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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  September 8, 2022 6:00pm-7:01pm AST

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11 o'clock. this is a news our life from dough are coming up in the next 60 minutes. growing concerned for the health of britons. queen elizabeth the 2nd, buckingham palace says she's under medical supervision. the u. s. pledge is more military aid for ukraine, as keith says its forces have retaken town near khaki from the russian. the u. n. a warns human development has been set back 5 years by an unprecedented run of crises, including the pandemic conflict and climate change. dental elections in the solomon islands, a delay to parliament postpones the vote for year. but critics say it's a paragraph and i'm he to same it with your schools. chelsea have announced grandpa says then you head coach and the latest from the us open, where francis t above has become the 1st american man to reach the semi finals in 16 years.
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mm. so we begin with the breaking news, united kingdom's queen elizabeth. this 2nd is under medical supervision at her scotland home mouth balmoral castle. a doctors say that concern for her health just 2 days ago she appointed britain's new prime minister liz trust at balmoral. royal official say her son and heir prince charles has arrived to join us of the close family members are traveling there now. that speaker of the house of commons was one of the 1st to comment on the news. i know i speak on behalf of the entire hers . when i say that we send over the best wishes to her majesty the queen that she and the ro family are in our thoughts and prayers of this mold. i'm going to take no more just to see if there is anything else we looked at large called him. oh, let's go straight back in palace where he challenged standing by and where he just take it through what we know so far. well we
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took off from about the queen as being the most famous women in the world. but it's anyway, i think going on events like this, where you can get a tangible sense of that on either side of me that way. in that way i, you have kind of flanked some flags of, of, of reports accrues the media from all over the world. is up spanish, the sides, polish that side. americans are french australians, and of course the domestic british media as well. we have crowds down outside her back in palace, gates o everyone here hoping, waiting to see whether the queen can rally from this latest health scare. as you can see in the moment, the flag is still flying very high on the roof of buckingham palace. but this health care does feel difference to the previous ones. yes, i am. the queen has had failing health for at least a year now. yes, there have been previous concerns. she has had co reads fairly recently. she is
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pulled out of numerous public events and duties and things, but the messaging coming from buckingham palace. the concern coming from buckingham palace are talking about her doctors, her and the fact that most of her family have rushed to be by her bedside does make this health scare feel different from previous ones. genuine, i think genuine worry that the queen might repeat, might be in her final hours or days. well, the world is watching and waiting for more news. what reaction have you been here? or there has been her messages of support so well wishing from across the political spectrum. as you would expect a we've heard from the arch which will canterbury we've heard from the leaders of the devolved parliament in the united kingdom. and we've heard from the prime
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minister miss truss, who said the whole country will be deeply concerned by the news from buckingham palace lunchtime. my thoughts and the thoughts of people across our united kingdom with her majesty the queen and her family this time. remember of course that the queen swore lace trustee and as prime minister in the nearest prime minister, the 15th of her very, very long reign. you have to go back to winston churchill as she did that in power moral because her health wasn't good enough to come down south to bucking pallets to london where she normally what performed that sort of function. but we have also heard from the leader of the opposition, the labor party to kiss tama a very similar message from him saying along with the rest of the country. i am deeply worried by the news from buckingham palace this afternoon. my thoughts with her majesty the queen and her family at this time, and i joined everyone across the united kingdom in hoping for her recovery. and
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also said that family that he mentions are almost all of them. ground her bad side or moral and wishing her the best. i already thanks for that silliness moment. returns reporting from vacuum pallets. well, let's take a look now at queen elizabeth 70 years on the throne. as she was born in 1926 in london, at that point, she wasn't expected to become queen, but after the application of her uncle, with the 8th, her father, georgia sex, became king in 1936. she married prince philip in 1947, and they had 4 children. when charles was born in 1948, when a father died in 1952 princess elizabeth became queen. she's the longest reigning monic in british history, in the past. the reign of queen victoria, in september 2015 in april 2021. her husband, prince philip, died just before his one hundreds birthday. they had been married for 73 years.
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let's bring it in for it martha, his director of history and policy at the institute of historical research and a professor of british and commonwealth history at the university of london at phillip mafia, big time of concern for the royal family and the british people. indeed, what do you make of the announcement and indeed where we might be at it. the situation seems very grades and dumb. i think it's, it said it's a moment we all knew lives, but camera benchley, and i think it's going to be a huge shock to do, to the ice kingdom and people around the world for it. there are costs to scenarios that the queen does indeed pass all she is alive and but passes on the crown or what are the circumstances for that to in that kind of situation? i think i think the queen would be very reluctance to,
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to move certification at this stage. i mean, that's been a gradual transfer responsibilities to prince charles and other members of the, of the world family. and that, that's been working extremely well. i think unless there were some major constitutional duties that the queen could no longer a form giving sent to, to bells and so forth. i think she would, she would remain, but you know, if she was very gravely ill then charles, whoops, whoops. at least temporarily. b, e m, given those tests, it tells us about the plan that is in place for precisely and what is unfolding at the moment. it has been planned for a long time and there is a cisco yeah, and there may be elements to the plan that will help to be those again, the current circumstances because those obviously with the queen plans for what
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happens as her desk have been taking place since she came to the 50 to remain that she literally so one of the elements of the, of the child is the column going to recess the british countries for quite a long time. so it's up to 10 days. now, at the moment with, you know, a new prime minister and some day urgent legislation needs it. that may have to be resolved. but the elements to the plan, which of course will go ahead. i mean, one of the key thing that, of course, the queen is not just the, the united kingdom of 16 commonwealth. well, many of them in the, in the caribbean bidding suiting tenant stay and the prime minister will have told
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when she died shortly before a public announcement is made amongst a lot of coordination. you mentioned the new prime minister. we saw the queen just what i think it is tuesday was determined to see through the ignition of bars. johnson in the appointments of trust, the 15th prime minister. so many years after the 1st which was of course winston church. yet it shows again how extraordinary sense, if you see, you know, she truly is very unwell of moments. but she feels it's, it's ho, personally to you know, to invite less trust to be the next prime minister. it's very important that the monarch is playing that crucial constitution at this moment. and the queen doesn't show that. she went ahead and did it, and that's why i think, you know,
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it's unlikely, however ill. she is that she would really sort of consider interesting reflect if you would, on the meaning of the monarchy for the british people and, and how important it is i think it's not just them on the kids and institution. ready it's, it's the individual i mean, criminal, but the 2nd is the longest reigning british monitoring history and an almost the longest reigning monitor cost. sure. i think, i think the 14 went for a little bit longer, but a long time ago. so you really gotta be silly. now to remember time when she wasn't queen, and i think you, as i say, i know the way that we know with the know the relative that they will die some time
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. but that doesn't necessarily diminish the shock when it, when it happens, because really, for most people like the constitutional monarchy is the queen. and it is her particular personality and sense of commitment. all right, we'll leave that for the time being excellent, murphy, to appreciate that. thanks very much indeed, and we will of course, bring an update we have right here announcer. now the united states has pledged more military aid for ukraine. your sexiest defense and lloyd austin made the announcement while visiting the ramstein at base germany where he's meeting defense ministers. 4 months after our initial contact group meeting, the war is at another key moment. russian forces continue to cruelly bombard ukrainian cities and civilians with missiles and artillery far but ukrainian forces are begun their counter offensive in the south of the country. and they are
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integrating the capabilities it we all have provided to help themselves to fight and reclaim their sovereign territory. latina from jenna hall and as more from the i based gemini. this is a format that's been going since april us lead of course, taking in native as well. there are 50 plus nations here ukrainians here as well in the form of the defense minister alexi resume called. and they've met more or less monthly now to talk about ukraine's immediate needs on the battlefield and how the allies go about trying to meet those needs. and clearly they're doing that again. but lloyd austin, in his opening address signaling, a quite significant change of focus and direction for this contact group of allies as well. recognizing that there is no immediate end in sight for this was this could be an extremely lengthy campaign that got to gear up the allies own efforts now to be able to continue supplying ukraine's needs in the long term. and that means he said, looking at their own industrial defense bases and if necessary,
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scaling up those industrial production bases so that they can produce more stuff that ukraine needs over a much, much longer period of time. so subtle, but significant shift in the focus of this group, he said, the face of the war is changing. and so is the mission of this contact group to work together to meet ukraine's requirements for the long haul. as the fight evolves. so must, we mean, while your sector state entity blinkin is on an unscheduled visit to keep where he met the president of the landscape? it is his 2nd trip to the crating capital. since school started the show, support comes as the country says, it's making advances and a counter offensive to retake territory from russia in the northeast and in the south. let's speak to gabriel is on the joins life cable. we'll talk about the fighting. just a moment, gape 1st of all, this visit by the us extra states, a unexpected unannounced. yeah, very much unexpected, and very much unannounced. it came as
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a surprise to everyone here, quite frankly, and des, entity blink, and has been touring keith. we know that he's been visiting a children's hospital here. we think that he's been visiting what top ukrainian officials all the way up to the highest levels. the president will diminish zalinski as well. if you haven't heard any statements or there's no sort of press conference between the 2 that are scheduled that we know of at this point. and we also don't know how long of lincoln plans to spend in cave. but as of now, we believe that he's still here meeting with officials at this very hour. he's not only a here to offer verbal support to the ukrainian officials, but also to offer substantive re or support as well. announcing a giving word here that he the u. s is announcing 2000000000 dollars in aid to ukraine and 18 other regional countries that the u. s. and others say are in their words at risk of rush from russian aggression in the region. this is aid that is military technical aid, that half of that 2000000000. so 1000000000
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a go directly to ukraine. this is on top of the nearly 800000000 that we just mentioned that was announced by the defense secretary in germany. that is 800000000 in direct military aid immediately to ukraine. so that is certainly an important visit by the secretary of state of the united states. and we perhaps could hear more from him this evening here. and keith, should he get, make some comments or i will keep an eye out for that. what about the fighting gabriel? these advances the ukraine says it's making ukraine is making some serious advances in the northeast to the country outside. how to keep we're getting a clear picture of, of the success that the ukrainians appear to be having. according to the general staff of the ukrainian military, ukraine has recaptured more than 20 villages or towns just within the past
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48 hours. that is a lot. and that includes towns as large as 25000 people in towns, such as by like clay, that are towns that have been critical supply points for the russians, where the russians were deeply entrenched. there for many months now been retaken by the ukrainians. ukraine's also say that they have pushed the front lines back towards the russians as much as 50 kilometers. a significant moving of the front lines of this war in the northeast and ukrainian se in all they've recaptured 700 square kilometers of territory that was previously held by the russians. this is significant because for the last several months, ukrainians have been in a defensive posture, hold territory that they have and try to stop the russians from advancing any further. that is pretty much been what the ukranian military has been doing for the last several months. this is one of the 1st counter offenses counter offenses where
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they have pushed forward sort of taken the fight to the russians. and it was unclear of the ukrainians had the capability to really succeed at this. and we are seeing early signs that they most certainly do quickly. now you ask, well, whereas all the russians, why, why, why are they able to do this? why it but the russians been able defend the territory that they have in the north . these 2 reasons, ukrainian seemed well equipped with western, a sophisticated west western arms. and secondly, the russians appeared to have moved many of their best fighters and best equipment from the northeast and moved it to the south. to counter the ukranian counter offensive there, leaving the russian soldiers in the northeast, potentially vulnerable for this surprise attack. and it appears to be reaping benefits for the ukrainians. they appear in the northeast, at least the ukrainians to have all the momentum on the battlefield or that's a pitcher in ukraine. gabriel is under in case like you are plenty more still ahead
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on the news are including go sport coming up. liverpool, receiving a champions league hammering in naples. ah, now just a couple of hours before news about the queen's help came in the u. k. his new prime minister has announced a new price cap on energy bill to protect consumers from soaring prices. miss shaw says the average annual household bill for gas and electricity will be kept at $2500.00 pounds. it's around $2900.00 to shore $3000.00. the promises expected to cost more than a $100000000000.00, that the prime minister has ruled out opposition calls to extend tax on energy company profits. and i can tell the house to day that we will not be giving in to the leader of the opposition. oh, for this to be funded through
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a winful tax that would undermine the national interest by discouraging the very investment we need with our less being closed more for these the founder and chairman of the cross industry u. k. energy security group. john is now from london. so clive, the new prime ministers move. what do you think about it? i think it's a massive intervention. i don't think it just proportionate to the problem. every energy costs are a problem for some, but they're not a crisis for all. and it's a mistake, i think, to you is much of intervention to create artificial retail and wholesale prices in the market as a tool of welfare policy. i mean, what we're ended up doing, you're going to pictures, and this will be the suppliers. we will have the costs between the costs of the gas they buy and what they can charge consumers actually support supported by
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a massive amount of government borrowing and we will be in the future for tax. so the, so it's basically a blanket subsidy and there's a blanket subsidy. it's beneficial and doesn't really target to where it's most need to. the other problem is that it will create a high level of energy cost for the next 2 year where they could well preclude drop in the market. price is already evidence that wholesale prices may will begin to adjust because of concerns about this session and inflation. in fact, if you probably know the actual supply covered cost break even cost for m g c gases is less than ha. all right,
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which brings me to this point you talk about the crisis is only for some, but for them it could be probably will be intense, could be life threatening, and they will be asking why, why is that? just a direct winful tax on the energy companies. i don't agree with. the info is wrong as well because that will just scary. the best additional supply that we require your point about people who need yes. are people in need. and for those people, the best way the best route is not tend to be in the market on this kind of scale, a blanket basis. but to give them targeted help to give them energy price support payments directly and grant all. and to do that on a scale on a scale is required. and if you've combined and you say the supplier to take the way they can cap, which is really become a tool for on demand depending the cost of suppliers. basically,
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if you told us suppliers look, if you use the profits that you've made significantly during the crisis to offer credit free interest, free structure payment tool, customers and encourage them to to impose customers what ways in which they can in fact reduce energy. this will have a particular the good effect. what about the jumping this running out of time? what about this announcement and lifting the moratorium on fracking because fracking and this dash for gas it and st just drives the climate policy doesn't. and encouraging renewable energy, which in the end is the solution i. this is a question. i think we're moving into a different area. i think we're talking initially about and security in the next 10 to 15 years. i think there is a role future's strategy which needs to be examined and what we have is
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a proper cost benefit analysis. but alternative ways in which we can base and generate and combine with peak generation and how the market is going to move forward. i mean, that is something that they've been alluded. we've had somebody today about that but nothing, nothing major. so my major point here is that the intervention there is a need for some intervention, but it should be done directly to help people. and i think the, the intervention should not revolve around them. shipping artificial prices for retail, wholesale gas prices, clark off it to good to get your perspective it's clay movement from the u. k. energy security group. thanks a lot for the pandemic climate change in the war and ukraine had been playing for lowering life expectancy and living standards around the world. the u. n. development program says 9 out of every 10 countries being affected, the lives of people in south sudan shot and new jersey declined the most
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switzerland norway in iceland, remain the talk forming countries with higher standards of living and life expectancies. let's go to hebrew. morgan has recently been to 3 of those worth rank countries. joining us now from cartoons who don. so tell us about your experiences and to what extent climate change has had an impact on what's going on. while a scene in those 3 countries over the past, peers, the impact of climate change leading to displacement of civilian hundreds of thousands of people being forced to leave their homes. and that is affecting development in those countries, for example, felt for them for the past 3 years, has been with missing heavy flooding that has led to dozens of villages submerged. and people displaced not just inside the country, but some into neighboring sudan as well. and we've also seen the same happening in chad just over the past few month. heavy rains and floods including in the capital, has led to the displacement of people from their homes, has let the destruction of infrastructure as well. now in the share,
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it's the opposite. we've seen drought affecting livestock and the livelihood of people there, and all of that is affecting not just the development of those countries, but also the mental health of the people who are affected by it as well according to their reports. now the report also mentioned the impact of corporate on the, on the global supply chain to those countries, as well as other countries saying that that has disrupt said countries where the economy was already weakened due to other factors as well. so just conflict and instability, political instability. so lots of things in those reports, which when you look at those 3 countries or all those countries at the bottom left, climate change seems to be a major factor in putting them at the bottom of the list for everything. so that's a hip morgan reporting that from top to i still had her on al jazeera, a new face for human lights found, is there a lens. united nations veteran volk attack has been touched to the wrong, the life of the, with the latest i phone feature, the shiny, the microchip and
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a new manufacturing location. as the u. s. moves to cut its reliance on china and later in school will explain why barcelona, you strike a created history. the champions ah, that then taught to getting pushy out through patrick county right up through chile . this is the lines a cold fronts or coat to the sides, warmish, the north, and so santiago's temperature come right down to 11 degrees, a drop of almost 20 degrees to be august of the last 3 or 4 days. whatever they will see the same thing happen. is fine on thursday, we'll drop by 10 degrees thunderstorms coming across from argentina during friday. north of that and things look rather quiet. now. there are still shouts around in
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the north of brazil and beyond in venezuela, but much of the energy the atmosphere is being expended northwards. so it's in the atlantic vessel, or hurricane on the way through, leaving behind a good potential for shouts at the smaller islands. and the larger balance around the caribbean and surreal action, the eastern pacific with hurricane k, this thing here, like to make land fall, probably not so hurricane is rapidly falling apart. was a very big storm from the point of view where the rainy's, so it keeps going up through back california towards california itself, where it'll influence the weather in san diego in los angeles. during friday and saturday, temperatures dropped. rain comes in elsewhere in the u. s. still a few showers around the south in the interior, it's quite warm, but quite quiet. and she things looking rather more reasonable, but it's hot in the west. ah, the extraordinary men and women who are breaking the mold from the taxi drivers
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investing everything they have in to their mini bus only to face extreme danger on the suitors rough his tracks. to the jockey turn, power, magic saving lives, transporting the sick and elderly from medical help blue to whisking. it's all oh now which is 0. with lou.
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ah, how again you're watching al jazeera, remind about top stories is, are and united kingdom's queen elizabeth. the 2nd is under medical supervision at her scotland home balmoral castle. a doctor say there concern for her health, rural officials say her son and her child was already arrived to join her and other close family members are traveling there now. alright, let's take a look at queen elizabeth 70 is on the throne. she was born in 1926 in london. at that point she was not expected to become queen. but after the application of her uncle edward the 8th, her father, georgia 6 became king, was in 1936. she married prince philip in 947. they had 4 children. prince charles
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was born in 1948, and when her father died in 1952 princess elizabeth became queen. she is the longest reigning monarch in british history and has gone past even the reign of queen victoria. and that was in september 2015 in april 2021. her husband prince philip, died just before his 100 birthday. they had been married for 73 years. let's say now from christopher wilson, who's a road biographer and commentator. and he says, it appears the queen is nearing the end of her life. i've been speaking to people in scotland. i think we can take it that the queen's life is coming to an end. i think what is remarkable about this sovereign is that she has clung to the throne and to her job until the very last moment. i think we can see that her powers have been declining for the last year at the very least. and she has done a very, very good job in managing what she's able to do and putting from her things that
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she wasn't able to do. she's gone on far longer than anybody expected to do. she's much 6 years old and she is doing what she has done all that she possibly can to retain the strings of power. and the very idea that she was able to stand up price for a couple of days ago and greet the new prime minister. it would have been an iron will and determination on her part that she should do that to show that she is still sovereign until the moment she dies. i think that she is a thread of continuity, which has taken the nation through. i mean, there are people who are 80 or 90 years old in great britain, who as it was thought, is princess, become a queen, and have lived with her through consent through changing times. all that time and started reassuring in a changing world. some things remain the same and then for each new generation
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that's come, people have been born and died within the space of rain. she has always been that she is a constant in people's lives in this country. she has meant so much. well, i think that the, the fact that we are being told that charles is on his way. william is on his way. i think that the palace never wants to create a sense of anxiety around the time they what they try to do. but i think the fact that they are now saying that the next king and his successor are on the way to bell moral, suggests that we are now entering the last phase of the queen's life. and we don't know how long that will be, and many will hope that she will recover. but i think she has served her country, but nearly 100 years and must comp time when her life comes to an end. if
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we should die, there is a highly regimented and well organized state arrangement, which will take us through her lying in state and her funeral, her memorial service, and the various public occasions which will close around the end of her reign. it's all been organized for a very long time. she's been aware of all the things that are going to happen. she will have put her name to list so there will be no surprises for those around about family as to what's going to happen next. it's all be in session train. that's a role commentator, christopher wilson. now the can be, it says it is investigating the death of dozens of children who died of kidney failure in the past 3 months. health authorities say that might be a link to their use of a syrup containing processor more. the west african countries suspended the set of
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the drug on wednesday, mid stuff a bit. i is the director of the gambia health services and explains what steps are being taken to identify the cause of the death. we have an increase in the acute kidney injury fully in use one of our meeting and daddy. so our initial investigation should most likely equal in to 50157, dash equal i. let's talk soon producing 11 for the investigation so that there would be a link between trucks, vindictiveness, they said in class tomorrow, which has been sent so that we can send 2 different level rates for investigations . this was a communication to the facilities to see that there's a, use an attorney. meanwhile, a suspicious. so having a link to cos, india, teenagers that we have that we just had our data from the hospitals. so yes,
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in that, looking at the history, the way they presented, i'm doing the analysis of drugs they're taking. it's not, it's likely to be a one of the jobs that the and one is pointing to what is to put us down more. but from the autopsy results, we have a picture of a typical day, a poison all or him with syndrome. so that's why we are we to in the labs to see the confirm. so where are we can do last? we have a committee of explains a sit down and said that we are thinking most likely to see why that is causing this problem. since there would be a link. why don't treat that all facilities for precautionary measures to ensure that they use a system for his children until we're starting. now that it is the concrete, i'm not as 0 has learned, the un secretary general is plain to point a vulgar turk,
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as a next high commissioner for human rights. the austrian has worked for you and for more than 30 years, he would replace michelle bachelor who stepped down last week. so let's go live to our diplomatic editor. jay's base is danny bye for us at un headquarters in new york, said james, a new human rights chief. what do we know about him? well, we moving from michelle bachelor who was twice the president of her country chalet and a headed a. you an agency, you and women was a very well known figure on the global stage to a new un human rights commission of volcano turk, who is an austrian national, who unless you follow the un extremely costly. i'm sure you've never heard of. he was a key official and you and hcr dealing with refugees in geneva. interestingly, he was in the head office of you and hcr in key positions for all the time that antonio terrace was the high commissioner for refugees in geneva. and since antonio
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good harris has been the secretary general, he's been a key figure in his office on the 38th floor of the building that i'm speaking to you from now at the top, the place where the secretary general has his office. so he is very close to the un secretary general antonio terrace. he is one of his right hand men who has been given this important job at a very critical time. she writes, of course james, major issue in this world of ours that tell us about some the challenges ahead while michelle, especially didn't stand for a 2nd term, she only did the 1st term and surprise people by saying she wasn't going for a 2nd term after controversy of her trip to china, she was asking for unfettered access to weak camps. she wasn't given it. people say she didn't speak up enough on china. in the last few minutes, before her term was up, she finally released a report on the weaker situation that had been in the works for 2 years. she didn't
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ever comment on it. so now he has to deal with the follow through on that i think they'll be controversy to on his appointment the process already. some human rights officials say there was a lack of transparency and consultation with civil society that it was an opaque process. so i think potentially he does have problems trying to convince human rights activists that he's the right man for the job. as i said, worked a lot of refugees, but not all that much on human rights throughout his long career. and the fact he so close to the secretary general, this is supposed to be a pretty independent job with an independent voice. the set country general, of course, has to do deals with everyone. for example, look at a great deal on ukraine recently had to deal with the craniums and the russians, the high commissioner is supposed to speak out against human rights abuses anywhere around the world. if it's someone so close to the secretary general, is he going to do? so that's the big question. or jenny sikes about james by the un headquarters in
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new york accord. and pakistan has decided to indict former prime minister run con on charges of contempt of court. khan was accused of criminal content for threatening a judge she had ruled against one of his close aids. local news reports say he will be indicted in 2 weeks. con, submitted a document to the court on wednesday. expressing deep regrets at his remarks widens more from unprecedented. take your day outside the lama bod. hi gord. we've been reporting from outside the following proceedings. rich involved the former prime minute dame ron khan. it came of god gave objects every log of deliberation. the god was not going when de arguments put forward by the at darney was satisfactory and that of god made the court of god. now ruling will be indicted under any 2nd of september and it would carry a maximum penalty of him not being
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a member of the national assembly any more. however, he had already to dine from debt. we spoke to one of the government support of iran con and did what he had to say. this judgment was not expected. it could be very, very hard to say the least all lied will now be on the farm about high gord, red nimrod. on the day, on the 22nd of september, but political and legal experts say that it may not lead to banned from politics around hon. it still has the option of a non condition and apology and it will be important to see what happened in the next. harry and ron khan had already requested the guard on 3 occasions day that it should be given an opportunity to be able to explain himself and come on the rock. god was not allowed outside that god. why did
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a border party leader including the minister of the 5 of the fall robins? why draw on their data? david vollmer bryan minute. i knew that m. ron gone 3 days big development that bought at the contempt of its concern. a prominent ally of former us president donald trump has been charged with money laundering. and conspiracy say balin was indicted on 6 counts in new york on thursday. charges relate to trumps effort to build a wall along the us. mexico border is accused of defrauding. trump supporters of hundreds of thousands of dollars using the money for personal expenses. instead of construction on the wall. the solomon islands parliamentary pass, a contentious bill to delay next year's national election. prime minister says his country cannot afford to host both the pacific games and then the election in the same year. critics, a, it's another move by the government to undermine democracy. char, clock, houses are young children and youth, mrs. manor say. so ga bar,
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i was appointed prime minister of the solomon islands in 2019 for the 4th time. now the election said for next year has been delayed at his term has been extended until 2024. so give our a fast track to bill for constitutional reform to postpone the vote. the prime minister says the island nation can't afford to host the pacific games in 2023 and go to the polls. he holds a majority in the countries parliament and a contentious bill was passed easily him in the process of making decisions and load. this was the speaker in any democratic system. so is by members pasting groups. but it's triggered condemnation from the opposition. it's labeled to move a power grab and yet another attempt by the prime minister to undermine democracy. australia had offered to help fund the elections to avoid the delay. the soak of our a government described that as foreign interference, accepted the offer,
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but still delayed the vote. i don't think it means that the controversy goes away. i think there will be ongoing and disgruntlement are not just from the parliamentary opposition, but from others within the wider society of solomon islands. and i think we can expect to hear common tray and from various quarters in the ensuing weeks and months. a secret security deal with beijing allows chinese police and law enforcement offices to be based in the islands capital honey. our analysts say that agreement and prolonging saga barry's leadership could benefit china and strengthen the partnership in light or recent decisions that sort of are a government as made such as banning foreign vessels from docking in someone else wanna censorship. censorship of the national broadcaster secret security deal that's on islands signed with china. all of these are served to increase the
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executive power of the sort of market government as of may. so the bar a has served as prime minister 3 times before this, but wasn't popular enough to finish a turn. he says delaying the next election will be a went off with no date set for 2020, full speaking with sarah clark out here to kenya, where the parliament has held its 1st session since elections in august politicians convening following a supreme court decision to uphold william router's presidential, when on monday, at router was declared the winner by a slim margin, but his opponent, rider and anger, had rejected the results and looks and unsuccessful wit to challenge them in court . now there's tro lankin, the president has increased the size of his government, swearing in 37 junior ministers all but 3 of them are members of the ruling s l p. p. one is related to the former president scott, to buy and men to roger pike. sir, the resident says the extra m p 's will help create
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a more stable government to better deal with a country's economic crisis. tax president, russet. typo one has met his creation count bud zoran, milan evictions, our grip oh, an arrived in croatia on the last leg of a 3 nation bull hunter. this visit is part of an effort to further strengthen cooperation between turkey and the region. the turkish president began his at bolton to earlier this week with bosnia and serbia. so head here now to 0. we're not this boy including the latest in the us open, whether women's well, number one remains on trust to claim her 2nd grand slam this yes. ah
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with ah ah
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ah hello again, apple has launched its latest. i found a 14 model where that new features like satellite emergency tracking. but it's like all the u. s. tech johns is being pressured to move it factories away from china. u . s. government is offering billions to companies which develop domestically made electronic chips. supply chain disruptions caused by k with 19 lockdown in china, have increased costs, and apple is preparing to manufacture around 12000000 of renew. i phones in india this year actually focus more from basic well the u. s. government may have put in place a $50000000000.00 plan to scale up the manufacturing of semiconductors in america. but apple is report the pen to deal with a chinese chip maker for the 1st time, which could see it become even more reliant on the chinese market with so that it's
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made an agreement with a young c memory technology course to uses 3 d nan's of flash technology and it's new i phone 14 initially, but there are expectations that they could adopt why and tcs, technology in the future products as well. now the deal does help apple reduce the cost of flash memory, a key component in all smartphones, by diversifying its pool supplies will also help ensure sufficient volumes amid ongoing global supply chain disruptions. but there is speculation that this deal is really about trying to penetrate further into the chinese market. currently, it holds a 13 percent market share the smartphone market in china, but this still could help ingratiate itself with beijing by cozying up to a state run supply, particularly because as we know for will, for the 1st time be making it's i phones outside of china and india instead because
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of the ongoing production disruptions going on here was a li mikey. elmer is a trade diplomacy expert and says that apple and other tech john throughout sourcing production to countries like india and vietnam to reduce costs. apple is perhaps one of the closest watched companies by investors as well as tech enthusiast and the anti trust regulators worldwide. where we are going to see, at least in the 1st step, is a move away in the final assembly. basically the last step of the production to in the starting from maybe late next year. and while sub contract, like the taiwanese fox going, who's actually engineering the supply chain on behalf of apple, is going to keep a number of the key components, supplies still in the, on chinese main lab, as well as japan and the united states. so basically we'll be seeing is final
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assembly that is probably not very cost efficient given that the salaries have increased. some was in china over the last decade. oh, so he's actually going to move to india for a very limited volume that is probably destined for the indian domestic market. anyway. we already see, for example, the apple as moves some of the production for example, places like vietnam. and, and this is also the case of final assembly the take place there, while the key components of stairs supplied by taiwan, japan, and china and the united states. all right, let's get into sport. his peter makes you so much. just have a 2 months to go now until the 2022 fif woke up kicks off in cover. the 3rd time the tournament is taking place in the middle east. organizes have given an update on the events, elko policy. it will be served in areas around stadiums, 3 hours before every match, and for an hour after full time at friends zones, there'll be no time limits on when they can start serving alcohol except at the
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largest one, the fan festival in the center of doha, where it will only be available from 6 30 in the evening. the reason for that is it's going to attract a lot of families and children. and therefore we want to give them an opportunity to be in a alcohol free zone for certain part of the day. and then for later parts of the day, fans who are coming to enjoy the games and enjoy their time. they will have alcohol readily available for them. chelsea have announced graham potter as the new head coach. potter joins from brighton way. he has enjoyed 32 good seasons. on wednesday, chelsea parted ways with former boss thomas to go of the 3 defeats and the opening month of the campaign. liverpool manager, yoga, and clark says he see must reinvent themselves of the opening their champions lea campaign with a crashing for one defeat at napoli, liverpool went behind 5 minutes into the game, and then their defense was easily opened up as andre front gun jesus scored napoli
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2nd, italian side with ringal up at the break and they got a 4th early in the 2nd half for arthur zelinski with his 2nd of the match. liverpool pulled one back, but the damage had already been done. not really, but who knows m the difference? we have our m obviously there are different kind of on us our own us or rather com and expect from me to sort to situation and not thinking that somebody else was ordered. if that's how they always saw it. and them on the day when they changed their thoughts than they might tell me, robert levin doff ski warmed up for next week's game with former club by munich. by scoring a hat trick in barcelona is 51 thrashing of victoria paulson. he had an in he 2nd of the night just before have time to give bother. a $31.00 lead at the break. and
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the polish strike had got a 3rd to make him the 1st player to score champions, league patrick for 3 different teams. barza byron and barissi dawkins, speaking of bye, and they also started off with a win leroy san a showed great control before slotting home. the german sides opener against inter milan. and that bundis league champions got a 2nd after the break, courtesy of an own goal. as it finished to nil re charlatans. first taste of champ, hinsley football was a good one. the tottenham forward school to head and see in the final 15 minutes. so give the cider to no victory over mar, say, a winning return, fall spurs after a 2 year absence from europe's premier club. competition. really, i may be for reaching because her, i think her he the service there to ever. and i'd like these. i remember very
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were low and are we signing him up? he said her, i can't wait to play to listen. that chip has like music and to play in this competition. not many wars about him, but i was for me, from football to tennis sand. it's taken 16 years, but there is finally another american man in the semi finals of the us open. fresh rummy's, impressive victory of lafelle madell frances tear fo showed no signs of slowing down against russian. andre rob live the 24 year old delivered another stunning performance reporting a straight sets victory the last american to reach the final for new york was andy roddick, back in 2006 renown with relieves estimate tennyson. i want to see how far i can go. disney. yes, love man. i go every year. i mean, ah, you know, as doug is emotional. sure. i'm seen to like,
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yes. rename in young love. what you're doing. i mean that's, that's awesome. that's what it's all about. ah, you know, i love this in a row for the santa teeth and our faces. carlos al cortes. the spaniards survived the match point in the 4th set. kathy 10 in the attic center, eventually winning in 5 alcaraz through in 5 hours and 15 minutes. that's the 2nd longest match in us open history. he remains with a chance of becoming the youngest one, number one in history. if he reaches the finer gray, i mean, i feel if you way to, to be my face and we find out, you know what i slam her i. e, a peter m better, her original fashion and you sobbing it in this term is amazing. the crowd is amazing. i would say the best in the war. i mean then i do that. i receive for
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a in this quarter 3. i am it. he was unbelievable in the women's section. well, number one, i guess she on take booked a spot in the semi finals for the 1st time at flushing meadows. she got half local favored jessica peculiar in straight sets. the french open champion has now made the semi's in 3 of the 4 grand slams. this year after dough us is that i had i, in toronto, cecilia just, i just wasn't expecting to play so well here. and it gave me actually a lot because i could be kind of an underdog again for that not maybe fully, but you know, just um, yeah, not expect from myself, but i'm gonna, you know, when everything right now she on circle player in a sub i, lanka, for a spot in the final, she powered past former world number one, catalina plesk of her, in the 1st said 61 before claiming the 2nd in the tiebreaker sommerling her didn't pay the last grants man because place from bill roofs and russia were banned by
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wimbledon it was tough time, especially when i was working out and, and human on there was mumbled on playing on the tv. i was always, sir, turn it off because i couldn't watch it. but it was tough time and i work so hard or. yeah, i work to live on that. do well, we'll leave it for now. i'll be here again later with more sports news, nick, be to look forward to you later. thanks very much indeed for that from now. that is it for this news are, but i'll be back in a couple of minutes with more videos. ah ah.
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a baking the issues of the day produce as always, then criminalized around the boundaries of rights. these are just numbers. there people are families and our friends in our community member on our online, at your voice this minute to we don't believe in dialogue. don't political crisis must be off with a political solution as climate change progress is there. some people who are in places that they're just going to have to make. there is no recognition about what we're ready facing. the street on al jazeera 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 mot. lamont hill, talk through the headline to challenge the conventional wisdom, italy versus the right wing party fortelli. this idea is ahead in the polls could a decisive victory overcome the gridlock faced by recent government. the listening
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post examines and dissects the wealth media, how they operate, and the stories they cover with rising prices, clothing, hardship, and discontent across the globe. we report on the human health and not to attempt a tackling the crisis. september on al jazeera, environmental, a se one of astray is most ancient forest under red from mine. with tuscany penalties against protesters. when i, when ace makes those prepared to break the law. on our job here, under cover reporting a exclusive stories explosive results, al jazeera investigations ah, growing concerned for the health of britney's queen elizabeth the sec.

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