tv News Al Jazeera September 15, 2022 8:00pm-8:31pm AST
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russian president vladimir putin acknowledges china, has concerns about the ukraine boys. he sits down to talks with shebang. ah, hello, i am emily anguish. this is al jazeera alive from dough house are coming up. thousands of mourners paid their final respects to queen elizabeth as her body lies in state at westminster. home. the un welcomes as c spy between our mania and as a by john, after 2 days of violence, leads more than 170 people dead. and why food and water and medical supplies are running low and the occupied at west bank will hear from the red cross about what's needed. ah,
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welcome to the program. we begin in those becca stand where russian president vladimir putin has acknowledged china, has concerns about moscow's invasion of ukraine. food in and chinese presidents. she'd been paying met on the sidelines of this young, high cooperation organization summit. and it was big city of stomach hans, the face to face talks were they 1st since russia invited ukraine 7 months ago? we highly value the balance position of our chinese friends when it comes to the ukraine crisis. we understand your questions and concern about this. during today's meeting, we will of course, explain our position, put in also mad with his iranian counterpart, abraham racy, who said more cooperation makes for stronger ties. the late is that the some of the include india's prime minister, no ranger murdy, and turkey's president raj, up time, early one. the regional block was formed back in 1996 by banking and moscow to counter us influence a short time ago. i spoke with david phillips who directs
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a program on pace building and human rights at columbia university. he's also a former advisor to the un secretary general. he says it's not surprising. china has concerns about the war and ukraine. of course, china is concerned if use russia unprovoked, any legal attack against ukraine with skepticism. it doesn't condone those actions . but china also knows that it's neighborhood is volatile, or that it has outstanding problems with taiwan. that ha, and china may pursue a military solution to its regional issues in the future. so hutton acknowledged that china is trying to take a balance, but that balance needs to be not just geostrategic, it needs to be a balance of values and interests for democracy and freedom and free markets are important. elements of this discussion,
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ukraine's president has meant the head of the you in cave, the trip or is ursula under lions 3rd to ukraine since russia invited in february. she involuntarily zalinski a discussing your pain support for ukraine, and it's a bit to join the european union. gabriel alexander has more from keith. she and voldemort zelinski met behind closed doors here in key for little over an hour or so. and they came out, spoke to journalists afterwards, and they said that they spoke about a whole host of issues. but what it really came down to this visit by wonderland was to show support and solidarity for ukraine. she looked over at president vladimir zelinski and said, europe was with you yesterday. europe is with you today, and europe will be with you tomorrow. she said to zelinski, now they said that they spoke about substantive issues, such as europe's energy needs going into the winter energy shortages that they
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expect in europe. they spoke about rebuilding the ukranian economy and economy that is almost come to a grinding halt in the last 6 months since this invasion began. underlie and says that europe will commit $5000000000.00 in loans to, to ukraine, and also committed $250000000.00 to rebuilding ukrainian schools and, and also for temporary shelters for those that have been displaced by the war. but there was also a lot of focus in their meeting, apparently about reconstruction after the war is over. reconstruction, rebuilding the country bondai and saying that she next month, she will host a ukrainian donor conference in berlin, where she said she will bring together people to discuss exactly how much money ukraine will need to rebuild. and how to actually get that money here. a
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russian lead security organization is sending and tame to armenia after its government requested help. fighting has been taking place along. i mean is border with as a by john for days now. more than a 100000000 soldiers and 70 as a by johnny troops have been killed since monday night. if the worst bout seems to to, for a full scale war back in 2020. the united nations security council has held the session to discuss the conflict. kristen's learning has more from those un headquarters in new york. there's relieved that the 2 sides have declared a ceasefire after 3 days of intense fighting that's resulted in dozens of casualties for both sides. we heard from ambassadors on the security council as well as an assistant secretary general miroslav ganga who is charged with overseeing this region. he said that he is not in
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a position to confirm the conflicting narratives coming from armenian as or by john as to who is responsible for starting. at this recent conflict, armenia accuses azerbaijan of targeting military and civilian positions in their territory and azerbaijan. a for its part says they were responding to provocations, including mining near troops and attacks on troops in the region. that is, there's under international law, but has been contested for many years now. so we heard also from the armenian ambassador, a warning that they believed that further threats and further attacks were in the making. so the concern from the security council members was expressed a and calls for com and returned to negotiations to the 2 sides to resolve long
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unresolved issues. because there's concern about destabilizing the region. and that was stressed by the un under secretary general addressing the group ah, the united nations general assembly has honored queen elizabeth the 2nd delegates from all over the world paid tribute to the british monarch, including un secretary general antonio terrace. the sum is set on a most extraordinary reign. you are here today to pay tribute to the memory of her majesty queen elizabeth the 2nd of great britain and on the island. but the longest training monarch. when elizabeth was a pillar without b, it on the world stage for more than 70 years. she exceeded to the throne in a different age. the churchill roman style in mouth and the gold
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reassuring, and the spiting presence. she was an anchor of stability across decades of often football and history. while in london, thousands of mourners have filing past the coffin of queen elizabeth. a body will lie in state at westminster hole for the next 4 days. a q is stretching nearly 7 kilometers along the river, thames is staple white to pay their respects, the metropolitan police says the queen's funeral and lying and stays is the biggest security operation. it's faced, andrew simmons is among the crowns in london. what do you get? the feeling on speaking so many of them, and i've been a long way back that come from westminster a short time ago. and the general feeling is that this is nothing like a tourist trail. it's all in many cases, it's a personal pilgrimage. people really want to relate to the situation to say the last, well, to queen elizabeth the 2nd because quite simply,
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most of them here foss majority, more than 100 percent, have never known any other queen any of the king. so this is really, i wouldn't say it's, it's a solemn mood, but it's certainly serious. and i'm going to try and have a quick word now with, with some of the people here. how do you feel about all this time you're spending trying to get to witness to hold? absolutely fine. absolutely fine. it's perfect. i mean, she's an amazing woman. she's with, you know, what, what, what did you am i heard of most? oh, my goodness. has stability. her confidence, the fact she's a woman and doing, you know, women go to around the world and just just amazing, amazing. a service to enjoy and just what do you think about this long wait, do you think it's gonna be worth it? absolutely. i would do it twice over. yes,
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but it hasn't been that long at all. and it's been all good humored and lovely day . so it's been no problem at all. it's a serious mission. you're on that, isn't it? what, what's the purpose? is it just to say goodbye or pay your pay my respects and say good bye sir, no lane, and it's always been there for all our lives. been good. just a wonderful, wonderful lady. okay, and that's the general impression. thank you very much. indeed. that's the general impression we get from most people here, that they all really not bothered by the extent of time. they've been waiting that her troops are holding naval exercises with turkeys, maritime force, off the western coast of checking. grace is also taking part in the drills, despite rising tensions between ankara and athens or the disputes in the eastern mediterranean sent him because he was on board one other ships the dynamic marine or is the maple fostered. maven grill hole support turkey and they send by the terrain and, and the agency. it is the largest all of its coins held in 2022 in the region.
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verification approve it's operational level. the capacity for i'm phoebe is elements so that it can take over nato's maritime component command test from the u . k. for 2023. it may. i curious as this. a drill comes at a time when turkey and greece to nato l lies bar at over territorial waters and aerospace. but greece is also one of the 15 countries that have been attending in madrid, but has been out of the way. for a while, it's work is similar to all principles of frame from any political command, but they say that the aim over this and they told navy braille is to contribute all nato's collective defense. and to show turkey's commitment to the military ally in still ahead on al jazeera, sweden's prime minister, resigns after an unprecedented election when for the far right and lebanon's
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economy on age with no plans on how to tackle the rising cost of living and create lasting change ah, that extreme heat is gone from iraq. now we've lost 5 or 6 degrees. this guy hasn't changed. you'll notice the cloud around is still in southern pakistan. they have been shows up in karachi a couple days ago, but i think they're on their way to the monsoon rates. are going away, but still clipping the edges. lala otherwise are back to the hot dry but not as holt. we're down to 41 of 242, typically in iraq. that breeze could well fill with just as it comes down to the gulf states that has temperature come down a little bit of the major change will probably the feeling not as humid. 3940
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degrees, but not as close elsewhere. spot retires in the sky. very few of the few shout maybe in turkey. this isn't caucasus, and once again, thunderstorms in the mountains and southern saudi or western yemen. nothing much changes next couple of days. likewise, in tropical africa, the equator is roughly speaking about here. so north of the equator, we're still full of rain clouds often clumped together. you get masses of them start off, and if you go through sassy down to them or chat and keep moving westwards and stretch down as far as north and go. nothing much, unfortunately, in kenya, no rain in the immediate future in southern africa, but temperatures arising joe bergs up to 28. ah. a final farewell of the days of ceremony and emotional tribute. queen elizabeth the 2nd will be laid to rest. it means
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a coast. britton's longest reigning monarch will be buried next to her husband, prince philip, her parents and her sister as leaders from all over the world to pay their respects . join us for life coverage of the funeral on al jazeera queen elizabeth the 2nd a fine ah ah ah. hello, you're watching al jazeera, i'm emily anglin. he's a reminder about top stories this hour. the russian president has acknowledged china, has concerns about moscow's invasion of crime. vladimir putin met china's president on the sidelines of the shanghai corporation organization summit. it was becky
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stump, ukraine's president has met the head of the you in cave, o'sullivan de lion, and a lot of me zalinski discussing your pain support for ukraine. i did speak to join the block and a russian lead security organization is sending a team to our mania after it's government requested to help. fighting has been taken place along our manias border with as a by john to the u. s. now, where 2 bus loads of migrants have been dropped off in front of the vice president's home in washington, d. c. that says another group of about 50 people was sent from the southern state of florida to martha's vineyard in massachusetts. to explain this to us, let's bring in hydro castro who's outside the vice president's home in washington. hello, they heidi. so what's behind this move to use these people is political football. right, emily and speaking to the aid workers who are here to help these people,
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they say this was yet another humiliation that these people who are trying to escape violence and poverty in latin america were made to suffer on an a journey that is at times already dehumanizing, and that's what we saw here this morning, outside of vice president comma harris's residence, some a 100 people getting off of buses after traveling for some 30 plus hours on a bus from texas. just learning now from a group that among those passengers was a person who was diabetic was taken directly to the hospital, came off the bus in bad shape and also an infant who was also apparently injured aid workers say that these again, these are people, their families, their men, women, and children who are made to endure this. they say political game that has been orchestrated by republican governors in these border states. these 2 buses, particularly for cent by the state of texas, which is governed by greg abbot i and apparently happening in coordination with 2
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plane fulls of, of my grins. who arrived in martha's vineyard yesterday. now martha's vineyard is a, in, in massachusetts is where washington's wealthy and politically powerful go for their vacations and some 50 migrant showed up there yesterday, also transported from texas, but apparently their flights paid for by florida. yet another republican lead state where their governor rhonda sanchez, has presidential ambitions. so many are looking at this again as a political game where publican governors with political, a presidential ambitions, perhaps trying to replay donald trump's successful playbook in 2016 when he used the border. and illegal immigration as a major way of gaining support. but again, coming all back down to the families or the once caught in the middle of all this, emily? indeed heidi,
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it's just an extraordinary situation to use people like this. what happens to them now that they've been taken to these cities? right. and it was a heartbreaking seen seeing children just clutching as a pillows in plastic bags with nothing. but alas, besides that in the clothes on their back arriving in this foreign city to them. many of them though, the families see this as another leg, perhaps closer to their final destinations. immediately they were picked up here by the n g o groups and taken to a nearby church where they're receiving immediate shelter who'd a place to rest for a few hours before then continuing on their own bus journeys to wherever their final destination will be. and the idea is, once they arrive to wherever that place is, that they're going to register with the federal government to then wait in line for a chance to plead their case for asylum before an immigration judge. and depending on where that is, that is a long process,
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which is something else that the federal government is struggling and trying to process the final and seizures in a expedient manner. or i really appreciate the update to keep us posted. how does your castro live for us in washington? sweden's prime minister has resigned after suffering and narrow defeat in sundays election to the far right coalition boat race reports from melma. magdalena anderson 100 in her resignation to the speaker of the swedish parliament at about 11 am stock home time, a very low key and to a remarkable 10 monks in charge, she became sweden's 1st. every female prime minister made the historic decision to take the country into nato, and indeed she improved. i party. the social democrats results at these elections with 30 percent of the vote. not enough though, until rain will also be remembered for sweden's shift to the right. the man now
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charged with trying to put the government together, its own kristen, leader of the moderate party who has thrown that locked in with the right wing suite. and democrats, who in this election have become the 2nd biggest party in sweden. now the door still might be open for magdalena edition in a sense in her resignation speech. she said that she was prepared to talk to of christus and to see if he wanted to change his mind about working with the far right. a possible moderate social democratic government. it seems, far fetched at the moment. but it's something that could happen as talks continue over the coming weeks. crowds of mourners have gathered in the occupied waist bang for the funeral of palestinian teenagers, shot dead by israeli forces on thursday. the palestinian health ministry says 17 year old. oh, j selah was killed when violence broke out during an israeli. meanwhile, the international committee of the red cross has just wrapped up
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a high level 4 day visit to the occupied west bank. let's take a look at some of the work. it's doing them. since the start of the year, the i c r c has carried out $285.00 visits to palestinian detainees in israeli and palestinian detention centers. it's in hands to access to water and electricity for almost 560000 residents in the occupied west bank and gaza is also provided emergency and trauma training to 230 medical staff at the hospitals in the occupied territories for brit seo capone is the regional director for near and middle east at the international committee of the red cross. he told me what the most urgent needs are on the ground. now our work in the tensions and what we see in the tension, it's something we keep confidential. what i can say is that we have this, this regular access. and what is very important is that we facilitate the visit our families,
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because we often speak about our detainees. but what is also important is those families were separated and, and for them, because of the restriction of movement in the west by, it's often very difficult to have access to, to the last one who are, who are detained into an important part of our kids to to had them get to those places of detention and see, are they people, they loved one in detention. i believe that the discussion should be about the human situation. the discussion should be about the political solution. i mean, you made an action doesn't solve political problems in, in i believe that what we facing in the occupied territory. it's a lack of credible political process and with credible, credible political process often comes courage. courage to do the right compromises, courage to engage based on our international. you may turn low any particular the
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law of occupation. so probably let's focus more on the political situation and let start serious negotiation. because i can tell you, for the people in the occupy territory, it's just unbearable for 2 years. millions of people in lebanon have sanford, a severe economic crisis. government officials haven't been able to agree on a recovery program nor how to implement promised social protection plans from northern lebanon. dana hud shows us how people have changed their lives just to get by it's a new mode of transport to lebanon's, impoverished north a new reality in a country where nearly 80 percent of people are poor. dr dukes are becoming more popular as the high cost of living changes the way of life. i just saw that higher
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sagamore general life has become very difficult so we are always looking for ways to save money. and it's hard. the price to use took docs and that of course it's been 3 years since the economy collapse already vulnerable the global rise and food and fuel prices has worse than blood and on situation politicians blame for decades of corruption and mismanagement, are failing to agree on a recovery plan. 2 most of lebanon's people, life has changed. basic necessities are an affordable, especially since the cash strapped the state and the subsidies on basic goods. in a country that imports nearly everything, food price inflation is among the highest in the world. people's diets have changed . i used to sell between 200 to 300 chickens a day. now some about 50 sales have been effected across the board with vegetables or even close bread. a main staple is 6 times more expensive as production costs,
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spiral power cuts last most of the day. not everyone can afford the diesel for private generators. others switch to wood stoves since a gas cylinder costs. half of the minimum monthly wage as met, they've been seen with people are returning to old traditions. but we have to use wood because we are affected by the fuel and electricity crisis. millions like rami awake can't rely on their savings because of banks have locked depositors from their dollar accounts or funds they can access are worth less. while the local currency, the lira the valued against the dollar by more than 90 percent going to one of our seniors, i used to get paid 13 and a half dollars an hour. we had a good life. we used food to eat at restaurants. now my pays were less than $2.00 an hour. we can't even attend primrose because we can't afford transportation. the crisis has pushed the middle class into poverty. and as long as politicians step to
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make the economy viable, again, it's likely to think even deeper than i could, there was a zita didn't mean north slipping on. pakistan has succeeded in clearing a road in the southern sind province that's needed to deliver. i'd to areas devastated by floods, but many communities in the north still cut off. it's come out how to read and go on. it. you know what, 3 weeks since the doctor, drug heavy rains and i in the mountain that you're behind me, brought in raging gordon stone. the narrow riley has blocked away related, which i got off from the outside world. then the thousands of people are not risking their lives to be able to get door to our sick and to be able to get supplies in on their back. we have not seen any heavy machinery which are trying to go down the road. and if that is not done soon,
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many more people may die. we have all gourd that called outbreaks have been reported. and surgeon area got cut off. they do not have been drinking water off and getting any emergency aid at the moment is next to impossible. although the country runs in great day on the devastating floods that had their growth budgets on an effect, then the balloon, it's on proven the budget on your daughter did will have to do much more in order to georgia road length. and that will not take much time, but time is running out for those who are still got golf. and in need of help. one of the greatest men's tennis players of all time roger federer has announced his retirement from sport. joanna gaz, raska looks back at his incredible 24 ukraine, which
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a phaedra has given us some of the most thrilling moments we've seen in tennis. but at 41, the switch still has finally decided to call it quits. for 3 years have presented me with challenges in the form of injuries and surgeries, but i also know my bodies capacities and limits and its message to me lately has been clear. janice has treated me more generously than i ever would have dreamt. the now must recognize when it is time to end my competitive career. oh, next week's lay. the cup in london will be phaedrus, final atp event, and he won't play any more grand slams. it's the ne issue all over again when it comes to the grind of the regular tour. he is brought, he is not being able to stand up to that. i think we could all see it coming, but it still comes as a shock and surprise, ha. header is 1st of 20 grand slam titles, came at wimbledon in 2003 way instantly became
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a crowd favorites. people came from boston and home. and so nice you know, to share this moment. and thanks to everybody else, ah, a total of $103.00 atp titles, followed in a career that included an incredible $1251.00 match winds, the swiss. maestro spent a total of $310.00 weeks as well, no one amassing more than $130000000.00 in prize money throughout his career. i consider myself one of the most fortunate people on earth. how has given a special talent to play tennis than i did it at a level that i never imagined for much longer than i ever thought possible. some of the matches just to see how glorious he was on the tennis court. if his movement was like a ballet dancer, either so many moments with his career and it's just a really nice guy.
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