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tv   News  Al Jazeera  September 9, 2022 10:00pm-10:31pm AST

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elves and gun salutes as the u. k. mourn the loss of queen elizabeth after 70 years on the throne. that promise of lifelong service. i renew to all to do. charles her 3rd praises his mother as an inspiration in his 1st address to the nation as king. ah, norman taylor, this is under 0 life in london, also coming up. ah, using the news and australians pay tribute to the queen who is also their monarch and tears of joy as ukrainian forces take back towns and villages in the east. a russian official admits their advance has been sharp and rapid. ah.
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hello, united kingdom's new monarch, king charles the 3rd has addressed the nation, praising his mother, queen elizabeth for her unswerving devotion to the roll. he pledged to follow her example and serve with loyalty. people have continued together outside buckingham palace and balmoral and scotland. earlier they shouted, god save the king. as he and the queen consort camilla arrived and met well wishes the u. k. now wait to hear confirmation of a funeral date. you as president joe biden has already said, his intention is to attend or challenge begins or coverage from london. yesterday he was saying farewell to his going mother. on friday, through the grief he greeted crowds at buckingham palace, his king, and listened to them. welcome in the it's the moment this 73 year old man has spent his entire life preparing for
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waiting in that most peculiar excuse the line of royal succession. at an age at which most people would be retired or retiring. king charles, the 3rd is finally doing what he was born to do. time will tell what sort of monarch he will be that greeting the public like he did at buckingham palace on friday was a warm and open way to start. then his 1st address to the nation as sovereign as the green herself did with such unswerving devotion. i, too now solemnly pledged myself throughout the remaining time, god groundsmen, to uphold the constitutional principles at the heart of our nation. and wherever you may live in the united kingdom, or in the realms and territories across the world. and whatever may be your background or beliefs, i shall endeavor to serve you with loyalty, respect,
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and love. as i have throughout my life as enthusiastically as charles has been welcomed, britain is still a country in national mourning for a queen loved by millions. it will be a challenge for the new king to equal disaffection and reverence. since thursday evening crowns had been coming to pay their respects to elizabeth. as for the death of prince philip last year, the royal family are trying to discourage people from bringing flowers down to the gates of buckingham palace. they are saying that if you do, you'll be guided elsewhere to one of the parks to put your flowers there where you can see that message has not gone through the accuser stretching all the way up the road past the palace. he can't hold the people back each with their own personal reasons for coming. please keep walking up on your left hand side to call your response to the coin. allow your flowers. it's a very sad day. i've only known the queen and my mother was
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a refugee after the holocaust. and she came here in 1946 and was here for the queen. got married and when she was crowned and, and we've always been really grateful to this country and for her great leadership with the flowers. my dad is amazing. thank you very much. i remember i turned it off by not hospital in south africa. there was a year where by she came to south africa. i was, there's a student, nasa, just such a big day for everyone in south africa. you know, i and mandela day. and i just such a big day for everyone that the queen of england has come to south africa, royal successions are all about continuity. even so, this is one of those few clear hinges in time where an established era is left behind. and a new one begins will reach alan's al, jazeera london, we have correspondence, hipaa in palace and al laurel in scotland. and it start with neath arca,
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who sat. i am palace here in london, geneva had king charles is addressed a nation, giving us some indications of what kind of monarch he might prove to be. it did give us some suggest and indeed, i mean, considering this is a man who is used to speaking publicly, and most people here in the united kingdom have speak, heard him speak of multiple major events. this is undoubtedly the most important speech and his life. formerly prince charles, now of course, king charles the 3rd and the more vast majority of the speech was given over to reflecting on the long life of his mother. he sank. busy deeply and sincerely, for her steadfast years of service to the country. but he also reflected on the future as well, the kind of monarch that he would be in this we saw in rural re support that what he did talk about is being a monarch for all people, regardless of their backgrounds, regardless of their beliefs as well on top of that, he did also stress that he would be the kind of monica maintains,
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the traditions that were embodied and imbued in his mother as well. so a continuity, monica, but also somebody that embraces the modern age. he also threw forward to reflecting on the fact that his son, prince william, will now become prince of wales as her, as he, of course, was prior to becoming now king charles, he also talks about sir his other, some harry, reminder of course, that he is the head of a family, he leads that family and morning, at least the nation a morning to and crowns sit still at the palace behind you. yeah, we expect crowds to be gathering here and coming and going for several days. buckingham palace, of course, the most prominent the most well known palace in the british capital is the very much the epicenter of national morning. people are placing flowers here, despite being guided to other parks to
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a place there are floral tributes. people are coming here to reflect upon the historic moment and also to prepare a reflection for what's to come in a few days time with the st. funeral of queen elizabeth epoch. i thank you very much. indeed. are matheson joins his line from outside our moral castle in scotland and the crowns also still at belmont castle. yes, that's right. and they've been coming for the least of the last 9 hours and the one points they were so busy they were jamming the bridge that you can just see over my shoulder and the far end where the gates are was absolutely but packed with people, bringing your flowers and tributes and lighting of small candles and leaving messages all to be able to, to pay their respects to queen elizabeth the 2nd. it's been interest in seeing. however, the types of things that the nature of the cards that have been coming in. we've had a lot of local people, people from all over scotland, but there have been
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a lot of international visitors as well who have been on holiday in scotland are taking trips here and have felt it necessary to come here to show just the kind of impact that the wall family and in particular, queen elizabeth has had on them. of course, a king chose the 3rd is now in london between consort as me for saying, starting his boot is to take up his duties as monarch, but still people are coming as the light begins to do here in a ball moral. and it's understood that there's every chance that there are going to be more people even into the later hours of the night. and the queen's coffin is still at al neural. what are the events in scotland for the next few days? as such, i would expect in the coffin to remain here until sunday, at which point it's going to be taken by road. we understand to hollywood, palace, edinburgh, and it's going to rest there overnight. and the following day there is going to be
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a procession along the royal mile in edinburgh, which is going to an absent sales cathedral there. the body will rest again and we understand that there's going to be a private service. there is going to be a service that is going to be held for the public is also going to be able, private, one called the vigil of the princes, where members of the royal family will hold their own service. at the side of the coffin, when the sound that members of the public may well be allowed to walk alongside the coffin, while it is in some child's cathedral before it is then moved to london. and the procedures begin for the funeral. arrangements weren't going to happen in the capital there, but as i say, people still expected to be turning up on moral castle. of course, a scene where queen elizabeth the 2nd died on thursday evening from some thank you very much. earlier british politicians gathered in parliament to commemorate the death of queen elizabeth the 2nd and peace and prime ministers paid their respect and shared memories of the late monarch james base reports at westminster. the
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bruising daily business of politics has been put on hold. instead, a special session of the house of commons for the nation's politicians to pay their respects to the $1.00 person in the country who never allowed herself to be political. leading the tributes, the new prime minister, who was given the job by the queen in her last ever official engagement. just 2 days before she died, 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 bequeathed some modern dynamic nation that has grown and flourished under her rang opposition lead a kiss. tama said she was britain's greatest ever monarch, and he hoped her death would bring the nation back together. we must always remember one of the great lessons of our queen's right that we are always better
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when we rise above the petty, the trivial the day to day. to focus on the things that really matter. the things that unite us, rather than those which divide us. yet, there was some of that unity evident valve laughs and applause greeted a speech by boris johnson, who earlier this week was forced to quit his prime minister after being ousted by members of his own party. any 3 days ago, when she saw off her 14th prime minister and welcomed her 15th and i can tell you, in that audience, she was as radiant and as knowledgeable and as fascinated by politics as ever i can remember. and as wise in her advice as any one i know if not wiser, another former prime minister who became deeply unpopular over breaks it, delighted the commons with tales of her time with the late queen to resume recalled
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a picnic with the royal family balmoral where she been asked to lay out the food. i picked up some cheese, put it on a plate and was transferring it to the table. the cheese fell on the floor, had a split 2nd decision to make awe with the tea on the plate and put it on the table. and i turned round to see that my every mood. he watched very carefully. i her majesty the queen. i looked at her, she looked at me and she just smiled, and the cheese remained on the table. in recent years, the atmosphere and the house of commons has been hostile, with the visions over issues like rex it, the pandemic,
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and the energy crisis. what in this moment of national remembrance, there was for was unity, goodwill, grief, but also some laughter. james bows out his era london. many sporting events across the u. k. had been cancelled or postpone this weekend as a mark of respect. all premier league football matches have been postponed, even though cancelling fixtures is not obligatory under the government's national morning guidance. british racing has been cancelled on saturday, but will resume on sunday. even industrial action has been called off union se plan strikes, my postal and rail workers in the u. k. will not now go ahead. parts of british life, it have remained unchanged for decades, will now be transformed to mark the reign of king charles the 3rd. for the 1st time in 70 years, the national anthem will switch from god save the queen to go said the king. charles will also replace his mother on new coins, bank notes,
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and stamps. it's traditional for the new moment to face the opposite direction to their predecessor. so charles is image will face left because the queen faced right . and the wall cipher will change. that's the monogram used on everything from mailboxes to police uniforms. current new features, the queens into our stamp blown image of the since edward's crown, and also be legal changes. senior lawyers will become the king's council rather than the queen's counsel. and the government will change from her majesty to his majesty's government. while the queen was also had a state of new zealand and australia, which are both commonwealth nations, have been paying tribute to her as adrian brown reports, washington in new zealand. people are mourning the passing of a british monarch who was also them on for all or most of their lives. prime minister, just inter arden among the thousands of people signing books of condolence. she
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said, queen elizabeth had been the nation's mother and grandmother the last days of the queen's life, captured who she was in so many ways working to the very end on behalf of the people she loved. and that is why i'm sure that we will receive the news of her passing with both emotions of deep sadness, but also gratitude for life that was actually and completely devoted to the service of others. the indigenous murray, people of new zealand make up more than 17 percent of the population. some performed hucker to celebrate. and on the queen, her representative new zealand governor general cindy key ro has murray heritage for most news cylinders. queen elizabeth has really been a constant in our lives. she's been here her whole time and she's provided a still sense of continuity and stability for us. among others,
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the mood was one of some reflection, sorrow that she'd gone gratitude for what she did. while it's not unexpected, it's always said the family. when the loved one pulses away and the queen's been such a big feature of our lives for so long, a sentiment echoed across the tasman c and australia where the queen was also head of state. she 1st visited both countries as monarch, almost 70 years ago. at the start of her reign, there is comfort to be found in her majesty's own words. great is the price we pay for love. this is a loss we feel deeply in australia. queen elizabeth the 2nd is the only reining monarch most of us had known. and the only one to ever visit australia. many people in new zealand and australia woke up to the news. actually really in
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shocking, i'm probably going to walk away and cry. i'm going to cry. i know that's crazy, but shocks initially sad. i'm adding a day. everyone will remember where they were and what they doing. sorry. yeah, it saw it's huge into the sunset sky over wellington, how about a $96.00 gun salute? one for each year of the queen's life. she was commander in chief of new zealand. defense force. their power for tribute watched by a large crowd paying their respects to a beloved monarch, adrian brown al jazeera, wellington, joining me in the studio as well commentator and historian ed and it's like so much for coming to talk to. i just want to go back to the 1st move of king charles and said, go down spokane palace and talking to the people in the crowds before he'd even given the address the nation. what did you make of us as a kind of signal of what kind of king he'll be? i think as king, he is going to follow really. the pattern that he set about creating is prince of
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wales. really post 9097 with the death of diana, he did seek to present himself as a more familiar personable, likable figure. really, as part of his, the rehabilitation of his, of his public image, it was key that he pay attention to public opinion and listen to the public and, and what we saw, the softening with that walk about was exactly that gauging engaging, intimately, effectually with his people and in terms of the speech, i mean, one of the things people have pointed out is that with controls, we know we know some of his views about things because he's been around for so long and had the ability to, to talk about it. and there was perhaps that kind of concern by some people who, you know, how is he going to put those views to one side? what do you think of the speech? he seemed to be saying, i wouldn't be able to give as much of my time to charges and issues i care about not people who worry that he might be a kind of an interfering figure. i think it absolutely was the fact that he essentially said i am decoupling from those spheres of influence of interest. where
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before now i have sought to express political views and concern. there was a lot of anxiety. i think that if he was not careful, the new king would run into trouble the causes of expressing contentious political use. notably in his address this evening, he also spoke of the need to adhere to the constitutional principles that had been embodied by his mother as queen. so i think we are witnessing a transition in terms of prince of wales to ny raining moment. and if he passing the baton on some of those issues to, to prince william, do you think possibly we know that for example, that the 2 of them until very recently were really competing for the mantle of environmentalist king in waiting. both of them sought to express their concern
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about the natural world, segregation of, of the climate and environment. i imagine prince william could become a little bit more vocal in that respect if his father is to withdraw. but william generally speaking, has been very careful to tow a constitutional line, really in accordance with the example set by his, by his grandmother. he hasn't caught the same kinds of controversy as was the case with charles when he was prince of wales. and in terms of what happens next, so clearly this a small work quite a few more days until we get to the funeral. what's your expectation as to how close you will be watched who, who comes and who doesn't come? it's going to be extremely closely watched the, the former monarch elizabeth the 2nd really had a, a global reputation not just as a popular celebrity figure, but as head of the commonwealth and someone who also had often very good relationships with foreign ministers, foreign politicians. so i think that will be
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a rallying around this moment of national grief. certainly for the, for the monarchy. and we are likely to see quite a lot of foreign dignitaries and others coming to the, to the united kingdom, to be present for the events. it does not offer an opportunity for, for diplomacy, for some of the countries that might have monitor their own and kind of in some ways connected with monarchy in the u. k. for some of the paps, the positions that have been taken on in terms of foreign policy where they haven't been as supportive over ukraine to say that they might be in the, in the, in the kind of in barnes of the, of a funeral might be persuaded to kind of come on the side with that. it's certainly the case, the big royal occasions that have witnessed foreign dignitaries sort of descend on london. be they sort of the royal weddings of the, of the 20th century, or be they indeed the 1953 coronation. there is this,
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they sort of strange diplomatic quality to at all in the it is bringing together some of the most powerful people in the world into one space. i think perhaps most importantly it is an opportunity for our new monarch to, to meet and greet those, those foreign officials with whom he is going to be engaging. now as, as britons number one representative on the international stage i do in thank you very much, steve. coming to talk to you. thank you avenues. the head of the russian back to administration in ca cave has admitted that ukraine's advance in the southern region has been very sharp and rapid. the areas in red have been under russian control, but which elegant jeff confirm. ukrainian forces have captured a number of settlements within the area. the venues have been circulating on social media, showing villages, welcoming ukrainian forces in russian control, towns, ukrainian official se,
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then military is advanced, almost 50 kilometers in 3 days, were synonymous se keys southern offensive could shut down vital supply lines to the east and potentially leave thousands of russian troops in circles and he's 14 people have been injured in hockey off to russian missiles. it's a residential area, a children's art center, and a school was struck as well as several houses regional governess had 3 children were among the wounded year. fish, they are insane and they believe there is some one he was on the military person that hey, nobody object. hey, there are kids. there were no minutes. she hey, what a military where they hide in. this is nonsense. they made up. i think they are destroying what the patient system our future. i see no other reason. are you? nuclear watchdog says new shelling has destroyed power infrastructure in the ukrainian city. westoff operating these f origin nuclear power plant live. the i e
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a says this pages growing threat to the plant where the situation is becoming increasingly precarious. the plants offsite power lines, which would help prevent a potential nuclear meltdown. have already been cut coverage on doors and keys with more of the situation around the parisha. peers at the i a e, a is really raising the red flag in a way kind of raising the alarm if you will, hinting that the fighting is so bad around the apparition. nuclear power plant that they might have to consider, even pulling out there 2 remaining staff members that have been there now for a little over a week. they didn't quite say that, but they're certainly hinting at that, at least that was a message from our fail grossi, the director general of the i. e. a. he said the situation at the separation of nuclear power plant is, in his words unsustainable. and the situation is increasingly precarious. he's calling again for an immediate cease fire. he says that there is almost constant showing around this apparition,
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nuclear power plant that is endangering not only the safety of the power plant itself, but also his 2 staff members that are still in the power point. these are staff members of work for the i. e a that are meant to be on site monitors there at all times. and he said that there's little likelihood that he has any confidence to be able to reestablish any off site power into the plant. and he said it's affecting the city as well. the town i should say, of an ad who died, which is a town where the power plant is located. he said that town has been completely cut off from the power grid as an, as in total blackout right now. you energy ministers have struggled to reach a consensus on how to tackle the blocks energy crisis. it's an emergency meeting in brussels. i've been trying to find ways to shield citizens and businesses from the sparling gas and electricity bills, including consumption, cuts and price caps. european governments are increasingly concerned,
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rising costs could lead to social on rest, and political instability. prices rising sharply across europe. as russia chokes off, gas supplies over sanctions imposed in reaction to its invasion of ukraine. you, inspector general has call for massive international support to help those affected by the unprecedented floods and focused on antonio. terrorist has already launched an appeal for $160000000.00 aid to help the country cope with a disaster. and he's now arrived in pakistan to see the flood damage for himself. the government says around 1400 people have been killed so far, and the lives of nearly 33000000 people have been disrupted. come hider has more from his, i'm about a good parish, began his visit, the united nations secretary general lived and focused on a to see for him. hello, dr. strong pockets on the core dates and unprecedented and dramatic development. getting that budget on what on the front line of climate change,
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a wanted to international community, particularly don't turn paid responsible for carbon emission to come to pocket on the buckets on the prime minister. also saying that country will need help, and rehabilitation and reconstruction and tonia carriers have to say, he needs massive financial support to response to these cries is that they have costed, according to some estimates i've heard today about $30000000000.00 and counting and depth depth supports is entirely necessary and it is not a method of solidarity. it's a method of justice. the secretary general will be reading the floor, driving dad, with a bucket on the prime minister on saturday from a lot the international community to help august on calling this a dramatic a development. and he had seen a friend of august on the buckets on the prime minister. of course tanking mistake
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. you're get it for taking time out to come to the grid to a registrar data gate where the people of buckets on has bring images from the u. k . now of people remembering the life of queen elizabeth the 2nd ah ah ah dignity with a joy. but also celebration.
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i speak to you today with feelings of profound sorrow throughout her life. her majesty the queen, my beloved mother, was an inspiration. an example to me and to all my family and we owe her the most heartfelt debt. any family could oh to them. oh oh .

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