tv News Al Jazeera September 4, 2022 11:00am-11:31am AST
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one vote on al jazeera from young ideas to revolutionary thing, from political activism to incarceration. in part one of the 2 part document to see i'll give you a will explore the single minded journey of the 1st leave of an independent bosnia herzegovina as that bag of from prisoner to prison on a jessina. ah. ready in the mirror, donald trump hits out at president joe biden during his 1st rally since the f b. i searched his home. ah,
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hello norah kyle that says al jazeera, alive from doha, also coming up. shelling cuts the main power supply for europe's largest nuclear power plant under russian control in ukraine. to a prepared to vote on new constitution seen by supporters as one of the world's most progressive. and syrian refugees in tack, he fare for their safety as they faced the threat of deportation. ah, homer, you as president donald trump is called joe biden, an enemy of the state. oh, he was speaking at his 1st rally since the f. b. i searched his florida home as part of an investigation into his handling of classified documents. well, joe biden came to philadelphia, pennsylvania to give the most vicious, hateful,
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a derisive speech. ever delivered by an american president. vilifying $75000000.00 citizens plus another probably 752800 and 50. we want to be accurate about it as threats to democracy and as enemies of the state. you are all enemies of the state. and you want to know that the enemy of the state is him and the group that control him. i'll corresponded mike hannah has more from washington d. c. in a speech that law stood well over an hour, donald trump repeated many of the claims he, the full repeating his baseless claim that the 2020 election was stolen. he lashed out at president biden for accusing him and his maga. movement of being a real threat to democracy. he also accuse the f,
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b i and the department of justice of being weaponized by the, by that administration. the somewhat ironic from someone who it must be remembered, fired the director of the f, b i and demanded absolute loyalty from the department of justice. this is what he had to say about the f b i search of his home. a few weeks ago you saw when we witnessed one of the most shocking abuses of power by any administration in american history. the shameful raid and breaking of my home moral argo was a travesty of justice. that made a mockery of american laws, traditions, and principles before the entire world, the entire world was watching and their shock. but the speech was also notable, not for what trump said, but what he didn't, there was no mention of why he took the controversial documents from the white
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house and the 1st place why his lawyers certified that they'd been returned when the f b. i search revealed that in fact, they hadn't, so many questions remain that we're not answered within tram speech. he also did not repeat the claim that all these documents were declassified. something that has been made in social media. this is the type of statement that the f b i would lean in to should there be an investigation into obstruction of justice. why are both leaders in pennsylvania at the same time? well, it's an absolutely critical state in terms of the mid term elections at play. the central role in 2016 and in 2020, when biden wanted 580000 votes, and that's likely repeats itself in the mid terms, where among other things, pennsylvania could well decide who controls the senate. often november asked and agnes as a professor of political science at shipping's by a university and pennsylvania. she explains more about why this state is so
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important in american politics right now. until thing is incredibly important, we are a very unusual state. we're remarkable because we have a blend of urban and rural voters that make us very evenly divided. but even more than that, we have an open senate seat and a midterm election, where only a handful of races are even close. and we have an open human tutorial seat where whoever is going to win this race is going to determine whether pennsylvania is a pro life or pro choice state. and so because a former president trump hasn't doors, both republican candidates for these offices. he has some, some skin in this game and for president by ms from pennsylvania. so both see not only the fact the pennsylvania is a battle ground, but also that they are very personal stakes here. i imagine we'll be seeing more of them in the coming weeks. we have philadelphia on the east side of the commonwealth
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and pittsburgh on the west side of the commonwealth. and in between is a t shape of very rural conservative voters and they are, they are just die hard maga. and so that is why in 2016 for president trump, one pennsylvania 544000 in 2020 trump boss, pennsylvania. 580000 votes and you know, 80000 boats is a lot of boats, but not if you consider the fact that we have in pennsylvania 9000000 registered voters. so, you know, it just speaks to how very closely divided we are. there are more concerns about the safety of europe's biggest nuclear plant, which is under ration control in ukraine. here in watchdog says, as operates a facility has no connection to the last remaining power line. international atomic
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energy agencies as the plant is still supplying electricity through a reserved line. and a, one of the 6 reacts as is functioning, russia and ukraine accused each other of shelling net. the plant now corresponds on cable as on day, joins us now live from cave and gable. just update us on, on what's actually happening at the plant at the moment. well thursday, friday and saturday there was certainly shelling near the separation nuclear power plant so far on sunday. things are fairly calm when it comes to the fighting. but is the situation is still very tenuous there that can certainly change not hour by hour, but almost minute by minute at this point. clearly the situation is still very tense and it's still very much in the cross hairs of the fighting. this nuclear power plant between the russians and ukrainians. what is the real concern here? just to be clear,
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is that the nuclear reactors are fairly well built. they're huge slabs of concrete and they're meant to try to be very sturdy and strong. so for example, small arms fire, even just fragments of, of some shelling is not the concern that, that could potentially damage the nuclear reactors. it's, it's, it's the energy, it's the power supply to the reactors. that is the real concern. those are the things that are most vulnerable, because if the nuclear power plant was to completely lose any sort of power for any extended period of time, that is what potentially could cause a catastrophic nuclear event there. so this is what we're watching so closely. and this is why we're watching closely the fighting around the power plant and in the nearby towns and villages. it should be pointed out as well, where thousands of innocent civilians are caught behind russia
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lines and on the ukrainian side of the fighting as well are fling for example, in the city of nico pole, a city of a 115000 people. that's only about 30 kilometers from the nuclear power plant were told about half of the population has left and the other half. sometimes at night we'll just simply get in their cars. the people will just drive away get away from the town because of constant shelling and then come back during the day time hours . so still a very, a very tense situation. and in this, in the past week gave only receiving ukraine launched as counter offensive. what sort of progress is it making that well, that's right, we're about day 5 or 6 depending on how you counted on this counter offensive by the ukrainians. what they are trying to do is clear, and that's re take harrison harrison is a critical city and a critical region if you will. it has been held by the russians a since about
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a for the last few months or so. it's a very critical city for multiple reasons, but it is the, the gateway, if you will, further east to the city of odessa, which the ukrainians continue to hold the ukrainians feel now they have to retake had a song. and what they are trying to do is basically trap the russian russians, russian soldiers and their tens of thousands of russian soldiers there. so this counter offensive, they're not storming directly into the city of ukrainians. they are trying to encircle the russians slowly and methodically, cut off supply lines. and then as one a military analyst was saying, hence the russians off the whole by the ukrainians, is that the russians will receive war, pull back from the city peacefully because there are hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians in harrison city and the surrounding villages. so the ukrainians
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are having to be quite careful on how they try to do this counter offensive without killing innocent people. but clearly, ukrainians have encircled a large part of the outer outer room if you will, of her certain city in the headstone region. but they have not begun any sort of direct advance on the city itself as of yet, because russian forces are dugan very strongly ok. camera is on the brand. the very latest lines that from k, thanks very much. gabriel now rushes indefinite closure of the nord stream. one gas pipeline has increased phase of a winter energy crisis in europe. on friday, moscow again, shut down the pipeline and blaming an oil leak russian energy corporation gas. prom says a german firm is ready to carry out the repairs, but no site is available. however, seamans energy has denied this saying it has not been asked to take on the job. because his roster of weapon ising energy in response to sanctions for its invasion
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of ukraine announcement of an indefinite closure came hours after g. 7 nations agreed to impose a price cap on russian oil. pakistan's prime minister has assembled a committee to coordinate relief efforts and flood ravaged areas more than a 3rd of the country as under water affecting around $33000000.00 people. almost 1300 people have died after weeks of record monsoon rainfall and melting glasses. people whose homes are destroyed when living in temporary shelters. medical camps have also been set up. people in pakistan, his lives have been offended by the flooding face, continuing hardship as they wait for the waters to recede and international aid to be distributed. same bas ravi has more from succour in pakistan. send province to those who have a message from the people, have sinned, share your food in our hour of need, or we will take it from you. meet in
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a whirlpool, operate about the daily, the rich fill their stomachs and give us the run around. i make the children chase food until we're out of breath. i'm not a good fluted trucks before, not by choice, but necessity. the newly homeless live on roadsides, with a view of their submerged houses, swarming, passing chorus for help. they say they are treated like dog. up and they are going to go again, we're going to set ourselves on fire here if we don't eat them for sure, we will burn ourselves in again. the law they live to meet the people who come to us votes during the election are ignoring us. now, flood survivors sheltering in a vacant building without services and threatened with eviction to say, pakistan's leaders are only interested in photo opportunity. i don't know. i'm going to come to my house. i'll show you how bad it is. the waters this high, the walls have fallen down. where should we go? we came here and there's nothing i don't. these are all packed us down people's
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party voters. the p p. p winds in sin. where are they now? a member of sins assembly promised things will change the 3rd world country buckets, the bucket on the 3rd world country with a new government has previous government destroyed the economy. how can a provincial government, a smaller body be expected to do the trying to go everywhere and get to everyone? but these people are not convinced with anything. you know one here is keep hungry tonight. i've got a pledge to turn on the electricity and send more help back. a van has arrived with much needed medicine, and there is a fire engine filled with water that people are using to fill up all the water and cans and vessels that they can to carry into the flats that they're living there. also waiting for food to be sent to the slabs where the people are and everyone here hopes that there is enough to go around. they also hope that this is the
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beginning of promises being candidate. but night came, buildings remained dark and there isn't enough food for everyone. people blame their leaders, leaders blame their circumstances. but all agree international donors need to come here to witness what is happening. pakistan, they say cannot. whether this storm alone is in basra, v o 0 sucker sin the pakistan cell has hair on out. is there an a final farewell to the last the soviet leader mikhail gorbachev at present and vladimir putin did not attend? ah, the journey has begun the faithful world copies on its way to catherine book. your travel package to day. hello, the weather's quieting down nicely. now, across eastern parts of year, we will see clear skies coming back in here. showers long spells of rain moving out
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to the waist till a few shouts into central parts with a big bowl sure of dry weather across a central ours will introduce more in the way of late season, heated to parts of central europe some where to weather will push into the atlantic from the atlantic as we go on through the next hour. so. so tony increasingly where to cross at eastern side of ireland across northern ireland scott and seeing some lavish hours and some really windy weather going through. as we go on through the next couple of days that we go with it. heat into central part 25 celsius in berlin, around 5 or 6 above the average here. few showers by their state coming back in across much of france, largely dry and fine across a good part of the mediterranean, in that dry weather, extending across into the far north of africa, settled in sunny hair. some walked in tripoli, around $41.00 degrees celsius. central airs of africa, seeing some lively showers at wet weather. started to pep up once again into where chad easing across towards the gulf of guinea, southern parts of nigeria,
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seeing some longer spells afraid whether they're across much off west africa. see some heavy showers there. all the way into much of the cambia and the goal, official airline of the journey. talked to al jazeera, we ask for the rebound, you speak all of his clearly come get a high cost for airlines and the industry, what's going wrong. we listen you. where are you? i'm struggling in the 19 seventy's or do you have any regrets? no, we meet with global news makers. i'm talk about the store restock matter on al jazeera . holding the powerful to account. as we examined the u. s. sheets role in the world on al jazeera, with ah,
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logan, you're watching out is there as a reminder of our top story, is this our, when were you as present? donald trump has called joe biden, an enemy of the state. in speaking, in his 1st rally since the f b, i searched his florida home, investigating his handling of classified documents. the nuclear watchdog says the russian occupies oper. each a facility has lost its connection to the last remaining main power line at the plant, still supplying electricity through a reserve line has been weeks of shelling in the area. and pakistan's prime minister abbas sheriff has assembled a committee to coordinate relief efforts and flood ravaged areas more than 33000000 people have been affected and almost 1300 people have died. after weeks of record monsoon rainfall and melting glasses to lands, head to the poles on sunday for a referendum on replacing the constitution with one seems to be more progressive by
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its supporters. but the issue has to fight at the country and polls just a close outcome. our latin america. as to lucy newman reports from santiago for the 1st time, every chilion over the age of 18 will be able to win on a new road map for their future. like most constitutions, chili's, new draft, charter was horn hold of upheaval. millions of chileans, disenchanted with their institutions and decades of social inequality launched an unprecedented social uprising. 3 years ago. peace was re established when nearly 80 percent of citizens voted to do away with, with many saw as the roof of all evil, the dictatorship era constitution. you'll get thought already to the process. what he learned not having. i think the great merit at the chile and process was to have transformed a very disruptive moment that threatened to destroy or institutional order and turn it into a, an aquatic constitutional solution to be. so. the result is
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a draft charter which, if approved in today's referendum, would harold a new political, social, and economic europe for this country. september 4th marks another extremely significant election at gillian history, and they are both connected 52 years ago, serv. i thought i in there was voted in as the world's 1st democratically elected marks as president to be overthrown 3 years later in a military coup, led by general, a ghost will be no shame the architect of chillies, current constitution. the new charter is a major shift from pinochet's free market model. it would guarantee social rates like education, health, and pensions, and give recognition and autonomy to indigenous people. it's also the world's 1st constitution to guaranteed gender parity and respect for nature. it's a constitution that takes into account climate change and that gets very strong. a
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provisions for the protection of, of the environment it's, it's very oriented to sustainable development. i think that's very, a cutting edge aspect of the, of the text. ah, but there are many who believe that lift when delegates who drafted it went too far and imposed a text that doesn't reflect the concerns of the political center. and conservatives like wanting to fit another yet are said, constitutions cannot be life to her, right? they have to represent people's interests, regardless of ideology. that's why those who will vote against the constitution or demanding the process start all over again. it's like baking or kate. if the cake comes out flat and it's burned, you don't try to fix it. or you can cry, but it will never be a good kick. so you're throwing away even supporter is agree that the new charter must be improved, suggesting that whatever the outcome chili's constitutional process isn't over yet
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. to see a newman al jazeera santiago, argentina's congress has held a special session to condemn the attempted attack on vice president. christina fernandez de casner. it happens during a rally outside her home. and when osiris on thursday, a man was arrested after pointing a loaded gun in her face, which failed to fire. millions of syrian refugees living in turkey fare, they could be deported. most of them come from opposition, held areas in syria. it comes as anchor and damascus seek better relations, and the turkish economy worsens from 2 calls to send asylum seekers back vessel said our reports from turkey's southern city of gas, an tap ah, the turkish city goes into 70 kilometers from the border with syria. horst, about how familiar city of beverages it has been more than a decade since war, force them to be their homes, to make a new law. now the 1st,
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the possibility of having to move again can be on the other home. every day i have this fear being deported when my child goes to school, i worry where my wife goes shopping, i have anxiety. we can't exercise even our fundamental rights. a thief broke my car window 2 weeks ago and stole everything inside. a lawyer advised me not to report it to the police, because i might be deported to vanish out any official complaint. i might lead a syrian to being deported, deported to wear a war zone. are they ever residential elections are due to take place in turkey next year, during president ledger paid our lawns tenure. the country has taken in about 4000000, still an asylum seekers. but with economy faltering so to as public support for them, some opposition parties are capitalizing on the anti refugee sentiment and promising to st. serious back if they room as a counter. this was the ruling party, has lost clematis pushed to improve relations with the city and by the lawyer. citizens, however, worried the worst is yet to come. often,
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numerous attempts were found. some people willing to talk to us. they are asked that we protect their identities, saying, although they want their voices to be heard, they're afraid of being deported. sadly humbly for the dash ever yet is from ali progress. he says his 2 brothers are in prison back in syria. he hasn't heard from them in years and hopes they are still alive, and my mother didn't want to be filmed in public, in case the camera drew attention to him. at the hand, let some out of saudi. a sub eminence deportations have become just american frequent the recent stipends from turkish officials make us worry that we could be sent back at any minute him if i'm reported to the regime controlled errors, i'll have the same fight as my brothers. if i'm the porter to italy, been a very radical groups will not let us have a life while it's assassinations, and bombardment are all that white for us. they're only on the other side of the board. they're in syria. the ongoing war is silence. insidious voices on this side of the border in turkey. the fear of being deported is forcing them to sleep quite
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city and say, neither content is safe for them. and it is from said that o g 0 gazelle tip turkey. nasa has rolled out another launch attempt in the coming days for as awesome as one main mission. aerospace agency had to postpone left off of its giant rock it on saturday after a fuel leak. and the 2nd time in a week than a technical issue. derails the mission. alan fisher reports from cape canaveral disorder miss launch control at a t minus for hours and 45 minutes and counting. the rocket was primed. the count don't underway. but his feeling of the giant rockets began. it became clear that in that famous phrase, we have a problem. the last name has a recommendation of no go for launch to. ah, the nasa test rector and last director a leak on the link pumping liquid hydrogen into the tanks was found. engineers ran through the plans to fix it. was rector charlie back while thompson just called,
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ah, a scrub. but in the end, i to admit defeat the launch scrub for saturday. we do not launch until we think it's right. and these are teams have a labored over that, and that is the conclusion that they came to. so i look at this as a part of our space program, of which safety is the top of the list. it's the 2nd time in a week the much the 8 optimist project had to be stopped short of launch on monday . it was an issue traced back to a faulty gauge launch period. 25 is definitely off the table. we won't be launching this period ends on tuesday. we'll not be launching in this launch period. launch period 26 and 27 will really depend on the options that the team comes back
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with likely on monday or early tuesday morning, thousands of gathered in the parks and on beaches across florida space coast hoping to see a lunar launch only to leave disappointed we brought friends with us and foreign mercer and our friend son's birthday hope in the big candle would go off, but it didn't in unless you've ever seen a rocket go up. there's nothing like a heart pounding, i mean, shake your whole body and it's just something to say our committee has been plagued with delays with overruns them with a soaring budget. but nasa believes that even a short delay is worth it for a mission that will stretch over years and stretch the frontiers of space. allan fisher, i'll do zita cape canaveral, florida. if you nor have me call gorbachev, the last leader of the soviet union has been held in moscow. president vladimir putin stayed away with the kremlin, saying his work schedule was too busy than to monahan reports. the last leader,
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the soviet union was laid to rest in moscow cemetery mikhail. gorbachev was credited with changing the course of the 20th century by ending the cold war. he wasn't gras estate funeral. his final farewell was a loki affair to do so. unfortunately the ceremony was pretty oh, no, no speeches, no one spoke about gorbachev's achievement, his importance for our life and for the entire world. i was surprised by night here as well. the ceremony resembled more funeral of an important man, but not a state figure. earlier, thousands lined the streets of moscow to pay tribute to a man whose legacy shaped the modern world. thurston hello. hello. i think this man dissolved a people's farewell ceremony. he's a historic person no matter what some people feel about him. he did a lot and i think he did more get you some think that he did more bad. earlier this
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week, president vladimir putin paid respects to corporate job. but he skipped the funeral . citing his busy schedule. putin once said he considered the collapse of the soviet union to be the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the 20th century. hungarian prime minister victor urban was the only western leader to attend. the kremlin has been so far, quite respectful of, of li issues because garbage is not perceived as a strong leader and put in one still and appears to be and, and, and betrays himself as a strong leader. ah, much of gorbachev was often respected and revered. more the west than at home in russia. eliza new owner. when did you just came established that a warner for more that i live in the television advert from a 990 s. by charlotte? unfortunately, what about you did not make russia part of the west because the west didn't want
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that to happen. war, but you're certainly wanted it to happen. in 1087, he signed to disarmament treaty with us president ronald reagan removing a host of nuclear weapons. the treaty was the beginning of the end of the cold war . 2 years later, the berlin wall fell and one state after another broke away from the soviet union. he went on to win the nobel peace prize later in the field qu, by hardliners in moscow. the soviet union itself with dissolved and gorbachev resigned. lord and get now more than 30 years later, with rushes invasion of ukraine comes the danger of a new cold war. garbage have died at the age of 91 in moscow hospital after 2 years of serious illness. and while he was hailed the man of peace, he is left at a time of war. benton monahan al jazeera ah.
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