last year's military coup and demanding a return to full civilian rule. the military seas power from transitional civilian led government last year since then, and the military protests have been held and several cities almost every week. syrian state media says israel has launch several air strikes near a lap, owes international airport, causing some damage. for missiles are reported to have hit the runway and depots at the apple believe to contain missiles supplied by iran. low casualties have been reported. so far channels are being held for some of those killed during this week's violence in the rocky capital baghdad. the demonstration started on monday when influential she at lead him october,
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outsider said he was leaving politics. they ended on tuesday when he ordered his supporters to leave the green zone, though. so jabari has more from baghdad. i. this is the cause, the political rivalry in iraq, dozens of people came to pay their respects to the family of with some dorothy, for nearly a decade, the 38 year old had been part of psoriasis along the armed wing of she had politician mac t'other. also, others movement after southern announced yet again on monday that he's retiring from politics. his forces fought with shy rivals, supporting the iran backed coordination framework and iraqi security for hours in the capitol with sam's eldest son alleys, 15 years old. he is one of 4 and was, and wife is pregnant with their 5th child. with sam's brother, a boss says his brother was killed by a sniper who shot him through an eye issue with any monitor. oh,
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so we believe in the orders of mc, todd ro, sauder to reform the state. he's the only man who can save the state, but it's a policy in the coordination framework have gone too far. we offered them now 73 seats and parliament and told them to form the government, but they failed. kind of a many here say events of this past week as a reminder of how much they need souther to remain in politics was sam was a member of psoriasis along the, on the wing of southern movements. his older brother says his death only reinforces their relief and dedication to move to other else, other who they believe is in done with politics just yet. on the other side of town, those from the other side of this conflict laid their victims to rest. those been carried here were members of the popular mobilization forces. she ain't our groups that are now part of the government's military. the prime minister address the nation following the end of the violence on tuesday evening with a warning. well,
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had the montana and i warned that if they want to continue to create disputes and complications and not to listen to the source of reason than i will make a moral decision. but i am proceed to leave my post in accordance to the iraqi constitution at an appropriate time. oh, this political upheaval is not new here, but sees like this are in the heavily fortified green zone area. and as quickly as they began, they ended when southern told his followers to stop the bloodshed and leave that highlights the immense power he still has despite claims of retirement. and many are wondering how he will use it next door. so jabari al jazeera back that tens of thousands of healthcare workers in garza have been protesting against this rady controls. they say the restrictions imposed on palestinian patients seeking treatment outside galleries, costing lives. ambulances lined up at the nearest hospital in the north of the
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strip. just this mom for palestinians died after israel prevented them from leaving garza to receive treatment. pakistan's former prime minister em ranken has appeared in court and been given an extra week to answer contempt charges. his also facing charges under the anti terrorism act, prosecutors say he threatened police officers and adjudged involved in one and in the arrest of one of his aides. during a recent speech he gave, if convicted, he could face a 6 month prison term and be disqualified from running for office. the taliban has been marking the 1st anniversary of the withdrawal of foreign troops from afghanistan. ah, firework lit up the sky of the capital come to celebrate the departure of the last american soldiers at one minute to midnight. one year ago, the taliban also held a parade showing of equipment, the u. s. left behind and declared wednesday public holiday. president joe biden
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withdrew us forces after a 20 year war. since then, the taliban has re imposed its harsh version of a slum moore while an economic crisis has plunged millions deeper into poverty. the u. s. justice department says it has evidence. former president donald trump's team was hiding classified files at his florida home. it also says his advisors were obstructing an investigation into whether he illegally removed top secret documents from the white house. alan fisher reports from washington. it's a remarkable photo documents recovered by the f. b, i from it's read on the florida home of former president, donald trump. some marked in bright red or yellow top secret. and if you look closely, others mark each c s highly classified papers which could have details on american spies or secret human sources. the august 8th read came after repeated efforts by the authorities to have trumps tim returned documents taken. when he left the white
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house. trump's lawyers claimed they had made a diligent search and they had nothing that needed to be returned, but the rate uncovered more than a 100 classified documents. not just in the storage area at mont illegal, but in the ex presidents desk, the filing stating that government records were likely concealed and removed. and that efforts were taken to obstruct the government's investigation. the idea that he didn't know he was holding on to classified information and they were sitting in his desk in his office, not just in the storage room. it's very hard to make the argument on true social, the ex president social media channel. he offered up a line of defense terrible the way the f b i during the rate of my lago through documents hop hotly all over the floor. perhaps pretending it was me that did it. and then started taking pictures of them for the public to see thought they wanted them kept secret. lucky i declassified. but while running for president in 2016,
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he attacked hillary clinton's handling of sensitive documents insisting no one was above the law. in my administration, i am going to enforce all laws concerning the protection of classified information . some of what was recovered from on a logo was so sensitive, according to the court filing, even the f b, i counter intelligence personnel and d o g attorney's conducting the review, required additional clearance before they were permitted to review certain documents. trump's team have filed a request for a special master, an independent set of eyes saying the f. b. i seized documents to which they had no legal right. of the department of justice says all the documents have now been reviewed that none need to be returned. because they belong to the government, not to one individual, and that donald trump never declassify them. and that is what could put the ex president and his team at legal jeopardy allen fisher al jazeera,
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at the department of justice in washington. the venice film festival has opened with a heartfelt message from ukraine's president. i need the son o'neill just again that was doing a video from below to me. as the lensky played to delegate the ceremony in it. he paid tribute to the children killed in the ukraine, conflicts and asked the international community to continue its support for his country. still i had this news hour in sport, new castles, record signing strikes in his 1st premier league game and spain's famous tomato street fight laptop. martino returns after a 2 year hiatus. ah, cats are always official,
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a line of the journey with a full away official. and line of the join
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lou ah, welcome back. tough a gemini with the sport. thank you me for another game. another victory for off the leave made it 5 premier league winds and as many matches the leaders that maintains that 100 percent thought to the season by beating aston villa. gabriel j. d. that also ahead of the half an hour. so that going back in the 2nd half, that they was level so long as gabrielle marks and nellie made it to 13 minutes later, next to nick had all types of side it's manchester united on sunday it took adding holland 11 minutes to get his 1st touch again, nothing in forest in the manchester city strike and made it counts. as he put his side, one de la city then took advantage of
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a clearance from the forest go keeper. lovely move here was finish off while you guess it. hollins. eliza, go to said the 2nd half trick into game, but his goal was the best of the knights. how about this from 0 outcomes that made it all new to the champions. and another impressive effort here from city and alvarez, that was his 2nd of the game to give 50 a 6 mil when they say 2 points behind. also in 2nd, little falls at bumpy thought to the season. looks set to continue. they fell behind when newcastle, finding alexander essex scored on his premier, the baby, the swedish international have received his work, be the only hours area level for managed to find to equalize it in the 61st minute courtesy of her birthday. for me, the game was heading for a draw for the referee, allowed the match to go beyond the allocated stuff each time. liverpool managed to find
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a winner. 3 con valeo. second big 3 and 5 matches. curious, while newcastle suffered most of the speed that you needed hotline remain on beaten this season, but they only managed to share the points with west ham. but really soon, when i realized that not long after the break across the assist sonya, it was finished by thomas putnam, a 3rd in the table. 4 points behind awful. and over in france, parents, nation, i got back to many ways and the biggest stars were on the school. she may more with the again, please leave a message with the assist for the 1st and 2nd goes killing him by doubling really? yes, he finished 3. now, back to paris, doubled, kidney, then back, bite, singapore. the only olympic gold medalist has been banned from competing,
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offered missing to using cannabis submit. joseph scooting be michael felt so when the $100.00 meets a butterfly goes out the games in re a. but his admission has now led to singapore defense ministry finding him from taking any more leave from compulsory military service. singapore has strict rules on drugs, including the death penalty for trafficking getting has apologize for his actions and is likely to miss next is asian games as he finishes his to yet national. ah, at the us open it soon as he is on sheba, has made it into the 3rd round. the 4th straight year, the 5th see to be american, elizabeth, mangling the daughter of the $985.00 champion at flushing meadows among us. she was pushed in the 1st set twice coming from right down to its 75 against the wall. number 144. the 2nd set was more straightforward for last month. when would in find this with the ship taking it 60 when i came here, my goal was to be in the 2nd week and my goal was to really improve more and get
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through the 3rd the round. i'm just taking each much at a time and hopefully we'll, we'll learn from other yes opens, you know, have a, i have a mission i'm, i'm a number 5 in the words. so for me, i'm trying to represent that number as much as i can. so i can really improve my game, and i can really continue and improve my ranking, hopefully. and there's been a big upside from day 3 in new york. 3rd said, maria factory was eliminated by china's one. you write 75 in the world. one came back from a set sounds when the match in 2 hours and 44 minutes. it victory over the top 10 player. and she reaches the 3rd round of the grand plan for the 1st time. in the mens and the married land to the 3rd round of the us open for the 1st time in 6 years the 2012 champion dropped the opening sets against the american amino
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nava. but from that very last another for game faces, while number 14 italian, the tie berry team in major league baseball and new york yankee star are in judge is closing in on a 61 year old record. the outfits his high run for a 2nd straight day, taking his season tally to 51 with 32 games remaining. he's taking the american lead records of 61 home as for a single season, held by the nations re roger maris. new york ended a 3 game losing streak for the 7 for victory over the l. a angel in the famous sky dump is one of the main stops on the world calendar. every winter that the austrian city is also found to use for the venue when there's no snow, and it could be the toughest 400 meter race we've seen. as many as 2000 run
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a race up the flight which reaches an incline of 75 to send him pause. there were individual competitions and team events involving relays all equally greeting for those taking thoughts. on that is your support from me for now is back to leave in london studio. many thanks said joe, before we go spain's world famous annual tomato fight known as lateral. martina has returned to the streets of burn all. oh, teresa locals. she is trucks loaded with tons of rock tomatoes, drove through the town. more than $20000.00 participants held the fruit at each other to the main street read after 2 year hiatus because of covered celebrations, when full throttle with tomatoes, fly, non stop for over an hour. the festival is said to have originated for a bus stop among villages and 1945. we all loved it to your dads together. we all
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played together. i think this is the best value i spent my whole year. after 2 years, i'll call it this one. this is one hello me cleans we actually climbed up to get the time is 1011 elephant experience. everybody is recommended to come, jo, ones in their life that i didn't expect full to me. but it was so much fun and totally were the one hell of a clean up to follow that super media barker for this new use our i'll be back into my with more of the days that go away. ah ah,
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a september on al jazeera jillions go to the pose in the vote, the could redefine the country, but will the people approve the both the constitution up front returns, mot. lamont hill, talk through the headlines to challenge the conventional wisdom. the u. k. is conservative policy, alexa, new leda to become the country's prime minister. amid an impending economic recession. the listening post examines 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 were both on the human cost and maximum attempts, a tackling the crisis september on al jazeera for science. this, the evidence is irrefutable. with america's climate change,
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denial stubbornly mistrust of the fact. despite soaring temperatures, raging wild fires and shrinking water reserves, the world's largest economy. it still splits along ideological lines. so can it ever reach consensus to avoid catastrophe? climate wars are 2 on a j 0. which side is winning chaos or control? what does the new forever proxy war mean for america and nato? as long as americans keep consuming prices are going to keep going up. why didn't joe biden see inflation comic? how did we get so much raw? the quizzical look at us politics. the bottom line. ah ah, despite chinese opposition you and rights chief michel boucher lay releases

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