tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera September 10, 2022 4:00pm-5:01pm AST
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hello, i'm to clock this isn't news life. coming up in the next 60 minutes. god save the k. 3 chairs for his not just think, but k. a. united kingdom proclaims it's new king king charles, a 3rd officially seating to the throne. and taking up these responsibilities, i shall strive to follow the inspiring example. i have been said, a woman of wealth. we look at the great fortune of his late mother, elizabeth, the 2nd plus ukrainian, forced to say they've made a significant breakthrough in that culture offensive in the east and sport has resumed in the united kingdom following the death of queen elizabeth. it was
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a minute silence before play began in the test match between england and south africa. ah. so then it's been a spectacle like none other before it's shrinking. charles a 3rd has been officially proclaimed as king. for the very 1st time in hundreds of years, the british monarchy, the accession council, has conducted its business and public. first in saint james's palace, the seat of monarchy in front of the privy council of the united kingdom. in taking up these responsibilities, i shall strive to follow the inspiring example. i have been set in upholding constitutional government and to seek the peace, harmony and prosperity of the peoples of these islands and of the common rose realms and territories throughout the world. one next,
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the declaration was read out in the city of london announcing to the people we have a new monarch and thousands lined the streets and waited at the gates of buckingham palace to watch the pomp and ceremony to catch a glimpse of the 1st king. the country is seen for 70 years, king charles, the 3rd joe, the hall is outside bucking. probably join the king became king the moment his mother passed. but what we've seen this morning today has been the kind of official sanction yes, of course, in terms of the laws, the hereditary laws of monica, monica, he would have become king at the moment we lose, but the 2nd passed away, surrounded by her family. his hand would have been kissed by his siblings in acknowledgment of that. but of course, nothing is anything in the monarchy without centuries of tradition. and that was what we saw in the state rooms of some james's palace, the oldest seat of the monarchy. in fact, of all the palaces,
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this meeting of the accession council following an ancient tradition that goes back to normal times the room filled with around 200 people. members of the privy council, the old oldest legislative assembly in the world, set up to advise the monarch and other senior figures described by historians watching as the great and the good, the most powerful people in the land. certainly in politics and monarchy, they were all of the former prime ministers, raids, their members of parliament, current and constitution senior members of the clergy. and as well as that. of course, the queen, consort camilla and william. now prince of wales, they're both privy counsellors as well. all there to officially anoint charles king charles the 3rd in that room. he gave his 1st declaration as king. in fact, his 1st ever live televised speech. the one on friday night was pre recorded in
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which he uttered those words. you heard that he started by praising his mother and the example of her lifelong love and service. he said, i am deeply aware of this greatest inheritance. i shall strive. he said, to follow the inspiring example. i have been set and then he is proclaimed king by the council. oaths were signed and the proclamation was made public on the balcony outside saint james's palace declaring him king head of the commonwealth defender of the faith, the wording, beseeching god to bless his majesty with long and happy years to reign over us a rendition of the anthem 3 cheers for his majesty the king. and with that, it was official, and charles made his way from saint james's pallets a very short distance asked. these crowds thronging the roads here around buckingham palace. there had been some hope he might stop to meet the crowds, he didn't in keeping with the sort of ceremony the formality of the occasion. the
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gates swung open. he passed through and into the palace and we haven't seen him since in a day. and the formalities continued, and he's got a busy afternoon and, and certainly in the days ahead. well, he will this afternoon meet at mistrust, the prime minister. he's met her already, but this afternoon there'll be a formal meeting with the prime minister and the entire cabinet. he will be meeting king charles the 3rd his 1st government, and it's interesting to remember that all those years ago in 1952, when his mother ascended to the throne, she was just 25. when she met her 1st government, she went on to meet 15 in all prince charles to sorry, king charles the 3rd this afternoon meets his 1st government at the age of 73. that is the formalities for the day on my on sunday rather attention will shift to scotland where the body of the queen still lying and bound thou moral. where she
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died on thursday. we'll move to holly route, palace and then on to a service, a funeral services and giles cathedral in edinburgh. next, we are a journey thanks a lot to john hall reporting from outside buckingham palace. there was the 2nd proclamation took place in the financial heart of the nation, the city of london, god save the king. the yes, his area became known as a square mile is global banks establish their headquarters. but the tradition goes by centuries, king charles will inherit a personal fortune was hundreds of millions of dollars. his mother, we lived with a child of more during the green, duke and the prince wears each minute calling themselves and the queen kept one not doing it. she famously never carried cash despite being the face of it. throughout her long reign,
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my government will continue to work. queen elizabeth was one of britain's wealthiest women, a monarch landowner, property tycoon, collector and investor, with an estimated personal fortune about $500000000.00. the queen and the monarch have a due role. one is the head of state in which everything is disclosed and therefore all the financials are freely available to. she also had a role as a private individual and as a private individual, financial information is not necessarily to be disclosed to the public. her own wells came in part from her mother's estate properties including balmoral castle and scotland, a vast stamp collection artworks and the beloved race horses sunday afternoon. at one wave as bonnet, she owned one of the biggest property portfolios in the u. k. the crown estate
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includes park shopping centers, offices, business and residential property, profits from the estate, which is an independent commercial business, got paid into the u. k. treasury, which in turn took 25 percent of the profits and paid them to the queen. this is called the sovereign grant. privately she receive money from another estate, the duchy of lancaster, which has held entrust, the sovereign. it's worth an estimated $682000000.00. the queen started paying tax voluntarily on its income in 1992 in 2017 and investigation called the paradise papers found about $13000000.00 had been invested by the duchy . legally offshore. in a caribbean tax haven, she did nothing wrong. it wasn't illegal, but most people for that all her investments when in britain and they were in blue chip companies and it did tanisha image of being whiter than white. it looked as
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though she was acting like a city fund manager. it's unlikely will ever really know how well the british queen was with her wealth represented an outdated institution, that of monarchy for her support as though she was a valuable asset worth the coins and notes she appeared on. we'll reach helen's how to 0. ok. we're going to talk to dame jenny martin now she's a journalist and author joins is now from london. and then jenny, getting back to what's happened in the past few days. so much has happened and so fast. and on tuesday the queen was alive and carrying out duties on saturday. there's a new king. what do you make of it? all? you prime minister? new king? i was 3 when the queen was crowned. so i have never sung anything other than say the queen. i'm finding it really rather difficult to
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get used to saying, god save the king. you know, i've known prince charles for one for as long as i live fairly well, contemporaries. well, he's a year older than me. i'm 72 and he's 73. and it's just very, very strange. it says that the whole world has been turned upside down. and i loved queen, i think so many was love to you know, i met a few times. it was a was terrifying. man, you would have to meet again, you know, could you think of anything to say, would you park, would you fail to bow will say or whatever. and you and it was always very strict. you know, you would tell exactly how to behave in front. the queen, this is when i was getting an o b e palace and then later was made a dame and you know, given instructions, you know,
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you must walk along. you stop in front of the queen, you call her mom, not mom. and when she offered her hand, you take it and when it's all over you step backward, you don't turn your back on the queen. and then when you actually got back, she was just lovely. she was astonishing in her eighty's and ninety's. she would walk in at stand on the dance and just stand there for 2 hours. and i was thinking, could i possibly stand like that for a long time when she would just do, i think, how important you think it was to have a woman at the helm of the nation over all those years and those years which saw unprecedented change. i think so my generation, it was incredibly important, you know, when i was studying history at school, queen elizabeth, the 1st was my hero because she's all she was
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a symbol of women could do how powerful she could be, how she could make her own decisions. and rule over all these men. and of course we had our very own queen. and of course this has been the period during which women's lives have changed enormously. my mother, who was the queen's content, brutal though she died 16 years ago now. she didn't live as long as the queen did. but for her generation life forced hot, you weren't expected to marry half children. you know, my mother was a civil servant and she had to give up her job. when she had me, am i with the child with not allowed to work in the civil service? and with the queen there, as the powerful figurehead, female figurehead, just as elizabeth, the 1st thing she was so important,
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i think to my generation women who were really fighting hard to gain, right? that women had not had the for sure. and now you mentioned, you know, the new king and charles has committed to be just as dutiful as his mother ever was . it will be a hard act to follow and she will be a hard act to follow. but you know, he's been waiting for this. i'm sure with a lot of worried that it meant for him to rise. he had to lose his mother, which is a terribly difficult thing to even think of. but he has been trained. he's been very, very well trained by her. and he's had good times in his life. he's had terrible times in his life. he's come through the rule and i think you know what is really important. it is,
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she's now queen consult approved off by the queen, at which she was not at one point in their lives during the diana period. but she and he have come through together. and what i love about it is seeing, i don't like to go people of my generation elderly, but you know, we are aging that as they both are. but to see, to older people finally be able to get together because i have no doubt they have loved each other from being very, very young for all kinds of reasons. we're not able to get together, but now they are together. and camilla is important, you know, she's taken on domestic violence, protecting women who suffered much violence, helping children to read and read well, she's really engaged and she will be his support. and i think that going to be
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terrific. yeah. it is certainly the time of charles, i'm kind of damage any more and we do appreciate your perspective. thank you so much enjoy. but marcella had on these are including refugees from the ivory coast fine piece opportunities and a new home in liberia. holding on to home refugees in series circ band camp call for help. after 3 years of of located on humanitarian aid, we got support for the claims just needs to 1st grand slam. finally, we had the flu now ukraine says russian forces have retreated from the eastern city. vizier, moses trooped close in on the logistical hub counter offensive,
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has made significant gains in the east and hockey region, retaking dozens of towns and villages in the past week. meanwhile, russia has deployed more troops to shore up his defenses, but they must go back to ministration in the khaki region, admits the ukrainian advance has been rapid. let's get more in this. gabriel, alexander has been falling developments from out from the outskirts of cape said, gape. we're hearing of these significant advances in the last few hours what, what malkita? yeah, this has been a huge and ambitious military blitz by the ukrainians. and it started about 3 days ago and it's just been picking up steam every day for the last 3 days. and now the ukrainians have are on the cause of retaking the very strategic and important city of is zoom just south east of how to keep city. this is a critical turning point in this war because is him was, as is
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a city of more than 50000 people, it's not a village, it's not a town. it is a small city. but it was taken by the russians in march and april, after nearly 6 weeks of fighting. the russians have held it ever since. and it's been a strong hold of the russian military for the last several months. they've been using it as a key transit point on the rail line system there to supply their troops by the russian troops from the don bass region all the way into the how to keep region as well. this is why the fact that the ukrainians have been able to retake it is so significant. it basically means that the ukrainians have cut off supply lines to the entire portion to an entire portion of the russian soldiers there. and this blitz is really been incredible by the ukraine's in many ways are remarkable. i should say, because just in a zoom, like i said,
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it took 6 weeks for the russians over pierce fighting to take that city. if you piers the ukrainians have re taken it in less than a day that come the, the russian front lines have collapsed. there's simply no other way to state it. at least the russian front lines in the northeast region near how to keep the russians have been pulling out, pulling back the, the, the, that the soldiers for the russians who were on the front lines that were not well trained, not well equipped or easily overrun by the ukrainians, the russian troops were further back and more entrenched. they did have more troops and better equipment. they seem to essentially pull out and run away. that's pretty much the situation that we're seeing in the northeast. and even on pro russian telegram channels, you are hearing things like this was a defeat. clearly we were caught off guard. these are the kind of things that
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you're hearing even from pro russian onlookers here. so clearly the question now for the ukrainians is, is how far do they go, how far do they push this? but right now they clearly have a major momentum in the northeast and they haven't strategic retake and strategic areas that are a major setback for the russian and a major success for the frames or i gave thanks for that. a gabriel is under reporting from the outskirts if you thank you. it has been nearly 3 years since the certain government laughed aloud. the un to deliver a to the rock bottom refugee camp. it's a no man's land between the jordanian iraqi and syrian borders and now 10000 displaced people who live in rock band, according on the international community for help. they run out of basic goods center holder has this report. ah, your keen needs urgent medical help, but she can't get it here in the rookie band camp and se syria,
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her parents have taken to social media to ask for help. so far without success, blockaded by the syrian government since 2018. the thousands of displaced people living in rock ban feel they have been largely forgotten by the world located along a demilitarized zone, close to the border between jordan and iraq. the only way out is to territory under the control of the syrian regime for many, including atkins, parents who are members of the opposition free syrian army, leaving is not an option. last year, majority haven't unknown faith, but we don't know what will happen tomorrow. we are afraid that the blockade will be tightened even further. for years, we have been appealing for safe passage to another country or a position control territory in the north. i thought that was some harsh conditions at the camp or why tens of thousands left over the years, even if it meant returning to government areas without guarantees,
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they'd be safe. human rights groups have documented dozens of those who return being detained and tortured. we don't know how to help them and you and everyone else doesn't, bro. my name's change out of an end to this just so they want solution and job to to, to, to move to another area for years. the only lifeline for the estimated 8 to 10000 people there has been smuggling roots that some agencies use to bring and basic supplies like water. the last time the government in damascus allowed the united nations to deliver aid within 2019. it has been accused of using aid as a weapon of war and a tactic to star people into submission. not in a civil war. her father, we live a difficult life and very bad living conditions. we like to basic necessities,
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including water. we are thirsty, we walk 4 to 5 kilometers to get a kilo of rice for our kids. we are not living up with their cries for help are not, you know, solid, but they're growing louder as conditions and options all the worse. and for those left inside, i could are, oh sure, theda more than 30000 refugees from the ivory case living in liberia have returned home. you in refugee agency has described it as a success with 8 repatriation and resettlement commission. says many others refusing to return home, abandoning that i for, in citizenship to become liberians. it was hot reports now from the library and capital of monrovia movie. it was a move he had anticipated when in 2010 the civil war broke out in ivory coast. metro both led to liberia, but the ivory rebel forces stopped him at the border. they told him he did not belong in ivory coast. they shot his father dead. they did unspeakable things to
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his mother and sister, and killed them after 12 years in liberia, living as a refugee the you and offered him the chance to return home me turbo refused. library is my home now. the work home. they have invested in my education and they continue to invest in my education unprotected here. i don't have no problem with anybody. some of these for myself in august, the unimaginable happened between the 2 old rivals. ivory coast is president. what her and his predecessor lawanda booth, a show of unity after 2 decades of fighting over power that left 3000 people dead and half a 1000000 people displaced president water, i called on refugees to return home a step towards peace and reconciliation. more than 30000 ivory ins, living in liberia, answered his call, bringing an end to their exile. the you enclosed their settlements in liberia,
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but many ivory and say they're not ready to return home. liberia to has gone through a civil war, a quarter of a 1000000 people died in the early 2, thousands. and it's a country much poor and perhaps as politically unstable as i re coast. but for liberians living here, it has something their homeland doesn't. here they're not haunted by their past. liberia offers an opportunity for a new life. for the you in liberia is an example to the world with some countries closing their borders to refugees, references not just come with a bugging dis. they also come with experiences. they come with couches and different things that they can contribute in terms of the economy. they social have a now. so mid to a bo has enrolled in liberia 1st gender studies program, a course unavailable in ivory coast. his battle is suit, contribute to a fairer, more equal and just society in
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a country he feels he belongs to nicholas hawk al jazeera monrovia, liberia. okay. time for the weather, his overton hello. the weather should be largely fine and dry across much of the u . k. as we go on 3, the remainder of the we can, we have got one or 2 showers just around the east coast, but these will tend to ease away this area of low pressure on the boat. heavy rain recently that moves costello countries into germany. so little rich of high pressure, quieting things down before the next spell of wet weather moves in from the atlantic mixed in with this system here actually are the remnants of what was hurricane danielle, run towards spain and portugal in the coming days. but this is the picture for sunday, and linda wells largely fine and tri temperatures of around 23 celsius should be some decent spells a sunshine coming through. we can already see that wet weather coming in across ireland, northern ireland, pushing into western parts of scotland, a head of that sir, showers. there is
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a central and eastern areas of here which will continue to make the way further east. as we go on into the new working week by which stays that wet weather will come down across scotland or the parts of england, northern areas of wells as well. much chauffeur, france, germany, low countries, fine and tribe. that wet weather already started to pilots way into the iberian peninsula turning increased the wet and windy for portugal with a risk of flooding next week. still ahead here we're down to 0. we'll have a report from sin province in pakistan where a team from the united nations is taking stock of the unprecedented times. it's affected millions of people south korea's annual harvest festival returns. but the high cost of living duncan celebration was born in 50 minutes or so footballs. most famous trophy continues its global to become world ah,
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iraq, a nation where women's chastity is seen the central to its patriarchal item, but out of sight, human trafficking for prosecution is on the rise table and power talks the survivors and goes behind the scenes with a dedicated police squad, working to bring the perpetrators to justice. iraq human trafficking on a j 0. the latest news as it breaks. we've been speaking to the families in this about 5000 people. living in this block of government class has been displaced from their homes by the bus. they come from all over sand province. we detailed cover h l zero's legal teeth plans to submit a case with the international criminal court at the hey, from around the world. that there is here in this country, a culture here when it comes to you all really corruption. lou
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ah, and again watching al jazeera among the top stories, the saw and king charles a 3rd to be claimed. the new sovereign of the united kingdom for ceremony was held at the official seat of monica and changes. next, the declaration was read out of the city of london, and announcing to people that have a new one else's lined the streets, waited at the gate to buchan palace to see the meanwhile in ukraine keeps, his russian forces of retreated from the eastern city of museum in khaki for the counterfeits of his mate, significant gains re taking towns, dozens of towns and villages to the eastern region. possibly
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so in his many decades of prince of wales, charles was a controversial figure. on like the queen, he made no effort to hide his views on climate change and other issues i did. sonya diego explains. the new king's entrusts may have an impact on his wreck. he has been waiting for the longest time. there has never been any doubt of prince charles's desire to become king, but the sheer spell of his mother's reign has left him becoming king charles at relatively advanced years himself. and charles may cause a war, controversial figure as head of state. the queen elizabeth, the 2nd did married 1st to diana spencer began having an affair with camilla parker bowles before diana's tragic death. that in itself was a public relations problem. diana died a tragedy in 1997. the challenge was, how does he inadvertent common rehabs hate camina, who was his mistress?
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and the answer to that was years of painstaking work, emphasizing her good qualities. the fact that she had them, he had so much in common like a laugh together they were similar ages had similar favours of even the prince. a well purchased a wealth of kosher up kate charles's seeming detachment, perceived aloofness, have frequently led to accusations that he is out of touch with his subjects. and that will matter far more once he takes the throne, creating sustainable foods. but there are other concerns too. for many years, he has been writing private letters to government ministers, urging their interest in political issues close to his heart. these range from medicines, homeopathy, which is a favorite to fish stocks, to the power of corporations, of a farmers convention, states that members of the royal family off the bidden to express political opinions. when reporters have tried to ask his
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a literally behaving on prostitution, the violence, right, exactly like that. so it's king. will he be able to keep his opinions to himself too much? why tradition the prime minister visits the monarch every week to tell her all him what's going on in government. it's only supposed to be an exercise in explaining policy and no more. a key question surrounding charles is rain is whether he will reserve the right to tell the prime minister exactly what he thinks about decisions being taken by elected politicians. government has been closed. we don't know the details of the conversation, but even know the remote for that conversation. maybe that has to be opened up. so as you can see, what is a good thing that's a healthy thing, or maybe this is which shouldn't happen from the found of it. he has been advised to keep quiet. he knows very well what is expected of him as king. he has strong views on things in national life. that's true. but i think he's also got
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a very strong awareness from an early age, from the queen and from his own training and his own judgment. that is a constitutional monarch. you have to be a little bit more circumspect, and i'm sure that he will be as a woman, you cornel charles will also leave behind an enormous business empire in the south west of england. it's worth more than a $1000000000.00 and has been accused of helping drive local traders out of business. and that perhaps is a particular concern for supporters of the monarchy. which as of now, is a large majority in the u. k. the question is whether he can maintain that popularity. queen elizabeth kept her support during many years when the behavior of her family raised many eyebrows, the colonel, the richmond, and it dr. psychiatric. and it's on arguable that in terms of the brown to the house of windsor charles's son, william and his wife katherine, are seen as a more exciting proposition, more glamorous than
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a man who seems often to prefer his own company to that of others. charles has no doubt had many years to dwell on these things. his choices will help determine where the support for the monarchy continues. as it is now talking to the world sonic i, eagle al jazeera raul. why be watching that to the right of the screen as being image is coming to us from balmoral, where the focus is switch to calls from peasantry of london to gree other grieving children of the queen. most prince. andrew can just see my cousins, prince andrew. they've just come out of the gates of the castle and then looking at the flowers, the array of flowers and messages that a man whose children now just was watching for m a prince. andrew consoling one of his daughters, or both his daughters of her in part, princess eugenia pritchard creatures or prince edward. as though the countess wessex, is there a prince, his own machine, which is on there as well?
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are all coming out to inspect the huge outpouring of support that there has been for the royal family after the queen died. and of course the members of the family that were looking at their they'd be enough balmoral and they went off on thursday on the day that it was announced that she was gravely ill. and of course she died later that day and they've been there ever since. their brother prince charles's will not please charles any more. is it he is king king took charles a 3rd. he's done in london, attending to the business of state. let's, as we watch those pictures, we can bring an ed owens, whose role historian joins us from london. so as i say, the focus switching from the pageantry of london to, to the other grieving members of the queen's family. and what do you make of all this? good afternoon, nick. i think the scenes that we're watching here are indicative of the way that
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monarchy is both a national institution, that it has this important symbolic roll at the heart of, of modern britain. and yet of course, it is of a family institution as well. this is a, a family event as much as it is a state event and the death of elizabeth. the 2nd. we're watching quite moving scenes involving the queen's children and grandchildren who are wanting to demonstrate certainly publicly that they are in tune with well wishes that they are paying attention to the, the condolences that have been expressed by members of the public for the royal family by appearing here at the gates of val, mom and there of course the, the queen's body is still at bell moral. it will. i think tomorrow that she will be moved when she that's correct. yeah. i think one of the reasons why there's been, ah, some discussion exactly when as to when the,
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the queen's funeral is going to be in and why that her, that that discussion has been ongoing. originally, it was planned for immediately 10 days after the queen's death, but there has been some deliberation that not least because she, she died at bow moreland because she passed about moral. it's led to an a lying in state, a temporary lying state hat ball moral before her. her body is conveyed to london for the, the lying in state at westminster hall. and that's created something of a delay and has meant that the, i think the rural household has had to build some flexibility into their original schedule to allow for that. yeah. and they're just disappearing back through the gate now. the queen's other children at princess anne, prince edward and prince andrew and their children as well. they're taking the scene at balmoral ed moving back to the new mana, or we were looking at a short film a little bit earlier talking about how he'd been fairly, you know,
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i wouldn't say opinionated but he's got his views and he let people know them. it's something that he can't do anymore. i would say that the king charles prince wells was very opinionated. he spoke loudly on issues ranging from climate environment in the natural world to the built environment. architecture. homeopathic medicines, the need to support britton's military personnel with the most recent technological, technological equipment. and of course, he also lobbied at the highest levels he, he wrote private letters to prime minister tony blair, urging him to, to persue what his, his aims, his ambitions, he wrote to civil servants and other other ministers of state. for the same reason . it was only because of a guardian investigation and a freedom of information requested that those black spider members, those letters, were eventually came into the public domain. so as prince of wales, the reason why king charles was controversial was because he got embroiled in,
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in areas that traditionally constitutional monitors sought to avoid. but i think last night he gave us some indication in his 1st speeches, king that he is going to be stake, taking a step back from what, what son have accused him of meddling. and that's the word that's being used instead, he is going to, it would seem follow the model of constitutional monarchy that was established by his mother. are you not expressing views that might lead to control, honestly? and we're going to leave that for moment. do appreciate your perspective or back with you as time goes on, but thanks very much indeed for the time being that the ed owens there. we're going to return to bow moral. we can speak to our correspondent rob matheson, who's standing by there and was observing those scenes in at rob. we got a glimpse there of the queen's children and grandchildren. indeed at having a look at the, the great up pouring of grief that has been yes
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. and this is a very significant moment for them because this is the 1st time that they've been seen in public since the death of cleaners. but elizabeth for 2nd here at fall moral on thursday afternoon. i also a very important moment, of course, for the members of public who saw the, the procession of green range rover cause, which are very often standard for carrying, carrying the boil family at pass by this was something that had not been expected by the people who'd been gathering here, living, gathering primarily to put flowers outside and add those flows, in fact, of the many flowers that are outside the gates of the, of the castle, just over the bridge from where i am now. very interesting, a group that we saw there, that the, the of the members of the wall family who stepped out of the cons to, to look at the, the flowers. and we were there was speculation that they were going to do something like this. principally, because something very similar happened about 25 years ago when following the death
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of princess diana. and at that time, her children, william and harry were here at bol model, with their queen elizabeth, with them prince charles and prince philip. and after her death, they did the same thing. there was an international outpouring of grief people had been providing flowers and mike as marks of respect. and they came out and inspected the notes of god from buildings that who there. but amongst the group that we saw there to day interestingly perhaps was prince andrew, prince andrew, personal life has been something of a headlight. that in the headlines over the last few years, there has been a distinct separation, shall we say, between prince andrew and the rest of the royal family. but quite clearly, he is included in this group. and as a result, there is perhaps a suggestion that for this moment for this period of morning are falling to the death of queen elizabeth the 2nd. it has broken down some barriers,
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perhaps temporarily to allow the family to them to come together to mourn their cream, to mourn their mother and to mourn the grandmother the queen's party remaining for now at bell morrow. but she will to morrow be finally taken from the places she loved so much. that's right, she is going to be the body is going to be moved from here by road. we understand it's going to be taken to our hollywood palace in edinburgh where it's going to lay in rest temporarily. the following day, the queen's coffin will be carried in a procession of the royal mild in edinburgh, tuesday giles cathedral, where it will also lay to rest again temporarily. they'll be a special religious service held there. and also what's known as the vigil of the princess when the princess stand around. they are the coffin itself for
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a period of time. and once that is complete, the following day, the coffin will board a plane and it will be carried to london and buckingham palace where the funeral arrangements sectional processes will continue from there. but to day a very significant moment. not only as a save for the people who were waiting to put their tributes outside the gates of the castle. but equally, an important moment for those members of the royal family, the 1st time that they be seen in public since the death of queen elizabeth the 2nd . and of course, as we look at those, then this is the royal family, inspecting the flowers, laid a memory of their mother and grandmother. it. it just helps to remember that, you know, the queen was a queen of course, head of state. she was also a mother and a grandmother and indeed a great grandmother. and i think that that's something that has resonated very greatly, particularly with the people who have been coming here over the last day since the
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announcement of her death on thursday evening was made. we've been talking to several people as they've been coming here to pay their respects from one of the various several words that keep being repeated. decency is one of them. strength is another one. but interestingly, the as the impression of her as a mother, as a leader of the royal family, as someone, as one lady put it from i spoke to her, come from who was from ukraine and was, is staying just an hour away. she felt it was important for her to come here because she had grown up with the queen. she grew up the only mewing knowing the queen as the monarch of the united kingdom. but also regarded her as a very moral person than somebody who had tremendous strength, particularly through adversity and through the great responsibilities that she taken over the years. so i think that the sense of family in the sense of motherhood is, is very strong, particularly here at bar mold castle,
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which of course, through our family regard as a family home and leave you there for nar, robert. but thanks to that, to report on how the queen's children, princes and prince edward, prince andrew and their children have been outside by more causal inspecting the array of flowed through to be laid ah. okay, to pakistan. now where the un secretary general antonio terrorist says, the country needs massive financial support if he's visiting sin province to see the devastation caused by the worth flooding. in decades, agencies say one of the biggest threats is water born, disease and children living in camps are particularly vulnerable. st baths ravi has more from a hinge your daughter in symptoms. a u. n team has been a turing parts of flood affected pakistan in baluchistan. and since province meeting with those that are living in or near the flood zone,
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trying to recess the damage for themself, trying to get a sense of how people are suffering and trying to cope with the ongoing crisis. and their message to the world is very clear, it is time to step in and help pockets done. now my job here is rather simple and so is the 2nd generals to come here to see what are the urgent needs that we need to, to talk to the world about. and those urgent needs are life saving assistance right now for those people that you've been talking about. and then a really serious process of leveraging international support for adaptation for resilience, for livelihood development. so that these people have some way to go home to and not just survive. that's the message that we have come to to see and to look at. and i'm sure that's what the secretary will take away with them. now the human suffering is unparalleled in its scope, but the delegation also visited us, go with heritage site here. it's in pockets,
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bundling. it is thousands of years old. it allows pakistan to trace its roots thousands of years into the past, and it has been effected by the heavy rains that have inundated this part of the country. parts of this site have been washed away. bricks have been collected there that have been washed away by the heavy rains and we see mounds of rubble everywhere. so there has been damage to this site. the folks that operate this area say that it could have been much worse, that it could have been far more serious, but that they were spared. the rain spared the original structures that stand here . so what we're being told is that the conservation work that has been done here over the years. that is what is suffered in the last few heavy rains that have come through this part of cent and taylor. for that point, we'll look at the stoopa right here. this is the largest structure, the highest point of this site, the conservation we're that had been done too in case the top of the stupid to keep it intact at southern to, to secured from the elements that had been done recently. that has been washed away
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by the floods. the original structure were told remains intact. it's not as bad as it could have been. but the visit by the un team here is meant to illustrate a very important point. the human suffering is obvious and unparalleled. and you can't compare the loss of life to what's happening here. but at the same time, this is an existential threat. climate change is now beginning to wash away human history as well. in south korea, millions of people have begun celebrating the annual harvest festival known as just york. it's the 1st time since the beginning of the pandemic that families have been able to gather largely without any restrictions. because rob mcbride reports from sole becomes a shop, his face, a steep rise in process to soft by tradition, is a time for families to be coming together in big gatherings for people to be traveling to their home towns, all the things. in fact, they largely haven't been doing during the pandemic, which makes this holiday as we emerge from that. all the more important people want to be out shopping for the gift they normally give,
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such as the elaborate food baskets of preparing the special dishes they normally serve up. but here as everywhere else they've been hit by inflation. i am i bites of fruit and juicing products as gifts, but they're more expensive this year. prices of farm produce in particular have shot up in part because of damaging rains and storms that south korea has been experiencing with vegetable prices up more than a quarter compared with last year. i did today, you're out looking for the humble cabbage. the essential ingredient for kim cheese, you could find yourself paying 3 times as much as last you saw how yeah, we've raised our prices like everyone else and people are buying lease. the price of cooking oil has gone up a 100 percent and other ingredients, a more expensive. we feel bad, but it's a difficult time for everyone right now. very aware of the importance of this
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festival, the government has been trying to increase the food supply. i'm looking at different ways of keeping prices down so that hard press shoppers badly in need of a holiday. don't blame them for an unhappy to suck and still had her an out 0. got sports cutter officially opening its last and biggest will come venue or will be hit with that ah, when the news breaks here on here more intense wildfires that the best case scenario is this when people need to be hi and the story told it was exciting to have this icon of the blind be shown to everyone with exclusive interviews, an in depth report. approaches for food damage being brought al jazeera has teens on the ground to bring you more award winning documentaries, and lives. lou
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ah, top support has for nick. thank you so much, sport has resumed in the united kingdom following the death of queen elizabeth england cricketers had been playing south africa in a task match. lou ah, god save the king was sung for the 1st time at a major sporting event. rugby and golf is also back on in the u. k, but old top level football has been postponed. england have dominated the days
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place south africa batting 1st and im scored a 111 for 9 matches been reduced to a 3 day contest. the series was level and 11 going into this deciding match should have guitar has officially opened its 8th and final walk up venue. $80000.00 fans, witness the 1st official match atlas l. stadium where the welcome final will be held on december the 18th. and he richardson reports ah, the last and biggest piece in kettles, world cup stadium jig. so it's one the country has been piecing together for more than a decade. lease sale stadium will host the final of footballs, most important, international tournaments at the end of this year. it's official opening, so the saudi arabian and egyptian league champions meet in the sale, seek backup vans, getting a taste of what's to come when the world cup kicks off in november. what's keeping
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you awake at night at this point in terms of the final preparations? everything, everything gives me like a $9.00 coverage at all. i was just talking to somebody a few days ago about the billing the current exam. you've studied it all in the last up and i always wanna help you with. i know we're ready. we're confident. but you know, you can never, we do ready? well, 80000 fans attended this much. hundreds of thousands of supporters are expected to be in the country for the world cup. for many finding affordable accommodation during the tournament remains a concern. no official accommodation portal has enough inventory for all budgets of all front types. they want $80.00 apartments. they want to live in town. they want to live with. all these are available on the portal
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origin seen of those is saudi arabia will be the 10 will cut, matches played out the sale stadium. a meeting of countries and continents will be replicated across cattle for the duration of the $29.00 day tournaments. we're talking about moving a bond, especially with well, and hopefully people from south america will be able to pick up with these moments. the stadium has not witnessed its 1st cycle when footballs most famous trophy be taking, sent to stacy at the world cup final. on december, the 18th, with all his demonstration, it's ready to hurst whirlpool matches nozik just for 2 months to buy lodgers
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preparations. welcome holidays with friends around resort under houses here. so i will say the world cup trophy is on a global tour ahead of the tournament and guitar. it's been in cameroon for a 2 day visit. the central african country is one of 5 nations from the continent, having to tar for the 1st time fever is taking a trophy to each of the $32.00 countries that are qualified for this year. it's world cup teenager, antenna sensation, carlos al, caress is 3 to his 1st grand. some final is semi final. when ended francis t. f o. 's dream, ron at the us open. a 19 year old spaniard outlasted his american opponent willing and a 5 set thriller tearful, who knocked at ruffin adel out in the 4th round, the 1st american man to reach the last 4 in almost 2 decades. a last 2 weeks of
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nausea. i came here why when you are so, but i thought i'd let you go down a it was a great for me. the and i the i pray raise against sir francis who were playing unbelievable oswell this 2 weeks. i mean, sir, great feeling to be in our final alcaraz spell phase. well, number 7, caspar, rude and sundays final. the new each and b take karen catching off of russia in for sat to reach his 2nd grand some final a season. the winner of the us open title will replace daniel madame as the man's well, number one. and that is all you support for now. back to you, nick. far. a great, thanks very much day. we'll see you later. thanks. we're now finally back to our top story. queen elizabeth the 2nd was known for being dignified and composed in public. but she is also renowned for her sense of humor and warmth. will leave you
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reveal so ah, perhaps you would like a marmalade sandwich. i always keep one for emergencies. so do i i keep mine in. yeah. ah, natal peach in everything that's very kind neo has big plans to turn its largest to validate into spectacles, but inside different velez. he can't actually veda has big plans of his own building since the age of 12 is unchained, yet skilled architect has as good
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a chance as any in his vision come to light the pedal and the master planner, the concluding part of rebel architecture analogies here, it's time for a memorable holiday with pegasus. it's time for turkey. set sail for new discoveries. enjoy. have new experiences. hit the shops, make wonderful memories. travel to turkey with pegasus, and with direct whites to istanbul and tribes. oh, book your ticket now for a memorable holiday. c. y p g s for our best prices. ah
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