tv News Al Jazeera September 9, 2022 5:00pm-5:31pm AST
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ah. a gun salute for queen elizabeth the 2nd is the united kingdom mourns her past. the u. k. parliament is in session to pay tribute to the longest serving royal in recent history. new king charles the 3rd arrives in london from ball moral greets crowds, paying their respects to his mom. as well as international reaction, we'll take a look at the lasting legacy of queen elizabeth's visit to ireland of the impact of death. they have all the islands staying within the u. k. ah, it is $1400.00, gmc hello. i'm adrian finnegan. this is al jazeera, britton's prime minister liz truss is about to meet the new king of the united kingdom charles sod of buckingham palace in london. charles is also to make his 1st
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televised address to the u. k as king. he'll speak to a nation mourning for his mother, queen elizabeth, who has died after 70 years on the throne. i'll the zeros andrew simmons reports on the day's events, so fall within seconds of king charles, the 3rd, arriving at buckingham palace with the queen, consort, came what appeared to be a change in schedule. a walk about the king looking relaxed, accepting the welcoming words. and in the background calls of god save the king. i was reign just beginning o ahead of his arrival and $96.00 guns salute one for each year of the queen's life. with the u. k. starting a 10 day period of morning bell's tolls not only in westminster,
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but all over the country. earlier, the mood outside buckingham palace was as solemn as it was when the queen's death was announced steady stream of mourners, each with some way of expressing themselves. others standing still, frozen in thought, flowers and messages spread out from all over the world. she was known as the grandmother of the nation, but to the people here. they think she was much more than that in the good times exuding, charm and fun. in the bad times, giving comfort uncall. she was the longest serving mana can british history. and with it came a sense of permanence. wilma harris feels that way. i think that really was that whole fence about he'll be in it. she will have her forever. and unfortunately, that's not been the case, and i think that will really, really miss and wish that place that she carried on with them and needs
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a corey and office worker says she still can't take it. they find out what this is not going to be any one i can like ever. like, no one. she she's to factor. she's, she's gotten so high in everyone's kind of eyes that a thing. any one can you can match in with us. and others feel she unified people and calm them at times of crisis, especially during the pandemic. the impact of just if he was with her kind of central the nation in a way that anything else really can at this point that i think everyone here as reflecting the same through the sadness, but at the same time, gratitude for her service today or not in trio and it's people in westminster, m. p is gathered to collectively give tribute to the queen that brother when the prime minister lives truss. she'd been appointed by the queen only 2 days before she died. her late majesty, queen elizabeth the 2nd was one of the greatest leaders. the world has ever known.
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she was the rock on which modern britain was built. she came to the throne at just 25 in a country that was emerging from the shadow war. she bequeath some modern dynamic nation that has grown and flourished under her rang the united kingdom is the great country it is to day a cause of ha, so many memories of an extraordinary woman whose waves from the buckingham palace balcony over 7 decades had in for all the world, despite her mobility problems, she'd excel during the platinum jubilees celebrations in june. now the balcony is empty. standing above the grief of a nation. andrew simmons out a 0 london out 0 is not in barbara, joins us now. live from buckingham palace were earlier. nadine, we saw those extraordinary scenes where a king charles,
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his motorcade are stopped at the gates of buckingham palace. and the new king got out of the car and met as many people as he could, who'd come there to pay their respects to his mother. that's right. there had been people here really and since thursday night local time gathering outside buckingham palace. but just in the last hour or so, yeah, excitement building gets people realize that the motorcade was on its way. helicopters were up above and then the cars arrives. and those scenes that you've just seen in and use reports which really do show not just the depth of feeling that people felt for the late queen, but now for king charles himself and the handover of power. and just an interesting point on that for the 1st time, the body called the accession council will be meeting on saturday morning here in
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saint james's park not far from where i'm standing and that will be televised for the 1st time ever. so that's a big new occasion for people to tune into. but yes, very a very touching gum tributes with people shouting out to king charles and show their support at his time of grief. you heard the prime minister in angie's report listing how people are showing their, their emotions. they feel like she said that there been a heartfelt outpouring of grief with crowds gathering but also flags at half mast and floral tribute. so that's certainly the case wherever you go around here, i've walked around green park just next to where i am. and people are being asked, in fact, to leave flowers. they're rather than at buckingham palace just for logistical reasons. and they're doing so at other places around the country like windsor castle, edinburgh castle. and also those gun salutes were not just here in the capital, but in edinburgh, in cardiff, in belfast, and so on. so it really was
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a nation wide event a while ago, more to come of course, and it's a lot of pressure on the new king because he'll be holding his 1st audience with the new prime minister. leads truss very shortly. and then at 6 o'clock local time, he'll be delivering an address to the nation, a pre recorded video address. at the same time, they'll be a service of memorial to queen elizabeth at saint paul's cathedral. and then of course, we go into the period of morning which has already been announced and ahead of the state funeral at westminster abbey. so footprint is for king charles. it's an extremely busy day, extremely busy weekend ahead as well, while he is still in morning grieving for his late mother. and i am sure that he will have appreciated that signal from the public and to say that he baba there live at buckingham palace, which is sort of west central london saint paul's cathedral. he was talking about.
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there were that ceremony will take place later is sort of east central london somewhere in the middle as westminster. and that's where our diplomatic editor james base is outside the palace of westminster. where parliament sits james as a that he was saying there are that you king getting straight down the business. he'll be meeting shortly with the country's new prime minister. yes, his 1st meeting with prime minister truss. and it's really amazing when you think what's happened in recent days because she was only given the job on tuesday by the late queen in her last ever official engagement. so i think they will both want to reflect on that. and clearly prime minister trust will want to send both her condolences and the condolences of the nation to king charles. she's already spoken on the telephone but meeting face to face that it will be different. i'm sure
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they're going to have discussions about the coming days. the coming days that up very, very well. 3, please. pre planned the 10 or 11 days of morning taking us to the funeral. the queen had a role in the planning of this, and i don't think anyone wants to go against her wishes. but i think that will be some coordination, potentially with the government and the role family and between the prime minister and the king on the tone of all of this trying to follow the public mood. remember when diana princess of wales died. i was here in london when that happened in 1997, and that was a very different circumstance. tragic death of a young lady of only $36.00. no one expected it. but there was a time during that when the authorities seem to misjudge the public mood. so i think they will be talking about the tone of what comes going forward. certainly here in the collins they be setting a different tone, a tone, perhaps a more unity,
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noble political business has been put to one side. we hardly trust, but giving her tribute. we also heard from kiss tom or the leader of the opposition and he made it clear that we must pull together. we will use the spirit of the queen and that is we always better when you we unite. and we actually saw some of that in the common chain, but let me just give you 2 examples to former prime ministers who ended that terms deeply unpopular forest. johnson ended his term earlier this week. as prime minister, it seems longer than that. so much has happened since, but he of course, was ousted by his own, m p. 's ousted by some members of his own cabinet as well. yet he was giving a speech at recalling his times with the queen. there was laughter. that was what warped and sadness that some of the stories he was telling, and then to resume another former prime minister. again, popularity went right to the bottom. during all those fierce debates over breaks it . and yet they were laughing and consoling with her as she spoke in the commons.
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she taught one particular amusing story of a time at balmoral, where of course the queen died her estate in scotland where they were having a picnic. the prime minister was having a picnic with the royal family and she been asked to help put out, lay out some of the food and she was doing this job, but the cheese out and it fell on the floor and she thought, what do i do now? she picked up the cheese and put it back on the table, hoping no one was no sing. and then she turned round and saw the crating of the queen just smiled and never said anything about it. the cheese remained on the table. are diplomatic, it is a james base reporting live there from westminster, central london, james for the month. many thanks. i speak to christopher wilson, he's a royal biographer. he joins been out live from london last to was cute here christopher . but let's start with those remarkable scenes that we saw earlier of the new king stopping his motorcade as he arrived at buckingham palace getting out and greeting over a period of 15 or 20 minutes or so. as many people as he could,
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that had come to pay their respects to his mother. absolutely, and as i said earlier, this is unprecedented. no other monarch in my knowledge of history has ever done that has ever gone to the people 1st before he's gone to the prime minister for he's gone to anybody else. this is a significant change in my view for very small detail. but you know, we, royal experts look for signals everywhere. if you notice he's actually wearing dark suit, black tie, white shirt, all of which you'd expect. but he's also got a colored silk handkerchief in his pocket. now, none of us are wearing our colored handkerchief in our pockets where all showing how respect to the queen. but what he's doing in that small signal is saying, life goes on. and you know, i'm going to be a good,
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jolly king. lucky you can see his, his smiles. i mean, obviously he's struck by the loss of his mother. but here is the level of the people they want to. what you're saying christ, where he's laying down a marker here about what sort of monarchy is, will be yes, i think a different toe and interesting. they different from his going characteristics as a prince of wales. you know, we saw him in a rather lordly fashion. i think you could say, generally speaking, you same spot a lot, but there was sort of distance. whereas here, you know, touchy feely, pressing the flesh people loving the people and the people loving him that he's got some business as we were saying to get through. he's got to meet the country's new prime minister imminently, and then he'll be making that address to the nation on saturday. he will be
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proclaimed at the accession counsel in the state apartments at saint james's palace, which is just around the corner from buckingham palace in london. and many people want know, might not, that may not know or realize that the actual seat of the monarchy is absent. james is palace, isn't it? what does, what does this accession council do? well, the session council is there ready to rubber stamp something that we already know when the queen died, prince charles became king, but constitutionally speaking there have to be as it were, a band of elders of important people who witness this. and you know, this goes back for centuries and centuries were, you know, robber barons would try and become king and they had to people, people, they had to be people there making sure that the right person was actually going to grab the crown. and so i think what's really significant is 1st, prince charles obviously has decided that this should be an all inclusive moment.
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it's rob sacred moment up until now. but he thinks that it should be an all inclusive moment. and i think this actually shows, we may see some very different things happening at his coronation. when that comes probably next year he seems to go and i did get wind in his tail. i think he's got the idea that he's got to be a bit different from how his mom did it. good still to you again, christopher. many thanks. dear christopher, wasn't there walburga in london for us? what woke leaders of an paying tribute to queen elizabeth the 2nd india's prime minister, lorenzo modi said that he's pained by her death. he's announced a day of national mourning the president of france, mariama crohn, a saluted the monarch as a friend of france. he said that she'll be remembered as a kind hearted queen who's left a lasting impression on her country. and on her century and china as president, cheese in ping, as offered his sincere sympathies to britain and to the new king. islands president
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michael de higgins has paid tribute to the queen. he praised her for her, his sister, her historic visit in 2011 to all is she'll have suffered as a consequence of i trembled past. i extend my sincere thoughts and deep sympathy. she was the 1st british monarch to visit the country since its independence a century ago. a trip was welcomed as a moment of healing. ireland fought a war of independence against britain that led to the country being partitioned. bryan fini is a historian of political commentator. he explains how the queen's death might affect island. she ran so long and she was like a constant and unionist society and you knew this minds for the community in the north of ireland. there is no great loyalty towards the queen or
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a date towards brenton. however, there is acknowledgement that the queen made huge efforts that peace and reconciliation. president higgins is referred to her visit to ireland in 2011. she also came to the north of ireland. several times i met the senior figures in the re like martin mcguinness, who in many ways were responsible for killing of close relations like lord my buttons. so the divided response overall. everyone is aware that her visits in 2011, where she led a rece, the garden of remembrance to the man who had organized the 1916 rising against the british empire, was enormously important and remark. she made saying things she wished the some things had been done differently or not all. busy went on extremely well. so there,
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there will be many people who think that this is a chance really to complete the break. because in many ways, ireland was britain's 1st scholarly, on the north of ireland is the last remnant of that 1st colony. so it's a matter of completing the job whether or not the arrival of king charles the 3rd as has any impact. it is difficult to say. but certainly the passing of queen elizabeth, who was this constant over 70 years, will in many ways feel the desire to complete the process of de colonialism. jumping around the united kingdom we were in london, brian who just saw was in belfast and in northern ireland, not as good a scotland out here as rock matheson is outside ball moral castle, which is where queen elizabeth the 2nd that passed away. rob, what's happening that over
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about the hours last 8 hours, adrian has been a constant stream of people who've been coming to, to who to make their had to pay their tributes and went to a queen elizabeth the 2nd a you might be able to see just over my shoulder, there are some of the fall tributes, and also there was small candles there as well. many people, many of the floral tributes have a short messages on them as well, many in the same vein, thanking her for her service. what has been interesting is the expressions in people's faces will not seem significant outpourings of grief that we have seen in other parts of the country. here, people are, to some degree, it's almost fair to say that they look slightly shocked to be like, slightly stunned. this is something given the fact that the queen was 96, that is perhaps not unexpected. at the same time, the very fact that it has happened in their life time. let something so significant has happened is clearly registering with
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a great many of the people who are coming here. we've heard of local voices from scotland and from other parts of the u. k, we've heard many voices from around the world, people who are visiting scotland and chosen to come and pay their respects a heel here at ball moral. it's been a very interesting reaction to the way that the things have panned out here. we saw earlier on in the buckingham palace when making charles the 3rd arrived and did a new was shaking hands and was warmly greeted by the crowd. and that's an extension to some degree of the kind of warmth of the local people here in ball moral. i've been feeling for the family because the families holidays here for many years have been a part of the community and regarded as neighbors. so it's no surprise that they the king would receive that kind of reception in london as well. i'll 0. we're matheson reporting live back from balmoral castle and northeastern scotland will not take a look at what else is happening in the world in just
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i want to pay tribute to diana myself. she was an exceptional and gifted human being. ah ah ah, we have seen the worst, but also the best of our continent. we have witnessed how quickly things can change for the better. but we know that we must work hard to maintain the benefits of the page world. ah, me
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the un secretary general and tony of the tennis has arrived in pakistan to see flood damage. he called on the world to contribute more than $160000000.00 to help those affected by the unprecedented floods. i'll just come, i'll hide a reports from his mom about the united nations secretary general ed and focused on a to see for him. hello, dr. strong pockets on the court and unprecedented and dramatic development sharing that budgets on what on the front line of climate change. a wanted international community, particularly don't, don't read, read, read responsible for carbon and mission to come to pocket on the pockets on the prime minister. also saying that country really need else, and rehabilitation and reconstruction and tonia carriers have to say, she needs massive financial support to response to these cries is that
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have costed, according to some estimates i've heard today about 30 $1000000000.00 and counting and that's that supports is entirely necessary and it is not the method of soley that it, it's a method of justice. the security generally will be relating to flood drivers. dad with the focus on the prime minister on saturday. he has promised that he will launch the international community to help focused on falling this a dramatic, a development. and he had seen as a friend of focused on the focus on the prime minister. of course, thanking mr. get it for taking time out to come to this country to express its validity with the people of focused on unicef says that 3000000 children in pakistan need immediate humanitarian assistance. same bas robbie asked more now from baluchistan, province i, i like the, the, the i, you know, i like the road the by mike, i thought i let the camara got it. i like dyna go get there. oh. if the
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floods had spared her home, they weren't living on the side of the road. if she hadn't been sleeping so soundly, then maybe much massaged. her daughter would be safe. oh, my god, la dod, i got the 3 year old has been missing for more than a week. she disappeared in the middle of the night. her husband spends all day searching. the nudge must sit and wait, sad about hope. i didn't make fun to make a gosh. i know gabrielle, i don't want money. i don't want anything. my only appeal to the government is to reunite me with my little girl. whether she's dead or alive. i just want to see her one last time. i don't want anything else in the name of god what conditions must be in. she was so small. she says they had an argument with a man in a tent nearby. maybe he took her or maybe she wandered off and drowned. either scenario is a nightmare. could you tell someone to help her?
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she has no support. she doesn't have her parents. there's no one powerful in her family. whatever can be done to help this per woman do it. with bible agencies have worn children living out in the open or at greater risk of kidnapping trafficking and sexual abuse. but double up. but i mean i must tell bonnie dog, give my children water, give them food, give them a house. they need taints. if you can't give anything house, then just give us a house. my kids don't have a house left with only memories of home, children cope with the loss and trauma as best they can. thousands of villages have been inundated by the floods in this part of the largest done. it is an incredibly difficult team to try to comprehend. and if you look at the families that have been displaced, that are living now by the side of the road, they tell us that their biggest challenge is the safety of their children. their kids are out sure, living on the side of the road, exposed to the elements, insects, road traffic, the families we've met,
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the adults in those families tell us that their primary challenge is trying to keep their kids safe without help. some have failed. floods have made the dangers of diseased disappearance and death even worse. when seeing her daughter's body, not my search would be easier than never seeing her again as that the money i lay gaily. i z basra all jazeera darrow le yar baluchistan pakistan. north korea says that its committed to holding on to its nuclear weapons and has no intention of resuming negotiations on de nuclear ization pyongyang. parliament has passed a law authorizing an automatic nuclear strike if the countries ever attacked robert bride reports from sol. the defiant declaration from north korea's leader kim jong then came at a gathering of the country's parliament, the supreme people's assembly to customary applause. he announced the north status as
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a nuclear armed power would now be enshrined in law. would he had little cartoon legislating nuclear weapons policy one draws an irreversible line would have to so that the can be no bargaining of our nuclear weapons. it officially closes the door on attempts, brokered by the previous liberal administration in south korea to get the north to give up its nuclear weapons through summit diplomacy and comes amid fears. the north is preparing to conduct its vers nuclear test since 2017 concerns that were aired at a trilateral security meeting earlier this week between the us and its allies, south korea and japan. oh, or you know, it comes as both careers are celebrating the autumn thanksgiving festival of choose up a traditional time for family gatherings and which south career has used as an opportunity to call for
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a resumption of re unions of families separated by the korean war owner to day the south korean government offers talks with north korea to discuss a reunion of separated families. kentucky will go such a prospect seems as remote as ever given the current freeze into korean relations. south korea is ruling party, has condemned the north declaration as a threat to the south and the international community accusing pyongyang of causing its own isolation and resulting sanctions. and kim jong, run of using nuclear threats to protect his regime. once again, north korea seems to be showing the more it feels threatened by what it perceives as a hostile world. the more determined it is to hold on to its nuclear arsenal. rob mcbride al jazeera, so the gambia government is investigating whether the deaths of dozens of children from kidney failure and recent months. a link to a paracetamol syrup and.
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