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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  September 12, 2022 12:00am-1:01am AST

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hello, i'm marianna marcia. very well. welcome to the news our life from london coming up in the next 60 minutes. queen elizabeth coffin is welcomed by applause in edinburgh as she will lie at rest before her final journey to london. ukraine says russian attacks on critical infrastructure of triggered blackouts across the country. thousands of square kilometres of fertile farm land, now submerged by flood water leak and normally cost of the monsoon rains in pakistan. vote counting begins in sweden, where ruling block is in a battle for survival and made a surgeon support for the fall rights. and as for my 1st stop and is on the brink of winning his 2nd straight formula, one will title the red gold driver has extended his championship lead with the
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victory at the italian column p. ah, hello, welcome to the news our. we begin in scotland where the coffin of queen elizabeth the 2nd is arrived in edinburgh. after a more than 6 hour drive from balmoral castle. the journey saw the cortege wine through towns, fields and countryside, along a route lined with well wishes, hoping for their final opportunity to pay tribute to the queen. for monday she will, i rest at saint charles cathedral before her casket is then flown to london out as there is alan fisher has this report out from edinburgh the beginning of the final journey, the coffin of the late queen caddied by the groans keepers of her bo moral estate a place she loved the place. she died initially through the streets. she knew well
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past the stores and houses of the nearby village and out on to the main roads and the cities beyond. that is yeah. so i i'm happy i was, he had to give us a good 5. it was an absolute pleasure to say how much they, you know, she barabbas and, and we hold while proud in 1st to aberdeen in the northeast of scotland were local officials paid their respects. farmers and horse riders formed their own special gar devona. then on slowly to dundee and path heading for scotlands capital title, so it's to parts, it's who has gave it a whole life to say thank us for some reason. and i just felt there was no way i also wanted to be here to pay my last space. as the coffin, continued it, sad, slow procession. a reminder. the country is moving on. good. okay.
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the proclamation of the new king met by some disapproval in edinburgh. a reminder that while the current passes automatically from the queen to her eldest son, the affection the country held for her does not the cortege past famous landmarks before arriving in edinburgh coats had gathered since just after dawn, to mark the arrival at hollywood palace, the monarch's official residence in scotland. the queen came home the journey from balmoral took 6 and a half hours much longer than normal. but this was an opportunity for the people of scotland to share a collective moment of grief, of celebration and of history. her body will lie here in the throne room before being moved for the special service of thanksgiving at saint giles cathedral. the mourners led by her son, king charles the 3rd, and then the public will be given their chance to see their farewells,
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to figure largely loved widely respected and though sadly missed by the people of scotland. alan fisher, al jazeera hollywood, palace, edinburgh. oh hi for said shines is live now from outside. buckingham palace here in london and harry, the monarchists, spent the day meeting officials as he seeks to establish his reign. that's right. yes, i mean, right now here, there are still a few crowds. they've dissipated very much, of course now it's off the 10 o'clock fits dumb, still walking past the, the fences outside buckingham palace with the bouquets of flowers threaded through them. but as you say, there were important official engagements day for the new king, mainly focused on the commonwealth. something very close to his mother's heart as she rained during the time when the british empire really dissipated away. but she was very keen to ensure that the commonwealth remained in its stead and so to prince charles, met the secretary general of the commonwealth ernest
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a most of scotland rather also meeting 14 high commission is the chief diplomatic representatives of the commonwealth countries of which he is head of state here in london. now there have been tensions during recent years and changes in the commonwealth just most recently. barbados became republic and is no longer a country with the monarch his head of state. there are other countries, especially in the caribbean, where there are also pretty strong republican movements. so that is something that he's going to have to manage to try to retain the, the relevance and cohesion of this institution that his mother put a great deal of energy into trying to insure stood strong. one of many responsibilities that he has now inherited from his late mother. and how then is the rest of the wheat shaping up? well, it starts again with this extremely well rehearsed over many years coordinated series
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of events. it starts in the past of westminster. the new king and the queen consort will meet with both houses of parliament before they fly up to edinburgh. where as we report earlier, the coffin of the queen will be taken to saint joseph's cathedral. they will then move on the king and queen consort to belfast the following day tuesday when the body of the queen will be brought back to london by air. and that on wednesday, it will be taken by a gun carriage from buckingham palace to the palace of westminster, to the westminster hall. and it will lie in state her body there for the next 4 days until monday, the 19th the day of the funeral. that will take place at 11 a. m. about a quarter an hour before then the body will be processed again on with the, the royal family walking behind to the, the place of the funeral itself, westminster abbey. and then will be another procession from westminster abbey,
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to windsor castle. and it is, there will be the final committal ceremony of the queen's body at saint george's chapel, where her late husband was laid to rest. she will also be interred there, and then they'll be a private religious ceremony for the family itself. out of the gaze of the cameras and the many millions and billions of people around the world watching as that the final really most important ceremony of this period of morning takes place. i thank you very much from outside banking palestine. london high for said on the caribbean nation of antigua. barbosa is taking steps towards becoming a republic. prime minister gaston brown says he wants to referendum within 3 years . he made the remark of designing a document confirming can king charles the 3rd as the country's new head of state, bronze it out his plans earlier this year, when the earl and countess of wessex visited the commonwealth country, one of 14 nations to have the british monarch as their leader, chris mage,
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opera is a professor of history who specializes in colonialism. an empire says it's understandable that people will mourn the queen. but there are chapters in a history we should not forget. in discussing and talking about the, the glorification of the queen as we're seeing in her passing, what aren't you talking about now? that's kind of the question that i'm left with. specifically, the violence that has been committed in the name of this queen really over the course of her whole rank. that's what really worries me that that story is not being told and it's not a media. there are many people in our world. in fact, the majority of the world who understands at a family level at national level, why inferior violence matters. when we look at how the colonization ended, yes, it ended in the time in which we came to the throne and the 1900 began the matching . 1520 came to the throne. we've been in a period of the colonization from the 1950s onwards, but during the same period,
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we've seen ongoing injustice. we've seen under the rule of queen elizabeth, we've seen the violence and plunder and the massacres that took place in malaya. in yemen and aiden. in kenya, them out uprising we've seen under development that has been made systemic in places like caribbean and africa and even south asia. and you know, in my own research, i just determined, i discovered that it took until 2015 for the british government to in fact stopped paying its debt that it took out about a 100 years ago for slave owner. reparations. and this was being carried on again in the name of the queen. so the pastor colonialism continues to live on today. and partly it's because we continue to tell the story of the empire and not appreciate
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the pain in the suffering and the plunder of those who have been colonized by that empire. that, that, that's something that we need to make some space for, i think, or india has observed a day of morning in honor of queen elizabeth was a british colony for nearly 200 years and is the largest nation in the commonwealth . but in recent years, the government has tried to move away from its colonial past. as poverty met our port from new delhi. nazi this boulevard in the heart of new delhi, has received a makeover built by the british it houses famous building such as this war memorial . the road has been renovated and renamed. there's a new statue of freedom fighter, sebastian turbos, and these are not merely cosmetic changes. good. i made up a big the road was called kings. when was a symbol of colonialism now, which is called part of duty, kingsbury was for the british empire. for them, we were asleep. now it's architecture and spirit has changed. india was
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a british colony for nearly 2 centuries, 75 years after independence. it's trying to shake off that legacy. much of this part of the city was designed by english architect edwin luncheon to day. it's also a major tourist attraction, wide roads aligned by the parliament appellation home for the president and several museums. the government is removing what it calls, symbols of slavery. it's also spending more than one and a half $1000000000.00 on re vamping this area. opposite the aud parliament. a new one is being built. other plans include a new home for the prime minister. there are concerns about the environmental impact and poor working conditions at the site under boss giovanna. her the most significant change is the underpass. it's benefited locals, tourists, every one. it's not too crowded in ela and it makes the place more beautiful. i'm also with her papa. they say middle schools. i have heard a lot about how sebastian did adults is fought for india. he deserves his grand
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statue enough. i'm very happy to see it at andy again to limit his story and say, the project is part of the government's broader political goal. they have been all the time trying to project themselves as symbols of nationalism. they in fact, law harbor, hypo nationalism. i think the ideology is not one of nice to lose them. it's not one of anti colonial nationalism. we know that they did not play the ancestors played no part in the fleet em struggle. although india is a member of the commonwealth observing a day of mourning for britons, queen elizabeth the 2nd is a decision that evoked mixed feelings in a nation. when many are keen to rewrite the colonial past. daphne metal al jazeera new delhi in the news, our life from london national still to bring you on this program. protests are opt in chalet is the country marks the 49th anniversary of the military can lead by general gusto pin a. shea and story are madrid of back on top of the spanish league sano. have that
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story. ah, you, gradient officials are saying russian attacks of taken out critical infrastructure, triggering widespread blackouts in large areas of the country. they say the strikes have hit a thermal power station in harkey, the 2nd biggest city towns in the regions of dinner, proper troughs, danielle and sumi have also been effected. pfizer reports to be broken out where attacks occurred. an emergency crews containing the blazers present. rosemary zalinski says russia wants to leave people without electricity and heat, and estimated 9000000 people have been affected, including in territory controlled by russia, or the stripes come off to ukraine, made rapid advances in a northern and southern counter offensive. since early september, ukraine has made rapid games with keep taking a few days to take back territory that russia battle for months to control. present
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zalinski claims his forces have liberated the key towns of ism a day after retaking copy. ask both located on strategic rail lines. advances have also been made by ukraine in the south, near harrison, but at a slower pace. alger there is hardly abdul hamid has worn out from her keys, which finds itself plunged into darkness. a we are in a black out at the moment actually there is a power outages in 5 regions in the north east and the eastern part of the country. they are also unconfirmed, reported they are power will power outages all the way to odessa. but as i said, those were unconfirmed reports. now what we're hearing from officials is that the russians have hate critical infrastructure. they're not telling us what all where, but certainly there is definitely this city is in pitch black. we were actually
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under streets when that happened cleaners have made this formidable advance since the beginning of the month taking a lot of people by surprise here. many wondering how did that happen, especially that there was this sort of stalemate over the summer. there was this war of attrition between the 2 sides and all of a sudden things turned, i went, the ukrainians got more weapons from their western allies that gave them an edge. and all of a sudden they were able to hit the russians behind the defensive lines. and then push through the defensive lines that out. the question many have is, what will happen next? what will the russians do? people don't expect that they would just pull down, having no plan that the russians are saying they're regrouping. so suited a lot of questions up in the year, but if the green is managed to hold a ground, this will certainly be
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a turn in this war. they have the momentum at the moment. now the challenge is to keep that momentum. frank led, which is a senior and i train military strategy and lloyd university of portsmouth. he says these games made by the ukrainians in recent days are important. as this is a strategic victory for a similar significance about probably greater significance actually, dom that defeated russia here in march, a strategic a couple of reasons. first of all, it demonstrates highest levels in the international community, wavering international community, not doubting community ukrainians, kind of serious losses on the russians. it is a turning point in hunting or demonstrating ukrainian initiative. it's also a demonstration acumen of their skills incumbent on bringing all the
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training. it's hard over the last few months, years all together. now to take a far greater than the russians taken since april. it's very significant then it demonstrates you're also you can print quality is a deception. and it's an intelligence qu, and it's a remarkable display on for of russian ineptitude. elmore 8 is arriving in pakistan's, devastated southern send province after unprecedented floods. 2 more u. s. military plains loaded with $35.00 tons of relief of landed in the region, which is one of the worst effected in the country. un secretary general hygiene the terrace is appealed for $160000000.00 to help buck a sancho with the disaster. it is crime, the situation is climate carnage. when he visited this week in the 1400 people have died with 33000000 affected after a 3rd of the country was submerged. and the finance minister is saying the flood
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damage could amount to $10000000000.00. that independent economists say that the true cost is likely to be double that and could rise even higher, almost $1700000.00 homes and 6000 kilometers of roads will need to be rebuilt. farms and crops have also been badly at the agricultural sector makes up almost a quarter of pakistan's g. d p. more than 18000 square kilometers of agricultural and has been wiped out, including 80 percent of crops in send. this includes the countries key cotton crop and estimated 45 percent of that has been destroyed. cotton fuels pakistan's textile industry. this is a vital source of employment and foreign exchange. the timer and reserves of shrunk . inflation is skyrocketing to more than 27 percent. that was in august a 5 decade high energy prices have already been raised, 50 percent to secure an iron f bailout. oh boy soccer. we
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cannot leave our home. he said, we have to look after our children. we must re our own cattle, goats. she. okay, because otherwise, where would they go? and our forefathers lived here? there is no other place we could consider moving to one. so we have to live with that. on the, the cost of it, i should be little of a. i used to make around $2.00 a day. now even that's gone by the owners of the land came, wants to see the damage they promised to bring us food and hence what has been many days and they've not returned benefit money. washer a one is an economist at international crisis center based at university of oxford, blevins tech school of government. he joins me now from london. one of the immediate challenges facing the government. well, the new challenge is providing the image, saving assistance to, to millions of people who are displaced or have lost much of their private assets. so as you were referring to $1700000.00 homes which are either completely destroyed, damaged, there's millions of acres of crawl, which is a lot of private. i sort of attached to that. i've been destroyed. there isn't
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nearly a 1000000 livestock destroyed or died. so there is a lot of media return assistance to provide to just get people enough for food and shelter. we estimate that i think there's about half a 1000000 people currently in police camps are many more living inside to higher base where that's the only place that can find which is dry. but now going beyond this is going to be a major, major reconstruction effort. and that goes beyond sort of this direct financial cost, which the government has to know before. somehow that anywhere between $5020000000000.00 us dollars running on the estimates we believe. and dr. requires rebuilding all of these public assets, rebuilding school to rebuilding people, terms rebuilding roads, bridges, but also why i think i do quit fiscal assistants to all of these people who have now lost much of their i mean, wasn't as you, as you say, as the the humanitarian operation is usually jessica challenge that
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what we are seeing the government trying to tackle now. they're also seeking a bailout from the international monetary fund because of the way the, the agriculture and textile industries have been destination. just speaking about how that's a key. so it's an employment how difficult is it going to be the government to meet the conditions of an ins, bailout, the sort of austerity measures and taxes that will be required to access that money . so the ira program has been resumed and it is now virtually impossible to meet those a stereotype budget deficit targets and also treat different targets while continuing to while investing any, substantially into the rebuilding effort. there's almost impossible to do, but at the same time. so either there's a degree international support to be for the reconstruction effort or the sort of a relax is there is a conditionality part of the program which is needed because longer the government
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rates to relax to rebuild a school does learning losses for kids. so the more the government grades to have an adequate reconstruction program, the economic impact of these plots is going to become much, much more was. so that's very, that's a very significant things that the government how should i negotiate with international monetary fund? built in it's bilateral lenders like china and other countries on how it's going to manage its fiscal position while, while investing in this massive reconstruction effort. and the reconstruction effort is going to be very difficult because it's going to take many months for this water to drain. what does that mean for people in the meantime, you have they've lost that crops and they've lost their life stock that farm land. and they're not going to be able to continue with what, how it, what is that, how they going to be it with a going to be able to make a living and what sort of money they relying on to survive. so i think it's
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important to stress the people who are getting back to most dukes in the 1st order of the fact the direct impact other people who are also the poorest within the, within pakistan. so a lot of these people don't really i say they have is bland if their own that unless they're allowed is on for someone else and it sort of a sort of using it out under livestock there. so a lot of these be a lot of individuals, lot have any more assets, that's all of their assets have been wiped out. so did. so they have no source of sort of cushions to, to go back to didn't need substantial support in order to rebuild that line. of course, right now, a lot of it is going to come through direct military and supports or giving them shelter and food and medical assistance. but one, what happens once the water goes away, they will have, we will have to rebuild from scratch and that's going to push a lot of people either into poverty, very close to poverty. and that requires a lot of government assistance. i do the forms of cash transfer to rebuild their
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homes, to rebuild the sort of savings and somehow to recover, to go back to the position there were a few months ago before the floods. thank you very much. are quite for joining us from london. us agency for international development as plants to total of $60000000.00 to sri lanka, country has been dealing with its last economic crisis since independence. let's say that weeks have protest that top of the president got to buy right. you pack that on a 2 day visit to the country, u. s. 8 administrator samantha power announced to support and call for drastic or forms to political and economic systems. now fernandez has moved from combat. $60000000.00 announced during administrative power strip here to show lanka the 1st $4.00 to $1000000.00 as you said, subject to congressional approval will be used for the agriculture sector. the, all the 20000000 that she announced the day was about humanitarian assistance. because the current economic crisis is really biting,
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vulnerable families. but talking of her meeting with president runner, vicar missing her, the administrator said she had stressed the need for political reform and accountability to go hand in hand with economic reform. if there's a temptation to only proceed, you know, within the 4 corners of, of the economic domain and to move in a manner that, that, perhaps um, exacerbates political tensions and so forth. and, and this, this is not just true of the, the governing authorities. this, this is a message that we are also able to send to the opposition. ah, that lack of unity that, that polarization. ah, that divisiveness, you know, is, is going to make it even harder to attract the kind of investment. ah, it is going to perpetuate the impression of instability in terms of the crippling economic crisis and what she longer needs to do to ensure that it secures funding.
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international confidence, basically administered a policy is a stranger to sri lanka. and out of this country's issues did say that it was important for the government to sure that it is not just making pledges, but moving on with the reform with the changes. she said, it was important, essentially to look at the causes of the death which had accumulated over the years . and she did say that the u. s. stands ready to help with that restructuring. but also that all the creditors, obviously, lanka must work together openly and on an equal footing. still add for you on this is our pain ice. nigerian soon is left in limbo, the 7 month university strike. and in support. we can continue to tumble in the deciding test match between england, south africa, ah,
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with hi there, here's your weather update for europe and africa. so we did have some disruptive rein through the republic of ireland. heather, by the way, more so for southern sections that's now hopped over the irish c pushing in to wales, northern sections of ireland, also running into western norway on monday. now if we dip further toward that south remnants leftovers of what was hurricane danielle coming in to portugal, really up and down the coast there? i think we're going to see some pretty intense bursts of rain did set some record temperatures in the southeast of france. now it looks like the southwest of france on monday, bordeaux getting up to 38 degrees otherwise across central europe right through the balkans. it's fairly calm, but let's go round the boss for us. now we do have a slug of rain in istanbul. see those winds pick up just a bit with the high of 26 degrees off to africa,
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getting striped with some pretty solid bands of rain beneath togo and gone. i could see some flooding here for there toward the north. though alger is at $38.00 degrees, it's a good 10 above where you should be for this time of the year, close to it. anyway, southern africa, we do have extreme fire danger in play for a huge swath of south africa. but some showers inquisitive natal and the free state, so that should help things. but of course we need much more rain than that's high. 15 degrees in cape town on monday. well, susan, ah ah, ah, a meg with
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with, [000:00:00;00] with move ah,
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welcome back and look at the main stories now. grading official say, russian attacks have taken out critical infrastructure trigger and widespread blackouts in large areas of the country. a say the strikes have hit a thermal power station in our key. the 2nd biggest city towns in the regions of dina proper troughs, danielle and sumi, have also been effected body of queen elizabeth. the 2nd is arrived in edinburgh after a 6 hour journey from an balmoral castle where she died on thursday. a flag draped coffins was met by a military garden on a monday. it will be taken to some child's cathedral where the queen will lie at rest for 24 hours before casket is flying to london. and the crowds continue to gather round buckingham palace with thousands of people leaving floral shabby. it's it for some britons to question the relevant to the institution of monarchy i've goes on. john hall has minus now from london,
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seemingly without end the floral tributes of spilled out from buckingham palace on to the gardens of green park. the crowds, unrelenting snake their way along a one way system that no one quite understands. so they just follow the people in front. volunteers are pressed into action, fetching, carrying, removing plastic, packaging, loving messages. remember a queen who was the nation's grandmother. i said, we've been here since about 6 this morning to try to clear the flowers from avenue, the palace. what we found since we've been here since you've been very overwhelmed with dumb 15 truck so far and everyone's just coming in, giving us a hand just look at a paper with the epic and everything up there lit up in a clear everything up. fantastic. in 20 or so years of people, the culture of never seen anything like it. it's almost like a kind of pilgrimage,
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isn't it? thousands of people coming here many with a genuine sense of grief. others to have a physical experience of history and to leave their mark and here in this place it feels almost universal. actually, everyone must want to be here. but of course that's not the case. elsewhere, life goes on largely undisturbed, respectfully blacked out display windows at one of london's most famous stores serve only to hide the bustle of shoppers inside a majority, generally approve of the monarchy at britain today. but much of that is down to the popularity of the queen and her grandchildren for younger generations. it is an institution with questionable relevance. personally, it doesn't affect me. i know that might sound a bit insensitive, but i understand that the significant spot it doesn't have an impact on my life. personally, i think that's the general feeling with my friends. i think they're good. it's good
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to have like a head of the critique. applica figure to look up too, but i just don't think that is related for a lot of people now. god saved again. oh, while the new king is proclaimed in places great and small across the country, many simply go about their business. ah, king charles has work to do to shill his mother's place in the nations affection journal al jazeera london. i will bend you there is a senior fellow atlantic councils, europe's and he joins me now from new york and abandoned mass public displays of emotion, grief, not the the social cultural norm in this country. how do you explain this sense of dislocation and upheaval? i may suppose to remember that in some ways,
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queen elizabeth was the last real european monarch. another obviously are still monarchies and several other european countries on those. of course, now king charles, i think that she was the last moment to be revered with a hint of the divine right of kings, the ancient, historical sense that there was something ordained about the monarch that made her revere. and if you look back through history, there's in a really, over a 1000 years, ubs, a sense of sacral european kingship. really the diminishment of which in europe is the story of maternity. or is he millions of people? morning, queen, around the world. and one of the thing we've seen is that it's ignited this debate . this criticism, i suppose of the monarchies enrichment from the british empires, violent colonization of countries in asia, in africa,
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the sort of exploitation and suffering that resulted from colonial rule. why is that? still an uncomfortable conversation to have i don't think it's an uncomfortable conversation if i don't think it's a very popular conversation in britain and america. the rest of the world universities and newspapers, i don't think it's being shined from that discussion and i think it was for a long time. and that this death has coincided with a decade in which there's been major discussion of that in the, in the country. i think time was when it was, you know, uncomfortable or very hard to have that conversation are in the, the queen's youth or in the 19 fifties and sixties and seventies. when declines. ation was imminent the process or had just taken place. are we likely to see then, as we go into perhaps a different era?
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now the commonwealth diminished, perhaps, perhaps even disintegrate, calls going now def reparations. i think it's important. remember why? for smaller countries, in most the africa and the caribbean, want to be in the commonwealth. no one's obliging them to be in the commonwealth. many of them if they left the commonwealth, but few, if any people wouldn't notice in london let alone in australia and canada were simply north topic. and the reason they like to be that is because these countries struggle to get access to important leaders and important countries. and with the commonwealth, they get a summit every 2 years where they get to be with the british, the india and the canadians, the australia and south africans and the nigerians in important countries. and that's why a number of states have actually joined with on while that didn't have anything to do with the british empire,
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such as togo or cameroon. and that's why it continues to feel relevant to them. and you always, aaron, you ask, i asked you about reaction there to what has happened here. and perhaps how you would compare british monarchy to the, the concentration of power in the united states. in particular, sort of public reaction towards elected leaders seems to be perhaps more of a sense of reverence towards elected leaders in the u. s. then there is here. well, in a lot of ways are the united states in a very bad state as far as its constitution. and as far as its democracies concerned, like we need to really remember that the, the last president was the deranged or far right. billionaire that attempted with the support of
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a foreign and hostile powers to are not only to sort of wreck large aspects of american democracy, but also to undertake a to, to tar. and the, a white supremacy movement is rampant in the countries opposition with real threats of democratic breakdown, both at a local state level or a national level. and what we've seen here is really a sort of festival of, of projection. where because the country so divided and so find and so upset about what's happening. anything that can be filtered through america's great division right now will be so. and so there have been a lot of divisions over this, this debt that they really tell us very much about britain will have britain seen the world. but tell us a lot about america. so for example, if you go on twitter writing, other apps requested by angry and often quite done by ph. d. students,
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there will be a lot of kind of criticism of the queen as a, as a symbol of colonialism. if you drive outside new york is request stallnicher. if you do so through in sober sort of the rest of the state or into other states, you'll see a really, a large amount of flags, half mast are honoring the queen just on private property. so, you know, yet again, it's the story of america as a, as a divide isn't very unhappy site. thank you very much. benji to their new york. thousands of protests have taken the streets in chiles. the country marks of 49th anniversary of the military coup led by general gusto panada. on the 11th of september, 1973, the military, a type of presidential palace left present. salvatore and day was killed in the violence. chile then endured 17 years of dictatorship, thousands of political opponents were killed or disappeared. many more were arrested, tortured, or forced into exile latin america,
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added salisia newman has more now from santiago of all entire situation. every september 11th in this country, it's a date that sparks a lot of pain and a lot of anger and millions of people in this country. it did mark a military coup that took place on the 11th of september long before the twin towers. long before the date that most, most people think of the 11th of september, something that happened in the united states. but here it means something very, very different. it was an attack on democracy and it opened, or it led to 17 years of military dictatorship. and so there have been protests throughout the day, most of them peaceful, but also some very, very fierce clashes with riot police between mainly young people dressed in black, covering their faces wooded open throwing molotov cocktails. police have responded throughout the day with water cannon,
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lots of tear gas. we've got soaked ourselves that, that included a march into the cemetery where people went to pay their respects again on the tomb of president salary and the, and at a long wall where the names of thousands of people who are still missing and who disappeared after that cool, i have been paid homage as well, people of flowers, and they, they cried. many people sang and also a lot of people are demanding justice, which has not been served for most of the people who were victims of that cool. bo county is under wayne sweden's general election exit pulse a chest right wing opposition. parties could win and narrow the char. see full, reese joins his live now from stock. i'm why do we stand at the moment cole bringing a social democrats election, but jill or so should i'm across the ruling policy at the moment, but of
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a policy by here, but no one's really celebrating just yet. i want to bring in straight. so i low and radar, who's a social democrats member of parliament. she also go into my rights low and it's quite a bit of a swing from left to rights. all night started off with the exit polls suggesting that goal left to win coalition was probably going to win this election against the right. it looks like maybe there's only one. see it now, how's the, how's the general feeling in your politics? we're all quite nervous, but at the same time we feel that this is quite a big achievement that we have been in power for no idea. we're doing an even better lecture this time. so we're still looking forward for the polls regarding the bigger cities, a region like stuck on monday morning. so issac, this is going to be a long evening now. crops. the most remarkable thing in this election so far is that on the right, the extreme wrong sweden,
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democrats like overtaking the moderates as the 2nd biggest policy in sweden. and you've noticed some, some things within that that are also quite remarkable for sweden. down till now. we've only reflected upon that the women vote go basically to the left log, but this time we can see that there's a breakthrough within the swedish democrats, the right wing, 40 broadway. this stream parted my point of view. so yeah, it's a breakthrough. they're getting more support to some women, but still in my point of view, i think the conservative party that's really help the switch double cross the right thing is so important to get a bigger support this electron. so it's a huge bit rate for them. i wonder member phone of the so you got it. thank you very much. thank you. now mommy, i'm just add some extra clarity to what was said that essentially sweden, democrats,
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a very right wing party here in sweden has been getting more and more popularity over the past decade. immigration house increased in sweden and, but it's already this election that any other policy has been willing to work with them about the moderate harvey do all the traditional sanchez center rightful position. they've said that prepared to build the government with the support to persuade the democrats it gets into power. but it looks like that may have been made on the with the sweden democrats looking extremely lightweight to become the 2nd largest palsy in sweden. we're expecting the final results of this election in the next to turn off power. all right, thank you very much and still come for reese. millions of university students in nigeria are in limbo. as a staff strike enters it's 7th month lecture, is that demanding better pay and conditions, but the longer public colleges remain shot, the less students they'll be to return. when they reopen my address reports from
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khana on, i cheeriest student exodus. what's the facility man makes enough money to meet his basic needs and fund his education the final year. so surely, your student says his ambition goes beyond soon presses, but a strike by lecturers has put his goal of getting a must oral sciences or m. s. c. on hold, i have a drink, want to continue my emmett without finishing my physically algal. i want to know the and must as he started his 4 year degree program 6 years ago. and he expects to have to wait longer to graduate. prolonged strikes, often lead to entire academic, such as being cancelled, while many students from struggling probably say the dispute is wrecking their studies before i actually had the sam slow, i understanding in academic activities or academic performance,
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i couldn't solve maybe simple questions from me, handouts, most university professors and government only institutions here earn less than $1000.00 a month. lectures in more than 100 public universities walked out in february, demanding better pay and working conditions. they accused the government of reneging on agreement, signed by the 2 sites more than 20 years ago. when classes eventually resume, students will find several changes. many of the professors won't be there, frustrated by the prolonged strike. many lecturers have left nigeria or they're teaching jobs. some of the students i've also left enrolling in private institutions. one thing that won't have changed is a quality of education in public universities in nigeria. what had the electro say? their strike is indefinite? government had decided to deploy the we fun of starvation. hunger to kill is intellectuals by a, by stove in a i was hello,
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these will for some of them was now the dispute is led to an exodus of nigerian students to schools overseas. the number of nigeria is granted. student visas rose from around 842-0192 nearly $66000.00 at the end of june, and increase of 680 percent lecture say at that rate, public universities in nigeria may soon struggle to find enough able to students ahmed edris al jazeera colonel nigeria said i had all in use our a weight of unwelcome guests in thailand. snake's either on the count that liz and natural number size is destroyed and, and sport ferrari's formula. one team 4 shows in its home godfrey santa b. s. ty ah,
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lady, marvellous was brought to when a site is from the northern province of chuckle when she was a child. she's a member of the comb indigenous community. her family was escaping poverty. she says discrimination has been part of her life last month in argentina. some survivors and descendants of the com and mccoy people took part in an unprecedented trial of a case that goes back nearly a century ago. the trial for the massacre in that by the face, shows the serious abuses that indigenous community suffered in this country. only 1000000 of the 45000000 people in argentina consider themselves defendants of the original indigenous groups. most of them live in poverty and continue to fight for survival. argentina has long prided itself of a european heritage, one that often neglected and persecuted. indigenous groups. trial of not by piece a step to revise history and give indigenous communities the place they have been denied for too long.
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ah ah, ah. neighborhoods in the tie count, priscilla overrun with snakes and emergency calls about snakes have doubled. at least one person contacts bangkok, reptile response unit. every 15 minutes. tony chang explains what's causing the animals to invade people's homes. an emergency call for a half at the start of a well practice drill. but these firefighters aren't packing their houses. these days, they're more accustomed to a different threat. this is the snake wrangler. the former police officer. now head
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of the reptile rapid response team to day thereafter, a poultry poaching python, digesting its meal at the scene of the crime along with it gave me up. we've got to be fast, he says the trap went work, it might get away. the 3 meet along serpent tries to escape, but there's nowhere to hide. after a short struggle, it's bundled into a sack and taken away back at the station. they've got 2 rooms full of these slithery home invaders conditions are overcrowded, but at least they get fed. emergency services across bangkok are receiving 60000 snake related calls a year twice as many as 5 years ago. donia. the reason why we found mos max in house is because the aggressive expansion of the city has locked. they don't have a choice because their natural habitat isn't there anymore. but there's one place in the heart of the city where they're welcome. they're coming out now with
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a king cobra, which is the largest venomous snakes in the world, and by extension, one of the most dangerous. and this is one of the few places in the world where they milk them for their venom. this is the red cross snake form a regional hub, the anti venom production. they extract the poison as part of a show to educate the public. although this center produces enough anti venom for most of southeast asia. there are some parts of the world where supplies a desperately short in south africa and in india because they had on have the official and even on friday with her. and the big family call company day stop producing because their lack of profit back at the station, the snake wranglers practicing his skills affected over 19 years. but his advice is don't try this at home. oh, tony chang al jazeera,
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banco son has now hail the las bought anger very much my mom max 1st stop and he's on the brink of winning his 2nd straight formula. one world title. the red bull driver has extended his championship lead with the victory at the italian called p, and the which isn't reports. the heat has been on for our re all season. the home tracking italy, the teams, number one driver, sharla. claire was at least starting in pole position. lurking in the pack though, was red bulls max for stoppin. raining will champion had taken a great penalty for using too many engine parts. but he quickly worked his way up into 2nd place and was on the class tail ferrari campbell, that an extra set of tires could give them on the edge in a close finish. ah, as it was, he lost the lead and never again did. hello fletcher. in the closing lapse,
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danny ricardo's maclaren broke down resulted in an anti climatic finish. as the race ended with the drivers lined up behind a safety car, a snuff and cruised over the line for his 11th when the year he's now a 116 points. claire if laclare in the championship standings, the claire finish 2nd with george russell of mercedes in 3rd. yes i was there a good i had a clean again and then i could quickly you know, get back into my room and get into 2nd. yeah. just was really good on the tires. it was really enjoyable to drive today, even though it was quite a hot out there. but yeah, a great day for us the and was frustrating. i wish we could have ended up her a racing. but he says, yeah, unfortunately that we were 2nd about place and i was a because because of what i've been before, so it's a shame. but overall i, i gave you told me to today there are 6 races left in the season. but the title could be secured by for staff and the next group, pre in singapore,
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if he wins and the class fails to finish. and the richardson al jazeera, the man's final at the us open is on the way carlos al qaeda. that of spain is taken on, caspar would of norway, whoever wins will also become the new world number $1.99 cat. if that would be the youngest ever player to top the rankings either player has won a grand slam title before. it would last out and this he has french open a fine or a guess, raphael, no doubt. right now the match is level at one set all and the checked pair. old barbara h koba and a katerina sin jacobo, one b women's doubles, title pair have lifted the 5 major titles together and is triumph completed. a korea grand slam ramjet had moved back to the top of the spanish league of the reigning champions that were gold down against my okay, but hit back with a full one. when is it in forward, since she's
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a junior putting reale ahead that midway through the 2nd half? when takes them to points clear of barcelona? and england either just $33.00 more runs to win the deciding test of their series with south africa. south africa were bold out 469 in their 2nd innings. the at numbers over stadium left england with the victory target of just a 130. the home seems finish a day to call on 97 without loss. tr lanka. i have written paul, his son, and the final of the asia cup, the 16 torment a was being hosted by the united arab emirates, to like a one. the title decide on 2 by $23.00 runs replied, said his iron finch at signed off. he's one day international korea with win against you zealand ventures, retiring from his this format, but is staying on that to captain his country at the upcoming
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t. 20 woke up coming up to congratulate him an island chain. laura says that he's when at the p. j champ is ship, it was one for the good guys, mario, was that take him a swipe at play? is that who signed up for the breakaway live series? this was lars 1st, when on the european tour since becoming open champion back in 2019. i. mcelroy had the chance to force a playoff on the final green. but when he missed, i was confirmed as the trying to win up. 80 k is from the saudi arabian net back live series will also competing at this event. you know, i made no secret, says to how i feel about the whole thing at the started a week and then i wanted to go home in this tournament for myself, for some formal school. i think for this tour and you know, everyone has stayed loyal to the store and have wanted us on everything for this or i, i really feel like this is, this is one critical guys. and
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a new speed record has been set off the coast of france. the home team hit 99.94 kilometers per hour, which is a new high up for sale g p. c uses high performance that catalyzed with multiple races the held around the world. despite their record breaking effort trans, miss foul on a podium place. that would seem usa seeing their 1st ever when. that's it for me. i had you back to marry a lovely thanks, very much santa wraps up and he's al, but i'll be back in a few moments with more the days and you stay without his era. ah
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ah. a mineral central to the quest for clean energy? a key ingredient for the production of electric car batteries, cobalt extracting it is dangerous, but profitable with global demand set to skyrocket. people empower, investigates, claims that industrial mines extracting the precious material, needed for cleaner energy, are in fact, poisoning the environment with dire health consequences for those living in their shadow. the cost of cobalt people in power on a just 0 september on al jazeera world leaders from a $193.00 members states gather the united nations general assembly with the war in ukraine and the global cost of living crisis. high on the agenda, up front returns. mot. lamont hill, talk through the headline. the challenge, the conventional wisdom, italy versus the right wing party fortelli italia, is ahead in the polls could
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a decisive victory overcome the gridlock faced by recent government. listening post examines and dissects the wealth media, how they operate, and the stories they cover with rising prices, causing hardship and discontent across the globe. we report on the human health attempts a tackling the crisis september on al jazeera. it's a world full of glitz and glamour, with the popularity chasing india celebrities. it's a high stakes game one or when he goes behind the land with those hunting for the perfect picture. on al jazeera, beneath the surface lies a dark, has died in british politics. an exclusive al jazeera investigation coming scene. ah

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