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tv   Inside Story  Al Jazeera  September 17, 2022 2:30pm-3:01pm AST

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says she has been given an appointment for 2030 apis, added that. i have thoroughly documented the abuses and persecution. i have been a victim of it and it is become impossible to progress. i know people have an appointment scheduled for 2032, leaving us in this legal uncertainty for years. migration official fe. they're dealing with more than 200000 pending applications with at least another 50000 people. phil, waiting to start the process, putting a major strain and costa rica asylum services. the government that knowledge is the delays and the difficulties nicaraguans are facing in the country. that says it's simply overwhelmed by the influx. and we're put a him from austin and the you and refugee agency gave us 50 workers to help us. but the truth is that with these overwhelming numbers 30400 or more every day, we would need at least double that number. costa rica is not alone in its struggles
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to deal with refugees. other countries in the region, including the united states, are also addressing what has become a major problem as people flee violence or political repression at home. okay, we're leaving that report strike you live to london. this is lamba on the, the banks of the river thames opposite the palace of westminster, where people are queuing to pay their respects to her majesty a queen elizabeth the 2nd who's lying and straight across the other side of the river at westminster, a palace in westminster, hall at the q has received as you can see, a high profile visitor, king charles, the 3rd out leasing people who spend. 6 the best part of 60 now some of them having endured at a chilly night there on the banks of the thames, al 0 is harry force. it is what i suppose a 100 meters away from where the king is. of the moment harry that's right. yes, i mean we, we knew something was up, was
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a lot of security suddenly being stepped up, these barricades being rearranged. and yes, it is the king king charles, just in the last couple of minutes has arrived here by the riverside, presumably to pay his thanks and tribute to all these people chewing so long and so patiently, to pay tribute to his late mother, queen elizabeth the 2nd of this que perhaps we could just show you just next to us here that this queue, which has been moving pretty fast, has now become people just waiting in line to see the king. after all of these hours over a very cold night. often, patient sometimes being tested by the sheer length of time and the temperatures they are here. and one woman just told me that their energy levels had just been put up considerably by the fact that they now have the chance of having a few moments and perhaps exchanging some words with the king himself. i think it is notable, but king charles, since very soon after the death of his mother has made
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a point of trying to to get out of his car and, and meet people even from the very 1st evening. he came back to buckingham palace in london from balmoral in scotland. there was at work about featuring both him and his wife, queen camilla quickly consort, turk camilla. and there is, i think, a very deliberate attempt to engage as much as possible and, and to show him with the people. i mean, this is a huge transition for people in this country. you've ever only ever known one monic . the queen had really come to embody the monarchy for so many in this country. and now there is this, what is for this era and generation of people and incredibly rare moments to transition from one monic to the other. and so there is this very frequent meeting of people, and i think in this regard as well, at this particular place, a time for him to express his thanks. because this key who has in itself become
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a real sort of landmark and her an expression, a public grief. that is really quite especially when you're down here, it is quite an experience to see them in a hurry. you can't say because you're looking at us. but behind you there, the crowd getting an extra phillip up due to the presence of the prince of wales, who is also with his father, king charles, the 3rd meeting of crowds who f, as you say, harry have wasted an awfully long time and endured a pretty chilly night and once they get past the point, this point, they've still gotta go across lambeth bridge. it's. it's what about 2 kilometers away before they actually get to westminster hall yeah, i mean it's, it's very, as the crow flies, it's almost no distance. even if you took the normal path. it would be very quick about a 10 or 15 minute walk. but because the q really doubles the hearing, some she is for the cain, and i'm him if the principals as well just behind us there. um,
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when you get into the, the gardens behind the houses of parliament, there is this double backing queuing system. so it is much longer than perhaps people realize once they get to this point, are what we're hearing, maybe 3 or 4 hours more before they get to the, to the whole itself. but everyone will be talking to a said they don't regret the night in the cold and keep on their feet. even there have been people using crutches or to support themselves as they walk. and they say that it is absolutely worth it. the number of times people have said to us, well, she was my queen, of course i have to be here. and now the king is here as well. and the prince of wales. so for this group of people who may have been starting to wonder how long they would have to wait, even after all that waiting, mrs. a, this will be an amazing moment to real fill it. perhaps we can, we can try and talk across the barricades to some of them if, if that's something that that you'd, you'd like to hear. absolutely, harry, but, but good. why, why if can get into position while i'm on talking to you here. obviously that,
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but the king cannot travel the full length of the keel. he's trying to shake as many hands as he can in that particular section. it stretches a long way and it's, it's in front of you now cuz you're, you're facing the opposite direction. but the, the back of that q is a long way away from where you and the king of the prince of wales. all right, now. well actually i use, just as you say that we've, we've seen the king getting much closer to us. he's about 20 minutes meters away from us. now i can, i can ask how you guys feeling about this. i said, after a long wait, this must be a real pillow. to concentrate on that. so you bet there's a sense of just the buzz and the anticipation as the king makes his way down. this line of people who didn't expect this. they expected to be waiting another 3 or 4
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hours patiently and bringing with them all of the hot drinks and food and blankets that they've had to use to cope with this long night. and now not at the end of their journey. they have this incredible moment, which obviously will be a and even more memorable occasion than they are expecting. and i can only really imagine what this must be like for the queen, for the king. rather, i mean, the king shawls. this must be a moment of real emotion to see this outpouring of a dedication and patience and a sort of living memorial of grief for his mother. as you say, harriet, it really does mark the form that the future style of his monarchy. perhaps he is, he laid out a market here that he is in the midst of brief, from a voice. from the day he became king upon the passing of his mother, queen elizabeth the 2nd he has, as you say,
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been determined to be among the people to meet as many people as he possibly can. that's right. i mean, he's had some very official and ceremonial and probably very taxing duties as someone in the midst of the personal bereavement. ah, but it along with those set piece mon, she has been very clear. or it has been very clear that there has been a plan perhaps for him to be out and about as long as that is gonna bring our lego another round of tears we. we've heard 11 such already just a few minutes ago. so this is something that's been following him around either which is fur for his late mother as well as her funeral, pursue as her procession moved past on wednesday and ripples of applause. so i guess that this has been a few days of pretty extraordinary progress for the king around the country are
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often stopping and meeting. but it is something that the archbishop of canterbury was saying when we spoke to him a couple of hours ago. but not only is this a moments of public grief attribute to the queen, but it will be stirring up memories of that extreme, extremely distinct and an equal the emotion of personal great people be remembering their own bereavement. and he said as well that as, as the royal family performs all these duties and, and tries to come out and meet people and thank them. it's our time when they themselves will be processing those very personal and powerful emotions as well. yesterday evening, the king and his siblings to vigil at the queen's coffin over in westminster hall. later today, the queen's grandchildren are going to to, to perform
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a civil average. that's right. yes. we will see all 8 grand children of the queen are the children of king charles, of course, william and harry as well as those of anne and edward and andrew. so all 8 of them will be standing vigil around the coffin on the, on the, the, the prince. that a fault is it's known inside westminster hall. and so again, that be another moment. so people who been lining the streets and pathways for so long as they are lucky enough to be inside westminster hall at that time, they will have that extra moments of a memorable encounter. at least at some more distance. perhaps the nurse to members of the royal family as, as this nation warning period continues. i think this is really quite a remarkable moment because this is a something that obviously was always planned that there would be, she's 4 days of lying in states that people would line up and go through. but it is
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something that is become a real moment in it's of itself. i was talking to people just in the school bus q the other day. he was saying that we're going to come in to london not to see any particular map at to see this q. and so i think that has been very much recognized by the role family that there is this extremely public expression of grief and expression of patience. and people saying, well, the queen gave us 70 years of service, we can give her a few hours of waiting in line. and so i think it's, it was to be expected that there would be some kind of a public acknowledgment of that from the rural family. and this is the most public . and for these people, the most personal acknowledgments of that facts they could have expected with. so many people, as you say, coming in to the capitol with the state to rule on monday, just a few days away and so many heads of state flying and also from around the world.
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harry, it, it's got to be a bit of a headache for security services. yes, that is a major issue. there is of course has with all of this years and decades worth of planning that the archbishop was saying he'd been in house for 10 years. and every year there was a review of this plan, so it's not as if they're just starting from scratch, but there is a huge pressure just on the infrastructure of london. and so one of the issues to be considered among all the security planning is how or these degrees will get around. and of course, it's unlikely that president biden, for example, is going to be put on a bus with a whole lot of other leaders. but that, that, that calculation will have to come into play for, for a good number of people who aren't used to having to travel around like that. and so that reportedly is causing some tensions among some of the international delegations as to exactly how they're going to get get around and where they're going to sit. and the importance there is a,
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a huge amount of sort of diplomatic and proto cold based ad difficulty to all of this. but it is something that they will have been planning for. i was speaking to one, a senior former policeman the other day saying that this kind of elements of it is difficult, but it will have been planned and they're dealing with very cooperative crowds who are here for a reason that they want to be here. that they want to mock this moment. it's not like policing, some enormous protests, either an anti or an anti globalization movement or environmental movement. these people are here and they're not, he, it's sort of have any consultation necessarily. so it makes it easier from that perspective. but there are, as you say, hundreds of world leaders and extremely senior figures from, from the rural families and political institutions around the world who security will have to be managed. and obviously it's been going as planned so far. but it's, it's a big, it's a very big operation to, to consider on monday. okay. harry,
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and before we leave you a one of the most that with the people that what, what they feel about about what just happened. yeah. do my very best. yes. weird. where just a few yards away from all meters away from where prince william a prince of wales there. so he can't actually get down here, but i'm going to point the microphone again. excuse me. what was that like? what, what you say is it and what did the king say to you with the os family life? and i mean, did you get the impression that he was impressed and that's with my meaning. and i mean, he kind of expected this moment. i mean, you must feel pretty lucky. oh and is, you know, you got 3 or 4 hours to go and he might have wanted a coffee,
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but presumably this might be more than a coffee just to get you through. on cloud 9 now. he might have heard that lady just saying that that she'd take the extra delay just her just for that moment. so that gives you an impression that these people are feeling pretty special that they've managed to sort of lock out and time their arrival at this point on the river with that particular moment. and now i can see that prince william is just coming down the same line that his father did just a few moments ago. so he's trying to say thank you to the people in the back as well as those lucky enough to be right at the front here. and he too, has been front and centre of a lot of the public engagements. he will be standing vigil at his grandmother's coffin a little later in the day. but sir, obviously there is this decision by the royal family that they wanted to come out here and make a very public expression of gratitude and acknowledgements. will these thousands
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and thousands of people have been waiting for hours through the night and through the cold? and here he comes. can you imagine how he's feeling right now? seeing all of this, going out in front of him. with a, with a game out of her asking if the kids had had enough suite, some cigarettes keep them going. but that's what i was just about to say if you, we, we could just about that here that harry, i wonder what will let the prince of wales get a respectful distance away away from you before perhaps we can ask you again to point the microphone in the direction of the, of the crowds to ask how they,
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how they felt about that after i was struck by the answer, the one lady gave you when you said it, what, what did the king say to you? she said, i can't remember. she was so overcome with nerves. it was an amazing moment, but she couldn't remember what the, what the king says to her. so because she was, as he, as he got far away after now for us to, to point the microphone in that direction again. yeah, well give it a go. yeah. excuse me ladies. and just just wanted see how that was what, what did he say to you? what he said to him? i tell that he please been with crazy to think how they're picking up a time. it's so it's such a morale due to the many of you so long. yeah. i hadn't or i'll be not to that point. and how was the morale up to that point? i thought the body body is a bit weak, but the mind is still very much in this rival. well with,
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i mean obviously before all this happened, your, the main goal in the night moment you're going to be remembering was going to be inside that whole. i mean, presumably you're still very much. okay, go to that my map and what does it mean to you? why, why did you feel it necessary to, to be here and spend all this time or such, especially in so long and i'm so much into satellite. i thank you very much for talking to him. i got the king going off in the background . and so yeah, they, they spent a good 10 or 15 minutes, perhaps more going up and down this line. and as you can see, there are many people here who are not at all expecting this to happen, but very glad that it did something, harry, that, that, that strikes you as your point of the microphone of people is the range of actions that people up and they come from all over the country here. everybody after to
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experienced this absolutely. yeah we've, we've been speak to people from northern ireland. we've been speaking to people from lincolnshire where else? down down south in sorry. and yes, you're right. there are people who have really traveled long distances. they've been getting up very early in the morning, getting on early morning trains only to try to find the end of the queue, which has been difficult to some of them. i was telling me the other day and then stand in his queue for a very, very long time. there been i, we saw one gentleman who was at least in his seventies, a thought older wearing some military insignia. and he had terribly swollen legs of varicose veins struggling along. and yet he just kept going and there is a for, for these people are a real sort of sense of, of paying something back. i think in terms of, of just putting up with whatever they had to put up with for these few hours to,
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to sort of pay some kind of tribute of a fax and gratitude to her majesty how they might see the queen. and so i think that has been something that has been recognized nationally. a lot of the, the news broadcasts here in the u. k. have in the last couple days been very much focusing on this phenomenon this event. and given that, i think it would be strange if the royal family hadn't wanted to make some kind of public attributes and acknowledge all of it. and that's exactly what's been happening just in the last few minutes. very many things indeed, thoroughly enjoyed that a visit that from his majesty the king will, along with the prince wells, the people who queuing on the banks of the, at the times they loaned the opposite side of about with the palace of westminster . this is what they are doing to see they want a moment to be able to pay their respects to her majesty. queen elizabeth the 2nd who is lying in stays at westminster hall until before her funeral. on
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monday, the 19th of september or queen elizabeth the 2nd is the most recognizable person in the world. she's become part of a popular of popular culture represented in art, television, and music, out as heroes and a hayward looks now at how queen elizabeth's image has changed during her long reign. the crown brought the british queen to a new world wide audience. cr millions watched as the lines between fact and fiction blurred all long before the error of the internet. she was the most recognized woman in the world. no one else's life was chronicled through film, photography, and art for so long. from war whole to finance, her image was copied time and time again, and it was all largely respectful. as she got older, the representation of her in art became less formal, but there was still an edge of that deference. lucy employed official portrait,
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though, was unapologetic while chris levin's hologram represented the queen in an altogether different light. it shows her in a crown exactly as she is, but using a hologram. you know, that very interesting of modern development in poor trail allows you to access her as a human being in a very informal way. i say human being because because monarchs historically have been shown is rather remote, almost divine fig dehate. earlier the culture of deference based on challenge, the sex pistols, god save. the queen was loud brush and firmly anti establishment. epistles ripped up, the rulebook on the world's most famous face was defaced at a time when 25 years of a reign was being celebrated. the bbc bandit
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a many people were outraged by the bands behave. it tapped into us a kind of resentment about the queen. you know, she was having her jubilee at a time. and a lot of people work feeling very energized and didn't particularly want to point to this jubilee to say hi and i cause family warning her off my in the eighty's. everything image attracted with 80000000 viewers on british to week. and even the homer will usually untouchable interstate with satire. and few can forget the wolves of royalty, sport, and film colliding at the olympics. opening ceremony when the queen appeared to parachute out of the plain with james bond, or when she appeared in a joke with one of her grandson's queen elizabeth the seconds rain coincided with the rise of popular culture. even now, the fascination of what lay beyond the iconic image is likely to continue m a.
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hayward al jazeera in london. while the amazon or barbers of the original inhabitants of libya with her own flag language and culture. but for decades they were repressed. under the rule of mama gadhafi, now they're getting the chance to celebrate their culture. as malick, trainer reports, a group of college students has just become the 1st graduate. in the amazon language, western libya is home to libya's berber people, the amazon scattered across than a fool. so mountains are old amazon cities like this one. and i'll get her up, de la sassy, says the amazon. you have a long and rich history in libya and start when we're left on an amazon pick where the original inhabitants of libya here and is old city. there's evidence that dates back centuries and got taffy came to power. he sought to arabic, our culture became illegal to name our children. amazon names. he removed our
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culture from history books, but were preserved our culture and secret. ah, the horrible do is a musician. he says before revel, groups revolted against kit duffy in 2011, playing amazon music was a criminal offense at that that a no gun under gadhafi, amazon musicians would play music in secret. it was seen as a form of rebellion. but after the revolution, we can sing our songs, speak, our language revolution gave us the liberty to express our culture and heritage and nor the emma zeal. coastal city of water is the largest in libya. yet the view played an important role in the revolution that hobbled long time leader wal mart did that. he outlaw their tamar light language. now, after more than a decade, they are able to open celebrate their heritage and culture. the tamar site language
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is now being taught at this college ins water. it's the only university in libya that offers the course the way the multi is one of 7 recent graduates. she hopes to further her education and become a professor bad again and lunch. i am so proud to be one of the 1st people to graduate in the amazon language in libya's history. but motivated me was wanting to know more about myself and my identity as an m. as the women studying in this department has helped me to understand her culture language and heritage busy me, did her. although libya has been engulfed in violence and political divisions since 2011 the amazon ecc, they're happy with their new found freedom. ma, trina al jazeera western libya finally, cheaters
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a back in india nearly 70 years after they became extinct that this is the moment that india's prime minister look released 8 of the animals into a quarantine enclosure in one of the national parks and central india. they were relocated from the media and southern africa for the 12 of them are expected to arrive next month. the idea behind this project is to provide cedar. i mean india with a funding population of cedar that can be reintroduced over time. we hope in this 5 year period and then this is, you know, within our release in the us open and hopefully if the project as well, then they will leave earlier, people will know and re colonized the audience would say when nobody it's thing. finally, let's take you back to central london, the banks of the thames, their land, the fridge, just opposite the palace, westminster, where the prince of wales, prince william, miss. still working the crowd by shaking hands with as many people as he can in the
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last half hour. his father, king charles, the 3rd was that tune fell, meeting people who are standing in that long lion. ah, a 16 hour wait to cross over to the palace of westminster to see the coffin of the king's mother. when elizabeth, the 2nd lying and stacy in westminster hall, many people got the, the jolt of excited that they needed. at that point, having stuff, stuff stood in that queue for so long one years here and i was there a just a couple of minutes with sammy zed. ah, [000:00:00;00]
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with a ward winning documentary from around the world on al jazeera. ah ah
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ah say that mm hm. and then international anti corruption excellence award boot now for your hero, ah, with, [000:00:00;00] ah,

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