tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera September 7, 2022 4:00pm-5:01pm AST
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residents from an immigrants background, the danish government can't make people leave areas like feel nepal can purely on the basis of ethnicity what it can do is for housing to be sold off to private investors who then erased the rents. the idea is that mainly wished and people assume treatment wealthy will then be able to be back in residence or suing the government. and aunties take legation. policy said to them, social condition and crime rate would be valid, but we object to moving people from the homeless based on that committee, minorities point themself stuck. they move out of one area to lower the number of non westerners but can't move into another area for the same reason. ah, this is al jazeera. ah.
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hello molly, inside. this is the news i live from, die ha, coming up in the next 60 minutes. the rock supreme court dismisses a petition to dissolve the parliament saying it doesn't have the authority to do so . president vladimir putin says, no russian military equipment is in the separation nuclear plant, contradicting a report by the un nuclear watchdog. a bang as prime minister cops ties with iran and orders all iranian diplomats and leave following cyber attacks in july and kohls urgent help has floods destroyed thousands of homes, things to dawn and in sport. chelsea and looking for a new manager primarily collab, have sat, thomas tackle following that shelf defeat to dina. my saw grab in the champions lake. ah hello, welcome to the program. we began with some breaking news out of iraq where the
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supreme court has ruled. it does not have the constitutional authority to dissolve parliament, saying that it must dissolve itself. holla, titian's allied with the influential sheer leader book, thought of sutter had re filed a petition last month after previous request was rejected. sato supporters have been protesting for months now calling for a complete overhaul, a feat, political system, as well as new elections nets go straight to him. ron con, who's in baghdad. first emron. how do we interpret what the supreme court has ruled? well, there's one way of interpreting it, which is a, is an actual rebuke to the parliament. let me just read you the summary of the federal court decision. the house of representatives has exceeded the constitutional terms, and its penalty is dissolution, dissolving the parliament is not within the powers of the federal court. so the federal court in that last slide, it said it's not down to us. we can't do it,
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but it is a rebuke of the way parliament has behaved section. one of the ruling says, the members of the house of represent is off to being elected. do not represent themselves all that political blocks, but rather the people. therefore, it was necessary for them to work to achieve what they were elected for, which is the people's interests not to be a reason to obstruct that interest and threaten that safety and the safety of people completely. it's a very strongly worded statement. it's effective, he saying to pollen this is your mess. you so to out we don't have the power to be able to do this. it's put it back firmly into the parliament's hands. that's going to cause another crisis. they're going to be reading this like we are right now trying to make sense of it. but the only real sense of anybody i think right now will be able to make is that yes, the supreme court doesn't have the power to dissolve the apartment. but they're also saying that the parliament isn't acting in the people's interests. and that's an incredibly strong segment. how will it be received?
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we would be expecting people out on the streets. we're going to be expecting political reaction. mattel's also the she clara, a key shia cleric who has 73 members of parliament. it's the largest book. he's got a lot to lose. heck, as he was riding on the federal court dissolving palm because he wanted to see you elections. he'll have a reaction that to sri and movement of people that protested in october of 2020 and had a change of government. as a result, they'll have a reaction to this. well, that's going to be, we don't know how to just been a normal decision where they said it's not down to us. it's not down to the supreme court and left it, but it may well have been easier to stage manage. but now the supreme court has actually said to the parliament, you guys are representing the people and that needs to be something that parliament will and has to react to. okay, thank you about him, ron khan, that for us in baghdad. well, the latest unrest in iraq is fueled by a power struggle between shia grapes. mcdonald,
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solder opposes foreign interference and local politics. his supporters mainly come from poor communities that have long been shot out of the political system. they are competing against a collection of sheer groups known as the coordination framework that are aligned with iran. now both sides have military wings with thousands of members. and some of them have been involved in the recent st fi saying, we've seen in baghdad. let's get more unless we can speak on my outside. he is a middle east unless he joins us from alexandria in virginia. thank you for your time, sir. are you surprised that the court has come out with this result? no unknown to, but because the situation in iraq is dire. so i think the court's decision or the, the rationale behind the court's decision is to carefully come out with the decision on a carefully written statement. kind of holding the stick from the middle on the one hand saying it does have no right or no authority to dissolve ornament on the other
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. that is saying it's the, like your correspondent jointly said, this is the parliament smith said you need to solve it. so i think what they were trying to say is to perhaps a piece of adults father and his political power base in order not to perhaps avoid further disturb palletization of the country. so what are things going to happen next? i think there would be a lot of for political negotiations perhaps, but i also worry that sad side that has a powerful base, a powerful law militia. and we've seen our, you know, a lot of media organizations describe it as these aren't protests, protested general protest as while expressing their dismay about the political,
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a situation in iraq. however, and so that was case, that's partially true, but also they are loyal to their leader. i think her there will be some, my sort of protests i think down the line when there's this is a deadlock, right? you have 2 competing powers, and those powers are very, very, or you know, i'm to teeth and they have their own delicious. and they're already fought and they were all in the blood spilled between them. so the anonymity between them will continue. and i think that will translate into perhaps further chaos on bloodshed on the streets of the capital and perhaps other parts of your what do you think about that? all fathers and dame is here. i am. sorry, he's been invited to a number of political meetings and recent weeks, but he hasn't attended what's he trying to achieve? where that's the many 1000000 dollar question. if you look at some of the adults said, there was
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a history or rise to prominence since the u. s. that occupation with iraq in 2003, you will find out that this cleric is known. now he rose from the in ob, security of the unknown and he became a power of figure with a powerful militia. and slowly he fought with the americans. and then he, he changed courts and he re branded himself as the nationalist leader. however, he was also the same time a leader for powerful militia called the army and it was involved in sectarian killings. and then all of a sudden he decides to enter politics and he has a political clock in parliament and he keeps changing his mind. i'm in the iowa, i believe it's a couple of weeks ago that he decided to to resign and quit before that. prior to that he ordered his and east to quit parliament. although they are the biggest log . and i think it's because i, he failed to have formed an i government, the majority government. so i'm not quite sure anybody really understands one that
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on. so there is, he perhaps may not be aware of what he wants at the stage, but this is a recipe for more and fighting further instability not only and iraq, because if whoever is watching and trying to figure out was going in the right. if you think this will be contained within the borders of rock, that person will be completely mistaken. this one have a regional effect to her as well. quite interesting about your thoughts, a miles thought. a middle east analyst speaking to staff from alexandria in virginia. frankie, let's turn to russia now, where president vladimir putin has made a wide ranging speech of the eastern economic forum. he touched on sanctions energy and the war in ukraine. he rejected the un nuclear watchdogs report on the zachary's. your power station in ukraine denying russia has military equipment at the facility. now that comes off to be
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a cold for demilitarized zone around what is europe's largest nuclear pond. you also said that western sanctions against russia had backfired. and now threatened the whole world. if you do so newly hurt us because of the sanctions from the west, have been an aggressive attempt to get other countries to follow certain models. there are questions around sovereignty and subordinating to their will. these are policies which have been carried out for decade. but there's been slipping away of us domination. they haven't been able to see the objective fact. if we look at recent times, the entire system of international relations is going through tectonic change him. he's in cold, a priced up on russian gas, something the g 7 has agreed to the you is considering a dumb idea. he warned of consequences if it was implemented. meanwhile, european commission, president of amberlynn, has laid out a plan for the european union to tackle the energy crisis. she said, member states would be off to reduce electricity usage at peep times. and she also
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propose a price cap on russian gas. we aim at lowering the cost of gas and therefore we will propose a price cap on russian gas. of course the objective is very clear. we all know that our sanctions, deeply grinding into the russian economy with heavy negative impact. but booting is partially buffering through fossil fuel revenues. so here the objective is we must cut rushes revenues, which put in uses to finance his atrocious war and ukraine. let's get more on this with our correspondent dominic cane who is in berlin for us. dominic, let's 1st start with what kind of reaction as they have been from european leaders to persons, comments that he is not weaponized in energy. the thing to remember is that
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when we hear president putin thing is not doing it, that very many western leaders have said precisely the opposite that they believe that he is doing it. we know that the president of the commission, who we had speaking that from the lion esla on the line has said effectively exactly that some considerable time ago. and if we look into the package that she was announcing there, it's pretty clear that this is a retort, as it were in the, in the sense of a measure of their imposing a wind poll tax on companies whose profits are perceived to be too high for the amount of products that they are offering to consumers, the idea of smart savings, all that sort of thing. the idea of this capital in russian gas, we know already that other world leaders certainly from the g 7 have called for a cap on russian oil. so we can see pretty clear or the noise prices and the revenue gained from it. so it's pretty clear that those who take an opposing view to president putin. well, seeing what president front line has said,
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it's clear what the reaction is, at least amongst the leaders of some of larger countries in the e. u and the institutions where the sickly this idea, this russian gas price cap. is that likely to happen? not all members likely to be on board with this idea. the thing to bear in mind is that there is not unanimity of purpose in so far as all e u. lead is concerned, he's avi russia. we know that certain countries happening in negotiations with the russian federation. we know that the hungarians, particularly, i've been looking to do deals and with the russian federation with a lot to me putting president putin for the delivery of gas. so if unity is required, then it will be hard for you leaders to be able to provide it. but certainly there is also unquestionably given the sorts of public statements that have been from all
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manner of heads of state and heads of government. there appears to be a broad coalition of european leaders who think that the measure is being put forward or mooted fi you leaders in brussels at least all the way to go. so unanimity might be difficult, but that does appear to be a relatively broad coalition of leaders who favor these these proposals from brussels. okay, thanks about dominic cane and berlin. while in that same speech, latin and patient, also a keys ukraine of cheating, developing countries out of grain shipments by sending its harvest to the european union and adviser to ukraine's president. call that claim graham list last week. ship carrying 23000 tons of ukraine. grain arrived in east africa, especially curious if, if we did everything we could to get this ukrainian grain out. we did this with turkey. the result, if we remove turkey as an intermediary, virtually all the grain was brought,
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not the poor country but to the european union. the world food program speaks of the need for the poorest country on the out of $60000.00 tons of production, just 3 percent went to developing countries. we're working with. let's go to gabriel. alexander has lived for us in cave. gabriel. the president of ukraine has now reacted to those comments from president peace. and what exactly, as he said, well, the word here from keith is that those claims by the russian president are simply baseless. they say that you, that you know, that it's very clear that ukraine has exported ukrainian grain to the developing world in fact, present. so in sky is said that they plan to send $28000.00 tons of grain to somalia. that's on its way there now. and in fact, within the last week or so, the un food program has confirmed that ukrainian grain has arrived in the horn of
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africa. enough, according to the un to feed $1500000.00 people for a month. so you creating perspective on this is 2 things. number one is they say, you know, president prudent hasn't provided any evidence to indicate that the majority of this green is going to you countries and ukrainian perspective on this. number 2 is that even if it was, it doesn't matter because ukraine says message true to moscow is, it's our grain. we cut a deal, we can export it to wherever we want to export it to. and ukrainian point to the fact that as part of this deal with turkey, russia and turkey agreed to and ukraine agreed to it as well. that russia could export food and fertilizer, as well as part of this deal. that's russian food and russian fertilizer. ukrainian say we're not telling you where to export your fertilizer food. don't tell us where to export our grain. okay,
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thank you for that. gabriel. amazon did that for us in cave. well, the un and turkey broker, the grain deal with cave and moscow back in july, before the deal, tons of grain with stock in ukrainian ports blockaded by russia. since the invasion in february, now grain ships are given safe passage on the agreement, shipments must stop in a stumble to be inspected by turkish, united nation officials. and about a half a 1000000 tons of food have left few quain under the deal, eating high prices that threaten food shortages in developing countries that spring and tired of goods. louis is a professor of international relations that is stumble. i didn't university join us from is stumble. thank you for joining the program. the russian president said of the 87 ships loaded with grain from ukraine just to carry grain from the u. n. well, food program are those figures correct?
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i don't think that the russian explanations on this particular issue makes the reality on the grounds. what we have is that there is a kind of confrontation in russia and russia and ukraine and ukrainian generation committed to comply with the terms of screening agreement, which was truck in july 2002 in t. what i think russians are feeling a growing exposure to creating attacks lately in recent base, and also the europeans are increasing the kind of pressure on russia. so i think russian leadership might have decides to find a place damage on this kind of growing assault on u. k. so you should be should see hash kinds of frustration as part of our logic, your political game. it's part of to support talk kind of thing. yeah. i'm sure that if you can, do you know where those ac 5 other ships have gone?
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if only 2 have been used for the u. n. well, food program. i think it's a fact because the impossible to support those shapes actually, but the already know that the countries which are located in the global talk on in diet or having access to such kind of grades. so i think ukrainians and russians are supposed to do. they best to make sure that those grains reach to the countries which are in needle. so are you find the idea that russia, ukraine, and ships target european nations or countries other than the countries in the global south somehow fabricate the saw? which i think it doesn't reflect the reality, because this will be in the wide ocean of the terms they have all the de committed themselves to comply with in july 2002. and so i think that part of larger jo for that because they accuse ation the game will face using each other or filed late in the terms of the agreement. the grain deal. if the early diplomatic breakthrough made since the conflicts started. how concerned are you that president will now,
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renee, go on it or try and revise the term? i'm not, you know, deep the concern about the commitment of freshman sites with the say 3 months because everything depends on the situation on the ground. saw if they're actually, they should clearly somehow corner or push to the further corner. or if the russian leaderships think that the time is not on russia site. so they might take each and every kind of initiative that did this also to give a message to outside this that we should not be you should not ignore us. why we should not also forget the fact that you fresh life the terms of the agreement. but also have a negative chilling effect on some construction relationship. so these also very much concerns the, by the 3rd russian circus relationship. because for this deal to function properly, all parties have to comply with the commitments. this is quite important. and we
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also know that you have done days best to comply with the term so far, and chunky as the grantor country as the contribute. you will receive the traffic through the state is doing its best to make sure that the terms are being complied . if the international community come to the conclusion that it is on the russia that's by the terminal. so this will have a negative impact on construction relationship and also on the russian who game says that because he's also in need of securing major pharmacy in guy. so as many countries possible throughout the world. ok, but to get your thoughts tarka question, professor international relations stumble ident university. thanks more ahead on the nissan, including as prime minister, i will take immediate action to help people with their energy bills. new u. k. prime minister liz charles spaces, hub bus probably ministers, questions and column, and, and his grilled over high energy prices. love spring,
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the indian city of bang gallery to a standstill environmentalist lane, legal construction and timing. and in school, the tennis in tennis player who continues to make history with vs new leader liz trust is held her 1st prime minister's questions and parliament on her 2nd day in office. they would jeez, and cheese from m pays as she pushed her plans to grow the economy through tax cuts, conservative gum and ease on the pressure to tackle a cost of living crisis and soaring, energy bells. less trust ruled out taxing energy companies could record profit. once you fit in a leadership campaign, though she was a good windfall taxes. did she mean it? i am against
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a windfall tax. i believe it is the wrong thing to be met to be putting companies off investing in the united kingdom just to be growing the economy as go to a correspond, andrew semen sous life 1st in westminster, in london, under a love scrutiny on her 1st 24 hours any highlights? well yes of as the questions and answers in parliament is the big test of any new prime minister or the actual end result jor is out really. she did stand her ground. she did seem relatively calm. she did answer back in terms of the, the usual way, a prime minister would do the attacks upon her a but care stammer was targeted in his approach. he knew where he could find weak points, he kept emphasizing. where is the money going to come from? if you're going to freeze energy prices, the cost of prices,
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millions of millions of families in this country are desperately worried about maybe says it's got the answer because they would actually use the windfall tax against the energy companies, a $170000000000.00 pounds. that's well over $200000000000.00 is actually being up forecast for the next 2 years by the oil and gas companies. ah, he says thomas says that that money should be at sac with windfall tax. now as far as the new prime minister is concerned, no, she said no, she will not. i will not affect those taxes. they're totally legitimate. she says and she carried on repeating that economy growth and tax cuts were the way forward . this is the way storm a put it at one point, while stroke victims wait for hours for an ambulance in the health crisis and criminals walked the streets with impunity. why do you protect shell prophets
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and give amazon a tax break? and he also said, look, the conservative party has had 4 prime ministers in 6 years. it, the faces may change, but the story remains the same. she came back on that one, nothing new about a labor leader calling for more tax rises. she said it the same old tax and spend party. no one really had a killer blow in this exchange, but it wasn't a catastrophe for either side. now, what was on the front benches? there's a story there because all along the front branches you see fresh faces, all of them are loyalists. and there is a distinct piece of history here in that that this is the most diverse, top end of a, of a cabinet ever in political history. because there are no white english males amongst them. furthermore, there's also a lack of experience though, and somebody has done the math on this. they say that out of
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a 30 want ministers in the cabinet. there is a total of 36 years of experience. and between them, that is, and there's an average of 1.2 years experience for each person in that cabinet. now that isn't an experienced area, and there's another aspect to it all that she's gone solely for people who trust her at solely for people who support her. she's got rid of all re, she soon acts supporters, all of them. and there's a lot of experience there. she's got rid of them all. and so will there be a unity in this party? there's a question mark over that. oh, very interesting. angie's demons that for us in west minister let's bring in am would starboard ram and he's be europe managing director 15 eurasia. great. he's also in london for us. what is your initial reaction to the news less trust is made in the last 24 hours. thoughts on her cabinet and also how she performed at p. m.
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key today. i think overall this is a government but will be further to the right than the one. or is john from lead? there are many members of the far right. european research group are mowing senior cabinet positions. there are hard and campaign torrie strategists that have gone into downing street with less trust. this is going to be an incredibly robust administration. i think we are seeing her pivot pretty quickly to the fiscal cost of living and energy questions, and that will be an intervention, i believe tomorrow in which the government is going to announce substantial support across the board for families struggling with increasing any g bill in terms of her performance with a n p. m. two's pretty run of the mail. there was a pretty good substantial policy exchange between herself and position leda. kiss tom, but really i think what people are looking to get to view on is how she's going to
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manage some of the big challenges other coming down the track about the war in ukraine. it's the implications of the war in terms of energy security and fiscal policy is about the independence of the bank of england and about of course, the relationship with the you. absolutely, you take, you take the questions out of my mouth. we have been talking a lot about the domestic situation in the u. k. energy cost and so on. but she also has a lot of hangovers from breaks. it's still to face that relationship between the you . can you not really improve, improve dot all since birth thompson took over. i mean how, how do you think she's going to tackle that very difficult. i mean, live trust made a deal with the right to know that when the keys, the downing street part of the reason you see people likes while abraham and jacob breeze mall in very senior positions in the cabinet. she's also very invested in a piece of legislation. currently working this way through parliament. no, no,
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no. the violet protocol bill but effectively takes the northern ireland protocol that was the central element to the withdrawal treaty. the u. k. find in 2019 and completely reformed unilaterally. that was her initiative. she's very invested in that bill. she said today in p. m q, that any negotiation with you is all going talk to converge on the substance of bob bill. i don't think there's a deal to be done between the you and the u. k. the to side the to report the big question i think is can they both agree to the can because of the international geopolitical context and some of the challenges both the or the u. k. are grappling with and can they avoid confrontation? can they point escalation that could potentially result in some version of a trade conflict between the 2 side but would aggravate political and economic situation both dealing with and briefly there was an interesting headline on russian tv. on the day she won, miss trust, she pettis, he has triumph. this trust has become the new pm. she's had an old relationship
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with russia as foreign secretary. i mean just more generally as foreign sex race. she was a little bit shoot from the hip. some people say, how do you think she's going to handle international affairs as a prime minister? but i think the briefing from russians they media is more about a robust commitment to ukraine and they're very hard line and very hawkish line. she is articulating against or soccer sees, not just russia, but the chinese administration as well lives. trust is a big believer in the network of liberty, a g saddle, you know, democratic nations getting together on words to advance their interest globally. i think that's probably what's motivating the briefing from russian state media over and above any question around this trust with intelligence. obviously, she is clever. if she wasn't, she wouldn't be prime minister sitting in number time. her point might stop rahman, you're a managing director,
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you raise your group rescue in relief operations are taking place in the southern indian city of bang, alluring off to torrential rain monsoon range that began on sunday sweat facility. that is india's tech cob, causing flooding or long streets crates of traffic chaos, power outages and shortages of drinking water. many people to work from home, internal ologist say bang delivery receive more than 400 per cent of its average rainfall in the 1st week of august. well, that leads us to the weather here as well with more or less floods in bangalore through the region. and this is going to have been the wettest monsoon season in memory, in pakistan, at one stage 25 sent the country was under water. this is still a picture outside hydra bad for the south. more a case of the indus bursting its banks because there's so much rain to come down from upstream. now the good news in pakistan, if there is any, is it, there's no more topping up. there are very few showers around these little light
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blue things. a light rain showers. there's no real push of monsoon rain any more. the weather is generally fine, but the still flooding on the ground in india were more used to seeing regular flooding virtually any way during the monsoon season. and the month and start to retreat now. but as you know, there's been flooding recently in can oscar in bangalore, and this is the picture of that. this is maybe not such a big surprise. now for once, the monsoon season across india has been relatively noble for most places has been reasonable. married within the average of rainfall someplace in excess west protest and for the south there's been rather more than you might expect. and generally speaking, his whole western path of the peninsula has been wetter than usual. forecast wise is more rain to come down the western coast and the non pradesh, another carryon for dad to so head on the al jazeera, the people a dead and more still missing off the heavy rain. so i got
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safe going home and then international anti corruption excellence award boat now for your hero, hulu. ah, ah. you're watching out 0 lined up on top stories this our iraq supreme court has ruled . it doesn't have authority to dissolve the parliament. the court said parliament must dissolve itself politicians allied with the shia lead. i'm a bottles,
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father. re file the legal petition last month quoting for new elections. rush as president is accusing ukraine of threatening europe security by shelling the stopper asia, poland. he says russia has no military equipment at the nuclear facility. that's in direct contrast to an i. e. a report for instance, new prime minister has faced her 1st prime minister questions in parliament. she was grilled by the lead of the opposition over soaring energy bells. m boy coast now albania has savage. it's diplomatic ties with iran off to accusing it of launching a major cyber attack toronto audit iranian diplomats, and embassy staff to leave the country within 24 hours. washington has also weighed in saying an american investigation found iran responsible for an attack on government services and websites in july,
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a prime minister eddy rama says the response is proportionate saying the attack stead chaos and insecurity. niece or some alert. she, the minister of the government has decided with immediate effect to end diplomatic relations islamic republic of iran does. extreme response is fully proportionate to the gravity and risk of the cyber attack. the threat and paralyzed public services during digital systems and heck, interstate record, and still government documents, chaos and insecurity in the country. let's get more ellen, iran's reaction. we can speak to dorothy jabari who has been to her on for us the door. so why is this happening now? well, the relationship between albania and iran is very much strain, and this is not the 1st time albanian officials have had issues with iranian diplomats in their country. their dispute goes back to 2014. when about 3000
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members of the people much i had, the organization of iran were given refuge in albania after leaving iraq. now this organization is designated as a terrorist organization in iran because these people openly oppose the clerical rule in this country. since the early eighties and the officials in albania, dismissed the iranian diploma and basset, or to the country in 2018, along with another diplomat from the reigning embassy saying that their activities were not in the interest of their country basically calling them spies. then again in 2020 another, to iranian diplomats were also expelled from the iranian embassy in albania. now at the time, the iranian government said that the albanian officials were acting under the advice of the u. s. government and pressure from israel. even the supreme leader
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are itala ali, how many said in 2020, that albania is a small but even european country where american elements conspire with iranian traders and plan attacks against the republic. this you, information and decision taken by the albanian government seems to be the most extreme yet where the reigning embassy will no longer exist in albania. there is no, i'll be an embassy in town, so it's not likely for the way needs to be able to take any reciprocal measures. but i think in the coming days we'll hear from the foreign ministry likely saying that this is at the request for the americans and the israeli officials putting more pressure on the new government. and they will certainly deny any involvement in any kind of in a legit cyber attack taken place in the country in july. okay, thank you for that. dawson jabari the for us into ron. let's bring an o. c. as said, gee, he's an albanian historian as well. as assistant professor, the international islamic university, if of malaysia joins us from kuala lumpur,
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thank you so much for joining the program. is this about cyber attacks or is there more to it? well, it's you more to it. your fall, 13 albania, started to host the salaries for the nation, which is still listed as a nation here on iraq then was even by the united states was right in on how many hosts the you 30 been the ones i have in the power and also mama in the sound of dollars, then from there and even i just investigation of shows which i mean they carry fiber a fact. sometimes they came to carry on. federalist attacks against me. probably put her on the bulk of them, which i do. they came to being in 2016. they have maybe 30 something or
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been they have the hopes that i think with the stomach public or iran has continuous, profess been in government, has been in government to so much and has the same way. how dias, i, she job and other service organizations are being treated now they've never been in government has not responded to the complaint from the wrong side. and on the other hand, this year has been a year full of sort of a claim to have a new government institution in jewels. they have also claim to have a bomb being fire bombing. busy and maybe 3 bases. and on the other hand,
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what's happened is that in july, 2022 1000000000 government websites were hacked. until today there is no group responsibility. but the today for some reason the bringing government came into a conclusion on the fact that that came from iran. ok. and we've seen washington way in on this saying that their own investigation found iran responsible for an attack on those websites back in july. what, what other kind of intervention can you expect from the u. s? well, you were brought to a, been, you know, by the american government after they were removed from europe when you're expelled . and the u. s. embassy here on i was in charge of their security and everything else. they do bidding, government and politicians,
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they have no access to the majority. healing can help you find the ones i need from . there are many claims of humor. i it's a music. there are many defectors who have managed to escape to come, but, you know, been going to kind of going about, he's maybe a fair. and we have to mention something that we have had very hard to diploma the nation between albania and europe. even in the year 2018 in 2018, then we're heading claim that you're on was wanting to carry a terrorist attack against the organization. something that has never been proven back in 2000 a month and i'm finding so benjamin netanyahu, who already asked me for a drama to a severe relations, albania. we around the end of this year,
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we have the right number of being exposed. are we both in charge and the iranian, she does also have their bank accounts for them. you're on a fusions which were close. and since the time the revisions are read about ok, really good to get your thoughts all see yes, a historian, assistant professor at the university of malaysia, thank you for your analysis. flooding in saddam's, eastern states have got a reef, has killed at least 6 people more than 4000 houses have partially a completely collapsed emergency crews say they've provided all the assistance they can, but need international aid. you the woman that i worked on one telling her that the water came in flooded us and took everything on its way and there was nothing left for us. we used to have a huge number of books, but we lost them completely. we lost our savings. oh,
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foods and furniture. we have nothing but to thank god. oh god, no you name them on. i see they live out. we live in very difficult situations. our children hardly live here. we need tents, we need food and water. we need to medicine and treatment. our children are suffering as we don't have anything. i thought i had not least 15 people, mostly women and children have been killed in a landslide. in western uganda. heavy rang triggered the slide in the town of casie . several houses are buried on the mud. irene night, casita is the spokeswoman for the red cross. uganda she says rescue efforts are on the way we received the rainfall and that people to 2nd very didn't process a district experienced airline flight which buried scores of people. and we got our response action teams go to the blacks around for today, and immediately we did 15, but of course it was had to work in the we, i was considering that there was no lighting. but by early morning,
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the such and rescue team was on the ground and they've been able to retrieve 15 bodies today and my jury to these mothers and children. and they really have to understand because there were sleeping and a marking there were helpless. so it's still happening, but many were buried and rob was on the rescue team has had to dig them up from from there. and as i speak right now, the playground way. they did bodies, i've actually been assembled and there was nothing team has come from that district or say to be able to conduct the assessment rather than post marked in mind. i'm so sure that would be kind of back to their families for barriers today. it's quite said that it's likely that normal people might, for what might be found a life because those who were injured actually that 6 of them were referred today in the morning to hospital. but then the community may show that 18 people had been missing. so meaning if we've gotten a boat 15, so we have visit, maybe
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a likelihood of 3 more people. but it's still possible that the before the life considering the kind of tragedy and that you spent on the scene. so most likely the search and rescue is going to dig deep into my and it's not likely that somebody is alive from that time of the instance that for now, the number of people who have been killed often earthquake in western china has risen to 7495, he is still missing. rescue is evacuation people stranded in remote villages in the province. mccrae has extensively down the homes and infrastructure or the 21000 people have been evacuated. some areas prone to lam slides or building collapses outside has been a keys of interference after offering to found the next election in the solomon islands, solomon's prime, ministers, facing mounting pressure, falling proposals to change the constitution. he says his country can't afford to
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pay for an election and a major sporting event in the same year. sarah clark with holes, checkpoints are in place with police coding of access to parts of the parliamentary precinct. the solomon islands, prime minister plans to change the constitution to delay next year's election and stay in power until 2024. the opposition warns that would trigger political unrest and protests in the capitol. i object to anything that undermines the mandate and the role in the place of the people in decision making, affecting especially a mater as important as the life of parliament itself. the solomon islands is due to host the pacific games next november, man, a se, so gavera says the island nation can't afford to hold an election in the same year . some analysts say postponing the vote is considered an attempt to crush democracy . this is not generally considered to be what the people of solomon islands once they take their elections quite seriously. you know that that's quite
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a politically engaged society. and community said, since on our side of security agreement with beijing, critics of expressed concern about his growing influence. the deal allows chinese police and law enforcement teams to be based in the capital to ensure public order . but pacific analysts say the implications of china's presence on the, on a nation a far reaching last week the solomon islands, band u. s. naval ships from its ports camping. the west ships away from solomon islands would certainly be in part right now. and i think it's, it's pretty, it's been safely established that promise to sort of already has been must culminating pacific leader of china strategic content in the region. the position she has similar concerns. what is happening now that concerns me, is that prime minister sobari is so pro china and clearly anti u. s. and its allies that concerns me a great deal. it's not good for the future of this country. and he says it
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challenges the pacific traditional partners in the region. australia has revised its troubling boss warning potential further on rest in the capitol. it's a matter that will be raised by australia prime minister, anthony albanese. when he meets his counterpart in coming weeks, the sullivan islands lead. it says delaying the election will be a one off. there's little doubt so gavera is planned for constitutional reform will be passed as his government holds a majority in parliament. sir clarke al jazeera brisbin, australia. oh, it is coming up after the break. which emma, including the latest from the us, open on the late mine paso, between to the games biggest ah ah
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ah ah. his science the sport. yes. thank you really. we start with football and on tuesday night, chelsea coach thomas sequel received a yellow card in the champions league and within 24 hours he received a red card from the club. the gentleman has been sac just 6 games into the premier league season. to go to college in january 20, 21 and 4 months later lead up to that 2nd champions league title. chelsea also on the away for super cup and fee for club cup under people that yeah, the 49 year old was dismissed following the teams shot one no defeat to dina my zagreb. that was the 3rd loss of the season. we spoke to dan silver from the chelsea support his trust and often if the decisions of fact to call is about the new american i was wanting to stamp several floors. he at the club,
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he was manager. sometimes you get you in a ship could come in, they want that people, you know of board they got they got a pretty spot which had them going to kind of sky who did transfers. pay checks goes, i think they want their own people on board and i just, i think time will have know whether it's another harm, a foreign culture. although give a manager, you know, a child to build vision, build a club in a lot that we haven't clock, he's had 7 years now that you know, super come back to steve. that when he leaves winning carts and that's maybe the vision, they'll bring somebody in who has the vision and he will turn the club, you know, with a couple with a lot grand post us. i think he's, you know, he's, that is called, he started swarms. he's called sobriety, and it's a really good football, smart coach. he knows the players, he knows football and the whole argument about him not having chavez experience. we forget about the potato one chapstick for chelsea or any chums experiments. so good young, progressive coach, not a superstar, which should go for the past. you've had moraneus conte just, you know,
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a well known good progress. if you know coach who get time to build his team, go to start and you know, take, take his word at the yes i pension his in on chavez become the 1st african woman to reach the semi finals. the number 5 beat australia is islets on the on of it. the woman who ended the career of serena williams earlier in the tournament 16476, soon as any job one sets in have 5 matches. so far she reaches her 2nd straight grand slam, semi off the losing the final at wimbledon. i think the fact that broke the bureau of being the quarter finals all the time that didn't help with my confidence and knowing that could make finals in grand slams really help my game. and just, you know, trying to build that experience to go into 2nd weeks in grand slams carolyn garcia. books as was in the semi of a grand slam for the 1st time. she defeated local favorite co pay golf in straight sets. golf is the 1st french woman to reach the final 4 in new york since emily
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marez no 16 years ago. it's her next. it's a great challenge. you know, it's great to see players in the you have, we have been growing up together. we've bench off all the want to as well, and it's nice to see that that year we're, we made it to the top and we keep improving in the man norwegian castle rudest in with a chance of claiming the world. number one, ranking the french, i couldn't run about the politely me past and they say they're seni in straight sets. if read reaches the final and call us alcohol, doesn't hill automatically move off of the ranking? i'm honestly a bit surprised that the i made it to the him is here, but i think i've developed my heart good game a lot. the lead, the last, the error to and think miami this year show me and i proved to myself that i can be good players and rich lead if they just in big hardcore,
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carmen really faces current. hutchins 1st spot in the final, the russian out last, nic curial, sim, 5 sets, the book kits us, franklin semi, despite being seated 27, very few gave option of a chance of reaching this saw having made one semi final. and we also found out in the quarter finals is back showing at the us and i'm finished with a couple of broken brackets at his something you've probably never seen before. the tennis or any sporting contest for that matter, is found decided to have a haircut during the curious match. apparently, it was for a youtube thumbs and the fun was removed off rush stadium champions. the holders around madrid outclassed celtic to begin the defense that i thought were the 3 no, when nothing between the size and the top rail control off the right. and it's just, you know, giving the european champions the lead and sang, please in the process like a moderate that made it so you know,
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just 4 minutes later that was on his 100 parents around in the composition and at, and has art who came on for the injured at karen benjamin gord, madrid's 8 and how the 3 parents asthma got their quest for a 1st champion. the pipes were winning started them just 5 minutes ago, france against event the killing him buffet with a brilliant volley that the frenchman scored a 2nd is why that was another 1st time finish. to give a side a to go lead out the bright. you've a put them back in the 2nd half the lesson, the csc held on the 1st one victory. manchester city strike earling. holland just can't stop scoring. he got to on his jumping. think davy, for city to make it 12 goals and 7 games. new clubs still fight and also grabbed one to the premier league champions and convincing for now when she ever spanish side severe. i loved his routine, but this being the routine,
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every single press conferences to the game as me about to he made his roses judges of truth, whole frickin' content is retained, but the number's 3 for himself for his no judge was always he's there always he's there and always i like the feeling who the score more goals and historic moment for football in the u. s. with the men's and women's national team, signing an agreement to ensure equal pay. the new contracts include identical pay structures for appearances and tournament victories. revenue sharing an equitable distribution of wild comp prize money is worth announcing other national football associations will ready have equal pay for men and women, including england, brazil, spain, and australia. i mean is so good. i just like such a proud moment for all of us. i'm thinking back to all of the players that have come through just the work that was done specifically on the c, b a. but really before that to lay the groundwork and just knowing how much we put
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into it, you know, how much effort we've spent doing just that, you know, the same never said i had to, we had on the field. that's the same vibe we brought to this. so a super proud moment. really excited for everyone in and really excited to see where this pushes the game on. that is all your sports from me, from our pizza. we'll have another update just after $1545.00 at gmc really looking forward to it. thanks joe. man, that's it. from me, molly. inside for the sneeze. i'll be back in just a moment. much more. the days me stay with us here. officer ah september on al jazeera world leaders from a 193 members states gather the united nations general assembly with the war in ukraine and the global cost of living crisis high on the agenda. up front returns mclamore hill, top through the headline to challenge the conventional wisdom, italy that the right wing party fortelli italia, is ahead in the polls could
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a decisive victory overcome the gridlock faced by recent government. the listening post examines and dissects the wealth media. how they operate, and the stories they cover with rising prices, causing hardship and discontent across the globe. we were put on the human huff and that will attempt a tackling the crisis september on al jazeera. ah, allow government now just a all
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in the year, 127118 for the young, italian merchant and set out on an extraordinary journey. marco polo followed the still crow designer to the heart of cooper collins empire. retracing his steps, how a modern day explorer discovers the descendant echoes of last worlds and a reminder of what and who survives history? marco polo on al jazeera lou reports indicate that the u. s. nuclear watchdog can't verify iran's nuclear program is for peaceful purposes.
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