tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera September 1, 2022 9:00pm-10:01pm AST
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1000000 people are eligible to choose between the welfare state, his strength and rights, or to keep a constitution adopted under the dictatorship of augusta. finishing julie referendum on al jazeera. on the 5th of september, britton's conservative party will elect a new leader who will become the country's prime minister. a row likely to be defined by an unprecedented cost of living crisis spiraling inflation and away the strikes across the country. stay without his era, for the latest developments on the u. k. 's, new prime minister. ah, this is al jazeera ah hello, i'm carry johnston. this is the news are well live from don't coming up in the next 60 minutes. un mission to this operation. power plant wraps up,
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but it's leaving inspectors behind. 4 people are killed in fighting between rival shy factions in iraq's southern city of basra. i'm seen bas ravi and pakistan southern sin province where people in towns like this are using mud walls and sandbags to hold back the flood waters. a national tests in the us revealed remote learning during the pandemic had devastated effects on school children. and as for the serena william show is set for at least one more performance, the $23.00 tom grand slam champion, putting her retirement on hold with another when they do sr. a team of you and experts have inspect to the safety of europe's largest nuclear power facility in ukraine, the chief for the international atomic energy agency. rafael grossi has as to the
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russian or deposit zachary z. a plot or 5 others are staying behind. 3 survey reports from give renewed fighting around this up what it's yeah, nuclear power plant in the city of in order that did not prevent the un nuclear watchdog team from crossing the front lines. ah, in spite of the dangers, the team led by the international atomic energy director f, i ludo c moved ahead to begin the match, expected visit. grossey said he was able to inspect vital equipment. i saw a lot and i have my people there and we were able to, i was able to work at the whole site. moscow says keep center sabotage team to try to recover europe's largest, no power plant that's been under russian control since march. first of all, rosin milan at 6 20 am to teams of ukrainians saboteurs. 60 men stroll. you 7 speed
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boats attempted to land banks of the kafka water reservoir. some 3 kilometers, little feast to the supper is your nuclear poplar. he denies all accusations and says moscow is trying to manipulate the visit, carried out attacks around the city, to terrorize the population, and the ukrainian employees inside the plant. their well being is a major concern for ukrainian officials. keith says one of its reactors had to be shut down because of the shelling on thursday, and it warned about the possibility of a meltdown if the plant goes offline completely. the visit is expected to last for a few days until the un team on the ground can evaluate the dangers on site. the situation around the nuclear power plant has had authorities here in keep on the edge as hoping russia will demilitarized the area. but russia has already said it has no plans to remove its troops any time soon. that is how i'll defeat active. a germany has announced to will charter another floating natural gas terminal as part
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of its plan to stop relying on russian energy. the terminal will have the capacity for 5000000000 cubic meters per year and will be ready for use in the winter of 2023. to bring the country's total number of terminals to 5. the show of growing at miniature corporation, russia and china holding a war games the week long drills are taking place in russia's far east, tennessee of japan. boston at 2022 involves more than $50000.00 soldiers and thousands of weapon units, including aircraft and warships. graham on web is a research fellow at the s by to wrap them at a school of international studies at 9 young technological university. he says that ties between china and russia have grown stronger. i think it is a case of the proverbial i'll scratch my back in scratch mine and i think we saw this in terms of how things are played out over the course of this year. and we saw
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the cd, 0 russian invasion of the korean and a chinese look the other way. i didn't really join the majority of the international community and in pushing against that. and likewise, buttons administration has also turned the other way when it came, when has come to the issues of taiwan question and china's concerns about foreign interference in, in this particular issue. so clearly there is a concert of saw going on between these 2 countries. and i think the military exercises clearly provide a very clear strategic signal that they will walk rate and coordinate military affairs together. now, of course, additional members joining into this exercise of countries like mongolia and nicaragua allows. i mean it's, it's, it's quite disconcerting because these countries were formally allies of the former soviet union coming on board in this enterprise. and it's
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a sign that russia is telling the world that it's not alone, and it has, it has covered our friends that will recovery wiggers in turkey, a fair un report on china's sheen john region will be mostly ignored. it criticizes china. fritz abuse of wigan, muslims, and other minorities a, some still accused international community of turning a blind. i got your lopez or yon has more this sharpen is sample has been a refuge from a care am since she and her daughter left north was china 5 years ago. her husband and 2 other children were left behind in ching yank. she hasn't heard from them since she fears a you and report that condemns china's treatment of wiggers and other muslim minorities will largely go ignored. shame that best sell all day. oh, it's been 5 years of as living hair. china has killed our young people and left our children orphaned. the united nations isn't doing enough. michelle,
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that she'll let release the report. 13 minutes before her term as you and human rights chief ended. it found that wiggers and other mostly muslim groups and detention camps have been subjected to torture, including force medical treatment and sexual and gender based violence. who could have known though i said this is not a case of turks or wages or muslims or jose. this is the case of humanity. we're not calling for china to stop just because the wages of any person with the hash. and brian must know that this is wrong. the box on back home that china has denied any abuses. it says is policies inching. young fight, what it calls terrorism and provides a weaker with better economic opportunities. each other to the so called assessment is orchestrated and produced by the us and some western forces and is completely illegal and void by just fable. countless stories of torture and separation are shared within the weaker community of do salaam says he hasn't heard from his
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brother in 5 years. uh huh. and the more of a deliverable this report should have out earlier that this isn't something that can be put on hold when a group is being destroyed, it's not appropriate for humanity just to watch for a couple of years in a bit. the report recommends the chinese government take steps to release. weaver is detained in training centers, prisons or detention facilities. the weaker community hopes for the same, but fears their course will largely ignored at home and abroad. katya little miss of the young al jazeera, the u. s. government appears to have made a policy, you turn just off the ordering top tech firm and video to stop selling sophisticated computer chips to china. well that, so bring in the in share. he's an editor at large with the c net. he joined us live from silverspring, maryland to thanks for joining us at. what do you make of this apparent you turn?
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well it, in a lot of ways we're talking about the injured, his ease of the relationship between china in the united states and the tech industry increasingly is being caught in the middle. you may remember, for example, a couple years ago, we saw president donald trump then president donald trump, trying to get the way that tick tock works changed and bring it under american leadership. there's a lot of talk as well about concerns over security, over national security and even stuff like 5 g wireless. you may remember a couple of companies there have come under scrutiny. so this is an a lot of ways, a continuation of that pressure campaign. and how vital all these chips in every day technology in a lot of ways they aren't. these are artificial intelligence, which is stuff that, you know, we definitely are using more and more. but a lot of the technology it appears as though was stuff that could be used in
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servers. so imagine in big computer could be computer farms, right? big groups of computers that are really designed to help people to be able to do stuff like, you know, you could imagine being able to do hard math, being able to create all sorts of different experiences for trying to build, why self driving cars, all sorts of stuff like that, it's not really stuff that would go in our phones, for example, given what you say then how concerned is the u. s. government over china's technological advances in these fields? well, that's really the key. as we've written on sina, taiwan, in particular, where a lot of these chips are manufactured has become real flash point. and it's always been kind of an anxious type of place for the tech world. a lot of manufacturing happens there. in fact, a very vast majority of the chips in video, for example,
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the company we're talking about here as well as many others are built in taiwan. and so china, if it were to turn around and start doing, putting aggressive aggression toward taiwan the same way, for example, russia has been towards ukraine that could lead to a serious trouble for the tech industry. and i think that's part of why you see these dancing around the edges efforts by the us government to push and poll with the chinese government about all sorts of various tech interests. so politically and economically then a lot of stake. there's a ton, i mean look if, if, if suddenly something were to happen in taiwan, it's very possible the tech industry will be turned upside down and inside out, i mean, it's almost all of the technology that you and i have in our pockets and are looking at right now, somehow flows through that kind of through that place, and it could cause huge repercussions if that were to suddenly be disrupted. it's
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also worth noting that the american government has invested tens of billions of dollars in this thing called the chips act, which we read about on seen that. where you can actually, you know, they want to start manufacturing more ships in the united states. we, we manufacture some right now, but they want to do more because they don't want to be as reliance on taiwan and other places in share with seen that we appreciate your time. thank you. thanks for having the leader of poland. that governing party says his country will be demanding $1.00 trillion dollars in world war 2, reparations from germany. while the figure follows the release of her court on the costs of nazi germany is occupation from 1939 to 945. but a sub sikowski is a member of the european parliament and the former polish foreign minister. he says the court for reparations from the governing party is a political move. nazi germany committed unspeakable crimes in poland,
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up to 6000000 polish citizens dead and up to half of our economy. destroyed. but at plugs done the reparations that were decided upon by, by the pictures of the 2nd world war assigned to poland. 15 percent of the soviet reparations claims. and we were cheated out of most of that. so you could actually argue that it's the success of the state of the soviet union that owes us those reparations hope you list leadership here in poland is it knows full well that legally it's almost impossible to move this agenda forward. but they have a policy of attacking ally in germany, and it seems to play well in some parts of the right wing electric. germany is our
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ally in nato is a most important economic partner with whom we have a trade surplus. and i personally think that at a time when to choose armies or trying to conquer ukraine, when we have an actual present danger in the east, is not the best time to be picking fights with our western friends and alex i to more heads on the news our including will take a closer look at the latest in a string of mysterious debts of russian oil executives, the wife of malaysia's former prime minister. now james ross, zach is found guilty of corruption but his sport. can any one stop this man from driving away with another window? one well title and his head with it. ah, 3 days of mourning had been declared in iraq's southern city of basra,
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following violence between shiite rival armed groups. 4 people were killed and 10 others wounded on thursday with of the wide reports from baghdad. oh, i knew this is the aftermath of fighting between shy i'd groups in the center of basra. i militants affiliated, 2 influential leader, mac, that a solder exchange. it fired with a splinter group, backed by iran. both sides suffered the casualties on bill savage. didn't you know that even at night on people started to gather here? are you more intense gunfire went on chicken machine, guns, 80 aircraft weapons, and no watch. even the children were screaming, most people were afraid in their homes are cause broke apart, or the houses here were impacted by gunfire. that's all i did. i mean, there was firing, woke up terrified me. the area here had become a front line. god is our witness. boshra turned into marshal. this car was impacted
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it burned. this one broke apart. oh, dear shop, burned, even our homes were hit, our children kept screaming. hello. so what bustler is iraq to mean oil producing harbor? and this escalation in violence, fullest plaiting in baghdad. on monday, the political crises pitts followers of the powerful shad political leader mocked at a souther against mostly iran aligned parties, unparliamentary groups. southern supporters emerge it as the biggest party in parliament in elections in october, but weren't able to form a government. you like has had a caretaker government ever since. in baghdad, the supreme court has postponed rolling on a petition by the by. so that is movement until next wednesday, it demands the dissolution of parliament, an early elections. but this agreement between the political rivals goes beyond
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that. mod abdougla had al jazeera but that 2 young palestinians had been killed by israeli forces during raids and occupied westbank. one of the victims was shot when israeli soldiers entered the latter refugee camp. the 2nd was killed by israeli police in albury city. the u. s. national press club has a post, mostly awarded al jazeera correspondent, sharina acclaim. it's presidents awards. her niece at lena barclays, received the accolade on her behalf in washington. sharina was with al jazeera for 25 years, covering the story of the israeli occupation. she was shot in the head by israeli forces while on assignment in jeanine in may, out as they were, major network continues to demand a rapid, independent, and transparent investigation into the killing. the
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wife of malaysia's former prime minister, another browser has been convicted of corruption. she's been sentenced to 10 years in prison and find $216000000.00. a week ago, her husband began serving at jail time, also for corruption, florence louis reports from quantum number. when ross momento was the 1st lady of malaysia, she was heavily criticized for her lavish lifestyle from designer handbags, too expensive jewelry. but the true extent of her taste for the finer things in life only became clear when her husband nat geo plaza lost an election in 2018. after an investigation into allegations of corruption, the couple were eventually charged. police seized hundreds of boxes of jewelry handbags in cash, valued at more than a quarter of a $1000000000.00. on thursday, she was convicted of soliciting a bribe of nearly $42000000.00 and accepting one and a half 1000000 to help her company secure a project to build solar panels for schools. she's been sentenced to 10 years in
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prison and find $216000000.00, but remains on bail pending her appeal. yes, we have. we were noticed or you need appeal the find. the death of the 3rd week of bengal. all right. have you suspended? own he's released on earlier bill in bought buy, bought so oh client. very lot is able to go back home and leave with the family to like just last week, her husband began serving a 12 year prison term after losing his spinal appeal in one of several corruption trans. the u. s. justice department alleges a 4 and a half $1000000000.00 was stolen from the malaysian state investment fund, one empty b, and that around a $1000000000.00 from that went to nudging. prosecutors also said some of the money financed a hollywood blockbuster the wall street. although the charges against the production
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company will later dropped, then us attorney general had described the case as cryptography at its worst. the scandal played a part in the defeat of the governing party. i'm new in 2018. this is not the on the lawsuit against ross mar months or she faces 17 other charges of money laundering and tax evasion for illegally receiving more than $1.00 and a half $1000000.00 in a separate case. which means her legal troubles are far from over. florence lee al jazeera cologne port. pakistan's army is on high alert for more floods in the south . every province in the region has been devastated with sinned. the worst affected record monsoon reigns have led to the death of about 1200 people. nearly a 1000000 homes have been damaged or destroyed since june. u. n. has launched a 160000000 dollar appeal for emergency funding samples ravi has this update from us in the province. well,
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we've been talking for days about flood waters coming from the north in other areas and coming down towards saying that we, we found where those waters have been stopped. people in this town of marian w district have been using sand and dirt, dirt at this point of time in the floods taking on a premium role in trying to hold back to flood waters. people are trucking in san filling up sandbags and warning people to stay away from these mud walls that have been built around the town to try to keep the water out of the town out from keep it from pouring into the town. know where i'm standing at street level is about 5 or 6 feet below the water line. let me show you where that is. you see the mud wall there behind me. and if you come up here, this is where the water level is and it goes on for a great distance. you can see everything is submerged. there are bits of road, there are a little high enough for people to be able to walk, to get to where they need to go into the distance, our residential areas,
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our villages, our shops are people's homes and businesses. and there are rescue operations happening here. there are police and emergency vehicles or military vehicles in boats, and what they are doing is trying to shout out where they can. they're taking boats into those areas to try to reach people that need help. just here, police are trying to call out to anyone in these buildings to see if anybody needs to be evacuated. this is still a very, very active scene. and this water, it is unknown how long it will be standing here. but what people are hoping is that these, the sandbags, these dirt embankments, these make shift dams that have been built by the people that live here. the hope is that this will be enough to keep the water at bay until it dries up until it's pumped out. and people are being warned to stay away because the threat of more water coming, the threat of an imminent breach and this water flowing through into the town and further on is still very real. well,
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let's bring in up to the fidel he's unicef pockets. talk representative and joins us on skype form is i'm about that. welcome to the program. the sheer scale of this really can't be overstated. kennet no hurry, i should. it is not a covered do justice. just imagine a completely separate and wanted to see people are treated radish treated echoes of agricultural and gone. as you said, a 1000000 homes 470000 schools. it's really, really. busy devastating impact on children and families and the other is really good to stop it. and what are the challenges then of getting help to the people who need it?
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the most right now are you know, logistics is a huge issue. we don't have access to many areas. we're lucky, we have teams present in better sound in k p, as our team are able to respond. that initial faces providing water to water correlation, medical supplies, a nutrition of children giving supplements to mothers bets. and so it was all but just is a huge issue, particularly part of it. and another thing is also, of course, our supplies are ready on. we're lucky to have to talk to folks coming over the weekend to provide needed supplies. and as you've said, that you requested $160000000.00 early to save lives. you mention water that as well as displacement of people. how big is the fear of disease right now?
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this is the worst she only have at the moment. was stuck meeting with me all her with me diarrhea with me, my little children with me. they get fever, malaria, all the water. one disease is possible. that's why we're already positioning, border based, initial data. if this happens and hopefully we can have her to, we can see children, mothers, pregnancy mothers. so that is why i think it's critical to get the resources we need. so that more like some of the loss. and beyond that, what about wide scale damage to infrastructure and it is on for president 5000 kilometers of rows over $200.00 bridges. so with me, years and billions and billions of dollars to recover from those. i mean, of course i'll go sell it was 70080000 schools are destroyed and the remaining of
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schools mostly used for shelter to her last 2 years of learning recovery. now again losing learning because they don't have to learn. busy so how do we have to also make sure that we can improve shelters for learning? and of course also, but i would also, so for the winter, i need you to release. so we also need to be ready for that. after the fidel unicef, pakistan representative, we appreciate your time. now rebel is in ethiopia at north integrate region. say that i. e. 13 and your train forces have lost a major offensive against them. the statement, the to gripe people's liberation front, says the joint offensive is on multiple fronts. fighting between the government forces and the rebels resumed last week after 5 month love. how can web has more from direct the in neighboring can you and to the grand military forces is said
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that the federal government forces and ever trained forces of launched an attack in the northwest corner of the great province near the border with eritrea says, the town of bo is under a full from the tact that coming from full directions and to green forces are holding their positions on the heavy shelling. the government hasn't responded ethiopian government hasn't responded directly to the claims that it has said that the grey and forces of intensified their attacks and the killing and displacing civilian ever try and government hasn't responded to the side that it's been a c 5. the last 5 months that was broken last week when fighting resumed, and it was initially concentrated around the southeast corner of the gray province to graham forces and are claiming the northern front is opened as well. but it's not impossible to verify any of these claims access. is heavily restricted and
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there's an ongoing communication blackout in the grey provinces. was that a head heron al jazeera evidence bills that the pandemic has left children around the world months or even years behind their education? and iranian pool as of past and present have been getting a closer look. one of the sports most prized possessions. ah, here's your forecast for the 2nd of september. great to be with you starting in the middle east. we're really, there's no change in the weather pattern, plenty of hot sunshine to go around. still the odd burst of rain for western areas of yemen and certainly the possibilities, some of that activity could leak into mecca with the chance of showers or thunderstorms. there. it remains dry and quiet across afghanistan and pakistan were
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in the law for the monsoon reigns now probably until about mid september. still the risk of some showers around islam of bod, up against the foothills of the himalayas. disturbed weather still in the forecast for its stumble on friday. seen those winds pick up through the boss for us as well . and we're keeping that heat through the lab that will put the colors on dark of the red. the higher the temperature aleppo at $42.00, a man at $37.00, your temperatures are now starting to come down over the next few days. certainly the risk of seen some flooding across a huge swath of democratic republic of congo. really, south sudan including dubose wall on friday with a high, $31.00 degrees wind. still the big story across south africa. so for the northern cape province, the western cape and those winds have shifted around to northerly. so that's pumped up the temperature. for example, in durban to high of 25 degrees on friday, enjoy season. ah
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b. lou . ah, he watching al jazeera reminder of our top stories. now a team of you and experts has inspected the russian control. parisha nuclear power plant in ukraine. the international atomic energy agency chief has already left the site. the 5 others are staying behind. the outgoing un human rights chief has released a report saying there's evidence china's treatment of the minority amounts to crimes against humanity. and she rejected the study as an attempt to undermine its stability. funeral ceremonies had been held in iraq for 2 men killed in fighting
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between rival shy factions in basra. the southern iraqi city remains on edge to violence began on wednesday the chairman of russia's 2nd largest oil company has died of falling from a hospital window that's according to russian media reports. reformer gun off was being treated as a clinic in moscow. the lou coil chairman is one of several high level russian executives who have died in the last year. in july, a shipping c ties to the state energy company. gastro was found, shot dead in his swimming pool. or bill browser is the founder and ceo at hermitage, capital management and author of where did notice, he says he doesn't believe russia's explanation of the death. i think it's a murderer. if you have one person falling out a window that's suspicious, but when you have a oil, executives, oil, and gas executives over a short period of time, all dying under mysterious circumstances, it looks like
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a pattern. i think that this is a pattern that's connected with a fight inside of, of the potent regime over who gets the spoils of the oil and gas industry. and based on what i can see, it looks like he was pushed out the window because somebody wanted to add something which he was standing in front of and wouldn't let them get it. these types of incidents are organized by the secret beliefs. they call it the f s b. keep your listeners may, may know the name k g b, which is the previous secret police, but it's now the f s p. and this is an organization that regulated carries out assassinations and products and all sorts of other crimes. both economic and otherwise, and we've seen them do many other things very similar to this. the reason for this type of actions is that the economic pie has shrunk as
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a result of sanctions. the amount of money flushing around moscow is a lot less than it used to be. and so because there's less money, there's more people fighting over that money. and when people fighting over money in russia usually leads to murder, so i would expect more murders to happen. mexico preston to set to give his 4th state of the union address andras. and i know that because of the door is expected to lay out what he sees as his administration's achievements and address the countries biggest problems for inflation. is that a 21 year high drug related violence and corruption go largely unchecked or manual . arapahoe is with us now live from mexico city. so mexico presidents has faced criticism on a number of fronts like and face and high levels of violence. so how does he manage to maintain such high approval ratings? i carry that's a question. i think many world leaders are probably asking themselves when they consider that high approval rating of the mexican president. especially considering
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that high inflation, sluggish economy, of some levels of violence. mexico, seeing these aren't problems that are unique to mexico. but during his now 4th state of the union address, mexico's president is going to be touting several of his achievements specifically on matters on, on policy priorities ranging from health care education to infrastructure, creating jobs as well as reducing violence. we should know that despite all of these problems, despite what's been largely seen as a poor management of the pandemic, soaring inflation, a sluggish economy here in mexico, the president continues to enjoy a round, a 60 percent approval rating. as soon as high as 62 percent according some of the most recent pulling that we've seen, much of that approval has a lot to do with the president's continued rhetoric of wanting to improve conditions for the poorest in mexico wanting to he's, we're expected that he will be touting investments made toward universal health
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care investments made toward access to education as well as it just improving living conditions. generally speaking, specifically in the southern part of the country, places like us. and while hoc touting the create the creation of jobs through infrastructure projects and states in the southern part of the country, internationally am low as he's called here in mexico. and it is monday. love is over. the lord has also sort of been able to fly below the radar. stay away from some of the larger international controversies he's maintained very good relationship with the united states. he had a strong relationship with a trump administration, arguably, and even stronger relationship. now, with the bite administration where president lope is over, begins to lose ground is on the question of violence. a new study is found that violence against women, for example, has seen a significant rise in recent years. violence against journalists already been 15 journalists murdered in mexico. so far this year. that's more than twice as many
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that were killed in all of 2021. there been brazen attacks by cartel militias in several st. in several states in recent weeks, even here in mexico, these attacks appear to be occurring at a higher frequency. and the mexican president's plan for pacifying the country for reducing violence has essentially been more boots on the crown militarized approach . the creation of a national guard where we're now seeing as many as 115000 service men and women who are participating. and as a security forces for the country, this is a strategy that security experts here in mexico and even abroad have rejected as being a sustainable solution to address the crisis of violence in the country. but again, we saw several hours from the actual speech, but we anticipate that the president will be speaking about all of these topics. i know wrapping in mexico city. thank you for the mexican government has a publicly apologize to the families of victims of 82011 austin attack that killed
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52 people. interior secretary said the government failed to properly insure safety matches up the casino royale in the north eastern city of monterey. the building was set on fire by members of last status is one of mexico's most dangerous drug cartels. local police said the attack was in retaliation for not paying protection money. the u. s. has authorized updated code 19 vaccines and booster shots that targets the only constraint. food and drug administration hopes the modified jobs from the pfizer by intake and turner will provide high protection against more contagious variance. the white house says its confidence. there will be enough boosters for everyone who wants one. dr. marcus pressure is the chief medical officer at the association of state and territorial health officials explained the benefits of the vaccine booster. dr. we think that there's a lot of potentially having a version of the same that's much more tailored towards some of the barriers that
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we're seeing now with the coping fires. when the vaccine 1st came out back in 2021, it was very specific to the form of that thing we were saying. now we have new, we have the com variance, which is, which appears to be much more infectious. and you know, the hope. ready is that having a new form formulation of this back same can really result in the back things. it's much more effective now where we are now with the buyers. the challenge that we face with this new formulation to maxine is that we haven't had the same kind of we had time for the same clinical effectiveness studies that we've done previously with the vaccinate. you know, there is good evidence that this new formulation is safe and there's, there's some early evidence that it results in your body creating good. ready and having a good reaction when it comes into contact spectrum, but we haven't,
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we don't have the data yet exactly how effective it is. and that's been, that's been a little bit of a challenge. and i think that may be the challenge with the american public is that some people are going to want to see those data before they're going to be comfortable taking those facts. but i think that's the main reason why this is but some delays and rolling this out. national test results were these in united states show that the covered 900 pandemic has had a serious impact on children's education. but the results show that 9 year olds last ground in math or reading school was fell by the largest marsh in 30 years. but the panoramic learning loss isn't just an issue in the u. s. a global reports shows students from around the world are up to a year behind in their schooling. students in latin america and the south asia are the most impacted. and in the long term, these learning gaps could mean lower earnings for students and no economy productivity for nations. by 2040, the impact could lead to an annual loss of more than $1.00 trillion dollars
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worldwide. let's bring in yasmin sharif. she's the director of education, cannot wait. united nations global, a 1000000000 dollar fund for education in emergencies and protracted, christ is good to happy with us from new york. so how alarming is this for the generation that was forced to do remote learning for such a long period of time? thank you very much for having me with just sarah and speak to this numbers a few years ago when i did kinship. and also i had seen like nations mobile phones for the cation emerge, it was a crisis. there was an estimate, the 75000000 children and youth. half of them got 9 men in situations of conflict. this speak middle in sub saharan africa or refuse charges, less than america. a shotgun is bangladesh today and the number has
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skyrocketed to a shocking 222000000 their own children and not the lessons half of them burns for structuring in. in situations of conflict, climate can use this office where the refugees, whose education has been since being disrupt, in addition to their existing crisis as an assault. also corporate mindset. and when we talk about remote learning, what about those who perhaps have no access to things like computers and tablets? well, i can say that the majority of the want to 22000000 children knew that live in situations like sure, yeah. jam and god. in molly burkina, faso, social loss of republic found saddam do not have access to that technology required for mold learning because the infrastructure, the same plan will be,
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are. so i would say that's a divide that has, has been disclose the sort of corporate 9 thing has also shown the learning divide and the technology divide that between do so have them do some bone and what can and should be done to catch up as it were what, what is important now is does it wad that you manage large governments who have been to, to be international donors. hi, there individuals and private sector or stefan and share the responsibility to ensure that these 222000000 children and you are on the suffering from crisis and corporate 9 saying have the ability to loan and continue loaning. assume loaning me as your case. you're kind of way to work with you one system. and so the society and government from discount just to the never education in their
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instance are on the report of 2021. we have not reached the total of 7000000 children and use half of them gars through this thick approach, sometimes with remote learning and slick knology, but very seldom so. and most of their in the last 3 frank boys of the neighboring education and support insurance, we have to leave it there has been sharif, we appreciate your input. thank you. thank you so much for a student fin. the france have returned to school after the summer break, but some may not have a teacher. the french government says 4000 vacant teaching posts have not been filled with teachers. unions say low pay on the under valuing of the profession has worsened the crisis. and foster buffalo reports from pears. ah, maxine collier, worked as a substitute school teacher in the parish region for 7 years. he had to move schools often and was always on short contracts. he was passionate about the
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profession, but gave it up because he was frustrated with the system and the instability. in friedman po, i continued l, you were doing the same job as a staff teacher, your colleagues treat you the same and i had regular inspections like every one that went well. so the job is great, but what's difficult is that after a while it gets tiring because you are changing schools all the time. and there comes a point where you need something reliable as winston did this year for 1000 staff teaching jobs in france are unfilled. so the french governments calling on substitute teachers to help alleviate the shortage. some have no classroom experience. so they given a 4 day crash course before being thrown into the deep end said form as sure no, this training gives us a lot of pointers, tools and resources. but then it's clear we will have to learn on the job. so trade union say that instead of relying on substitute teachers, the government should take a closer look at why there aren't enough staff teachers in the 1st place. they say
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the problem is that the profession is underpaid and under valued. as children returned to school in france after the summer break, some say the education system is in crisis. oh really that what we want to days to be able to work and get conditions to be better paid and have smaller class less frances education minister pap and g. i says he understands teachers frustrations. he says salaries will be reviewed before the end of the year. but union say they're fed up of promises. they've called for strike at the end of the month, because they say the government is out of tune with their concerns. natasha butler, al jazeera paris. the international monetary fund has reached an agreement with shall anchor, provide around $2900000000.00 in emergency financing. as a country faces this worst economic crisis. since independence, while the deal will only go through if a sharon commits a number of conditions. now fernandez reports from caliber, it was an announcement,
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most people in sri lanka had been waiting for. i am half staff and the authorities have reached staff level agreement to support sri lanka, us economic policies with a 48 month arrangement under the so called extended fund facility, off about $2900000000.00 us dollars. shalanda asked the i miss helping much of the economy face collapse and he ran out of money for food, medicine, cooking gas and fuel. tens of thousands of she lumpkins were forced to q for essentials. the crisis led to months of protest, their force, former prime minister, my in the raj both said to resign, and his brother, president boot albert, to flee the country. news of an agreement on a bailout has brought a sense of relief to many here in j lanka. at some observers see, it may be premature to celebrate. we stand ready to a,
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put this agreement to our management and then to our if management approves it to then put it forward to the executive board. as soon as these are conditions that i mentioned are satisfied. so we, we do need to await. now for these are conditions to take place, the main condition is for sheila got to come up with a workable plan to pay back the money it owes. the i m f is also asked for increased taxes, an end to subsidize electricity and fuel and stringent efforts to stamp out corruption. the government has already begun implementing some of those reforms through an interim budget. hi there we had an act v me happy brand. tax management must play an important role in increasing revenue, including increasing tax collection, tax compliance and preventing tax evasion. i propose making it mandatory for everyone over 18 years to register with the inland revenue department. the respect
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of, of their annual income and tex holidays, fema $2900000000.00 from the i m f, will make a huge difference to sher lanka. but in order to secure dollars funds, it must come up with a proper plan of how it will pay. it's mountainous depths for the people if she lanka, that can't come fast enough. minute fernandez, ojo 0 colombo to brazil now where august to was the worst month of fires in the amazon rain forest in 15 years or then $40000.00 wildfires were reported. now short space research agency says that up my 12 percent compared to august last year, currently that i am vol. scenario has been criticized for softening restrictions on exploitation of the rain forest. in while both scenarios, main election rival has repeated his campaign promised to fight climate change. former president lewis and i feel that a silver was at a rally in the capital of amazon estate. he's proposing an alliance of rain forest
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nations to push for hort to deforestation. and spain's world famous annual tomato fight knows that matina is back. 020000 people have streets of the city. and each other in red juice celebrations have been halted for 2 years. because we all loved it to be all that together. we all played together and i think this is the best value i spent my whole year. if you had opt out to us, i'll call it this water. this is the one telephony cleans we actually climbed up to get the time is 1011 elephant experience. everybody is recommended to gum. yo ones in their life that i didn't expect full to me. but it was so much fun and totally worth it. was so the head hair on al jazeera and sports. serena williams extends
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safe going home and then international anti corruption excellence award boat now for your hero, hulu. ah, the sport now. thank you so much. carrie will. serena williams is a retirement still on hold after she want her 2nd strike match to the us open. the 4 year old is expected to hang up her racket at the end of this tournament, but she was too good. well, number 2 and that's consol heights david stock triples. oh, yeah. serena williams walked out, what could easily have been the last batch of her career. she's 123 grand slams, but he's currently ranked outside the top 600. the american was up against the
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world, number 2, a net conservation, but produce some trademark shots to make her mark in the acme set, she eventually took it on a toy break and the record crowd of nearly 30000 started to believe they were not quite to that one or a stony, an opponent hit back in a 2nd set comfortably taking it 6 games to to but somehow serena found a higher level in the decider against a play. at 14 years her junior, she shared the fighting spirit, but still live at so much success. so she turned pro as a 14 year old in 1995. and if the 2 hours 27 minutes from coat she wanted 6 to to progress around 3 is the 1st time in over year that serena has posted back to back winds. mr. little. and
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they will see that michael say, hey, you know, you know, for a 2nd i thought, oh my goodness, i did my best effort to this to me. and so i really, i just wanted to just keep trying and see what, what i can do and just do my best. and i was really excited to be honest. friends without tickets in new york were able to watch a big screens outside happy that the serena show will go on. for now at least it was excellent. excellent. i am so proud of. you've done it before and she can do it again and i think she's really proving to hear that she still got it. oh, this is a pretty racist country. i think so really about what all these people
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sharing were her before the tournament. not many gave serena a chance of winning a record equaling 24 grand slam. but now the perfect hollywood ending might just be on the cards. mixed up. she faces the unseeded australian. i let none of that folks out 0. my weldon born a gets fiance, also through surround 3, the polish top, beating former champion, and how implies sloan stevens, the to time grand fans huddle when it says she still hoping to have one last much against serena williams is a great example of like knowing this guy's telling me, for sure, watching current. it's amazing. she's playing better and better every medicine. i'm pretty curious how she's going to play next. trons and, you know, hopefully we're going to meeting if i don't love it. looking good in the defense of the men's council, the russian wilma was sweeping past france's offer, bring to nations straight sets. madame, for the next face,
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william being who's become the 1st chinese male points, reach. round 3 question marks. the stuff comes back on home soon as he continues his push towards a 2nd straight f one will title the stuff and a 93 point lead heading into the da school pray. already has 9 rice wins, deceased and closing in on the old farm record of 13. you want the small circuit in belgium last sunday with his ferrari rival shot claire down in 6, i think all season long. we've been quite quick on the straight. so some tracks of course it works better than others. and what i said before things spies maybe one of the best strikes for that car. and you know, with all the, the updates over the year so far, i think we got it in a better window. and yeah, just feel it felt really enjoyable to drive you said one podium in the last 9 races . it hurts especially looking at how it performance in the last 9 races take off by and i think it was the base i was off to probably fight for the winds and all of
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these races. and at the end you want to get one podium. so it hurts a little bit. now it's transfer deadline day in many of europe's top leagues english criminal champions. manchester city of my beth if signing during this window, bring in swiss defendant manual a kanji from brush a dormant i knew last year when i was a dark month that i wanted to make a next step that i want to to get better. and yet to see where i can go with my football career and to make the step here to to manage the city with pep. guardiola the coach i think can can get any better. much tonight's had of completed the signing of brazilian wing anthony from i actually 22 year old heading to the club and deal with more than $90000000.00. he's the 4th most expensive signing in premier lee history and rainy and football is past and present have been getting a closer look at the world. come around. men's and women's team were represented the entire on the men side to be heading to catherine event. before will be the 6
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will come appearance, the 1st time football governing body for taking the trophy to all of the $32.00 countries that have qualified for the tournaments. ok, more familiar later on, but that is how you'll sports looking for. andy, thank you very much. that's it for me for this news, i will have more of the day developments in just a few moments. stay with us here on out. ah ah. and in the year 1271, a young battalion matched set out on an extraordinary journey. carrying letters
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from the pope for the great coupla car. mockup alo, travel through wardrobe leaders, the following dangerous roads from the holy land. and beyond. to day, taking a shadow, professor showers travelled from china to venice with surging questions of how the relationship between east and west as j. o marco polo on al jazeera. on the 5th of september, britain's conservative party will elect a new leader who become the country's prime minister, a row likely to be defined by an unprecedented cost of living, crisis spiraling inflation and away the strikes across the country. stay without his era for the latest developments on the u. k. 's, new prime minister criminal games are selling vietnamese children, walk into slavery in europe. one to one east investigates. had the traffic is leading justice on our to sarah. new voices heating up the
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airway. lot of chinese listeners with kimberly here where they really think in their own country shifting power they case the rise of citizen journalism has changed everything. how do happen? it happened on social media and the undeniable impact of the mainstream narrative. australians went to the pole with those images front of mine is a war that is very much came forth out in the media as well as on the battlefield there listening post. dissect the media on al jazeera. ah, a nuclear plant in the middle of a was a new annex, perhaps a given access to this upper region nuclear facility. it is obvious that the plant and the physical integrity of the plant has been violated. ah.
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