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tv   News  Al Jazeera  September 17, 2022 5:00pm-5:31pm AST

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good oh and has its own super sound like faded out? is it well tells the stories behind for iconic songs. passion, drama, no infidelity, and an unrequited love or a bill of songs on out is here. anti semitism is an evil under a labor government. it will not be tolerated in any form. what? so f, beneath the surface lies the dark aside in british politics, the labour files hot one on al jazeera ah ukrainian investigators find signs of possible war crimes. after the discovery of a mass burial sites and resumed following a russian retreat,
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forensic experts are ready at work. there are hundreds of graves here in the forest . some of them are mine and appear to even have the date of death. but there are many others that i just know, but ah, i'm sammy's i them, this is al jazeera alive from dell hall. so coming up with a stand because the state of emergency in its border region off the dozens of people are killed in skirmishes with tajikistan and king charles, great people braving the cold and long accused attributes to his mother. queen elizabeth and jesus may come back in india for 70 years.
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non ukraine preserver laudermill zalinski says investigate is a found evidence of torture among bodies found in a mass burial sites in the northeast and see if you visit them. at least 450 bodies have been discovered just days after the city was recaptured from russian forces and its allies. some of them were found with their hands tied behind their backs. presidents and as he says, these are proof of possible russian war crimes. hood abdul, hamid reports from hart kiff tis looking gruesome on many levels. this is jim is now a desolate city. completely destroyed is barely a building that hasn't been at least partially damage and i'm talking about civilian targets here. apartment blocks, schools, pharmacies,
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the church. so certainly a very desolate picture and then these are now as investigators, as are looking through what happened there. talking to people, they discovered this mass burial side at least 440 graves there. some of them apparently, with more than one person buried in the same plot. and investigators have to sift through all of these to figure out what happened is certainly a place where you really see the real to all of this word. it's a city that has been besieged. it has been bitterly fought between the 2 sizes now firmly under ukrainian control. the soldiers are on. you see them roaming this trees, but this barely any sign of life. this is the report on the edge of its zoom in the forest. the grim reality of war nestled between the trees. graves of those who died during the russian occupation of the city each has
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a story. at the moment unknown. ukraine says some of the bodies exudes, show signs of torture. with the we are here at a place where you can see 3 graves in the 1st one. there is a rope on the neck, and the hands are tied. on some bodies, we see traces of torture. the brill site was discovered after the russians left a few days ago. police said their most 2 civilians, but bodies of 17 ukrainian soldiers were pulled out of a mass grave on the edge of the burial site. investigators and forensic experts are already at work. there are hundreds of graves here in the forest. some of them are mine and appear to even have the date of death. but there are many others that are just numbered. sir gay came to identify some of them. 46 of his neighbors died in the s drive that targeted his building. he pulled their bodies out of the problem to whom we people had to pay for the burial. and if he didn't have money than they
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were buried with a number, sometimes they put signs like woman with a red coat. those who were burying will may be local fixes russians and separatists from don yet and lou. hence, russia invaded if 2 in the early days of the war, it was used as a logistical help to supplies. forces in the dumbass is now a city in ruins. desolate there is no power, water or gas. ukrainian soldiers are back on the streets. but that dana wonders how she's going to face the approaching winter. she says some people froze to death alone in their homes at the beginning of the war. sitting under bench near by august says most of the death happened with that of on the me. i can say it's a mass grave people weary did. anyway, they could any gardens and squares the russian made in seen to attain to exceed the bodies from around the city and took them neither cemetery. she's hoping to find
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her husband who also died in an air strike. yes, martha natalia also tells me she doesn't know where her father is buried at 80. he died of fear and cold. perhaps they will be find that the burial site. investigators have a monumental task ahead. but ukraine is confident that some of the stories of those buried here will provide more evidence of war crimes, or that that hamid al jazeera, it's zoom. thousands of people have been killed in fighting this week along the border between kyrgyzstan into gk. stan. both countries accuse each other of carrying out the tanks on towns. no major incidents were reported overnight, but a cease fire was reportedly violated on friday. could, augustine has declared the state of emergency in the bath can board of region card they are taught to pull off was could get stance ambassador to the us. he says the tensions are part of a long running board. a dispute?
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well, clearly it, as it gets done, is attempting to put pressure on curious, done, and again, concessions on the issues on the board on the patient. as you said, for almost half of a border has not been dealing with. and the patient or process is going a bit slow. there's also an attempt to get access and control over water resources. there's a key water distribution of facilities that also distribute water into the jack is done. but there is no doubt that it is not here. you stand that started this confrontation on confrontation and there was a military that went into the territory during this time we saw that we saw them on the territory. here you stand. so with the number of people that had to be
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evacuated, more than 100000 was you know, a number of injured and killed. it's clearly kyrgyzstan. it's clear that it's not just and that was the started the fight. and the dick is done, has had the leader for many years now and is looking at is looking at transferring power to his son who is occupying senior government position. so some are increased on look at the latest or continued to military confrontation as an attempt to valley support around the leadership and a transfer of power within the family. armenia and bay, john are blaming each other for a flare up of violence on the border. this week, more than 200 soldiers have been killed in the fighting. russia has broken his seas 5 between the countries that appears to be holding president vladimir foods and
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says he's country can continue to mediate. can you measure? we regret the recent fighting, and of course the victims that occurred there, but also, and above all, under the influence of russia, this conflict was localized. i hope this continues to be the case, and here is the answer to the question about resources. we've still got enough of them. charles stress had brings us the theme from the angular on as of a john side of the border. behind me is a village town. that's the as every government, a very keen on showing the media. they having built it in the last 18 months or so . now, bear in mind that this area up until the 2020 wall was occupied as the as aires call it by armenian troops. there was nothing in this area except miles and miles of land. miles feels of land lines and armenian troops. since what the ass aries go
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where liberation of this area are around carol back. they have built this town and the people that are moving back into it already or id praise, internally displaced people who were forced to flee their home almost 30 years ago . we've been speaking to some of them here. and they have been very emotional in describing how important it is for them to be back here. how important it is for their children to grow up here. we polish them what it sounded like and what it, what it felt like. obviously them, having heard the shelling relatively close by to here. they were very confident, certainly on camera. bear in mind, we have somebody from the government pretty much with us all the time. but as i say, a great sense of determination here. that despite this recent escalation, inviting this village, this new town that has been built, the people coming back to it all determined to stay and rebuild their lives. and across the border in armenia, attorney chang has been surveying the damage in the village of sorts. this is the
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village of sark in northeast are many and you can see some of the damage that was sustained in the attack as an artillery shell, which had a bomb over here. and this is a house which we understand was occupied by family the time the windows, a shattered their shrapnel marks all over the wall. the village is now deserted. it's the last one before the border with as a by zone, over in that direction. i think this is the concern for many people living in these border air is not so much these attacks. but the fact that these attacks have started again after 2 years of relative peace and the seuss fall has effectively been thrown out of the window. but also that the international community on this occasion doesn't seem to be stepping in in quite the same way that it did in the past. and that if tension zoom, if fighting resumes, be very hard to step back. armenia as john, kevin, stan,
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and tajikistan are all former soviet states. they gained independence and $991.00. when the ussr broke upon creating new borders and in many cases, contested one's tensions caused by those of lead to conflicts between neighbors. which is good to go see, and the director of the regional study center, he says the violence is mainly influenced by the changing dynamic of russian power . russia is in a position of weakness, not spray the security, not confidence, and rushes, both distracted and overwhelming. why it's failed invasion? pray, what's interesting is the parallel between our media nozzle or john with care he's thought and project thought. both cases demonstrate a new trend or vacuum of russian inaction on willingness and capacity
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to respond by russia. perception is as important as reality. and both perception and reality here are defined by russian weakness this. busy only. ringback emboldened azerbaijan to which are media and didn't coverage, pocketing st on to with a cure the song. the 2nd element here, within this vacuum is also a victory for authoritarian leaderships in projects and also with john victories or struggling in democracy in armenia in stock. what's interesting is what's to car. i do see a storm on the horizon where no matter what happens in ukraine, we're going to be faced with an angry, isolated russia. so this short term inactivity by russia distracted by you re, may be replaced, then it's full. russia lashing out all of its neighbors,
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police in iran have been ordered to investigate the death of a woman who died in hospital after being arrested. massa m, he needs family says she was beaten after being detained by the so called morality . police. police say she had a heart attack, this c c t v video was released showing, i mean, the entering a police building in teheran. she then speaks to a policewoman who touches her head scarf. i mean, the then falls over, grabbing a chair before collapsing on the floor, said i had an al jazeera, i'm a list of it. i'm gifting costa rica where the number of this place me got. org was us more than doubled in less than a year. putting a strain on the countries asylum system and from all to television to music, we take a look at how the queen's representation and pop culture's change during her right . ah.
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hello there, let's look to south asian. we've seen some heavy rain effect in northern areas of india causing some flooding. and what's up her dash now the rain has ease but it is still there stretching all the way from the west to the east coast. it's going to be more intensified over a deja suddenly on sunday and we've got wet and windy weather swirling around the bay of bengal. that's going to chuck some heavy rains the likes me and my bangladesh and further north by the time we get in some monday. but it's looking much dryer down in the south and in the north west with pakistan. seeing lots of sunshine and clear skies the temperature in the whole picking up to the high thirty's by tuesday. now when you move to east asia, all eyes on super typhoon and nan model that has become a violent storm. it's expected to make landfall in the can. you shoe islands, we're talking very powerful winds,
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as well as exceptional amounts of rain. we could see landslides and mud slides. it's working its way further towards the north east. it could clip south korea. it's going to bring those conditions there and then move across, han shoe, by the time we get into choose say we are expecting it to sweep through tokyo. we are expecting heavy rains from the system with potential disruption, and it's going to make the temperature come down slightly. certainly by wednesday, that rain, lasting through to the mid week in tokyo. ah . oh, a
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move. oh. oh, let's take you through the headlines now. ukraine's president says investigators found evidence of torture among bodies found in a mass burial sites in the city of israel. hundreds of bodies were found off to the area was retaken from russian forces. d u. n. is sending a team to assess evidence of possible war crimes. at least 24 people have been killed in fighting this week on the border between kingston and the g is stand. no major incidents were reported overnight on saturday,
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for the seas fire was reported to be violated. the day before mimi are in desert by john to blame each other for a flyer off in violence this week on their border. more than 200 soldiers had been killed in the fighting. russia mediated the seas father. it appears to be holding at least 10 people have been killed in for a missing after heavy rain and flash flood swept across italy on friday night. the affected area is in the eastern province of one k. i'm at val has more people in the village of piano. lord your start clean up devry and try to solve it . what they can have you raised in the night caused powerful flash floods that swept down the slopes of central italy. several people lost their lives and others are missing. this man describes the force of the flood that wrecked his village. it
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broke down the door and through the mud inside of the building, an 800 kilogram football table was floating guys, it's, it's unbelievable. the waterways arrived accounts arrive in such a short time or rather luckily we live on the 1st floor and from our terrace. we saw the sudden mass of water that went out from 50 centimeters to 1.4 meters in less than 10 minutes. people say they survived by gathering or rooftops, or climbing up trees. dozens who were trapped in cars or on buildings managed to avoid being swept away. among the worst hit areas was the town of sidney guardia. wherever burst its banks, mud and debris rushed through the streets in the tourist town of or you know, covering homes along the way. this woman came here from another town to check on her grandmother's house. when he arrived this morning, the situation was really traumatic. inside the house, it is not habitable any more. we threw away everything that was in fight. and i
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don't know if it, when it would be possible to go back living here. what did he find ourselves submerged in one and a half meters in around 10 minutes without any one wanting us about the coming danger? and this is the situation. it was a little italy experienced its worst drought in 70 years this summer. now it faces the other extreme, torrential rains, further damaging people's lives, and the country's economy. i'm at one or 0. ah. now king charles, the 3rd is greeted people queuing in london to pay their respects the late queen, lying in state at westminster, hall. ah, the king and his son, prince william, spoke to people who have been waiting in line for hours. the way to view the queen's coffin is currently over 16 hours. are a force,
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it is live from the queue in london. so how does that queue look like now, harry i will, it's still progressing. it's going a lot more swiftly than it was a little while ago when the king and the prince of wales were here, but it's still taking a very long time. 16 and a half hours is the current estimate. it is at capacity yet, so people are still able to join. but those who joined last night experienced a very cold and long period. there were times when no rehearsals going on, the whole q had to come to an end, or least to her, to a halt for a while. but still people were saying, this is something that they wanted to do. there were no gretz expressed to us, at least, and they were just glad to be able to be here. and then of course, in the anticipatory few moments before the king and the prince of wales showed up, there was a big buzz, a lot of security turning up and people heading towards the barricades behind us here. and you saw the king make taking a lot of time here actually to,
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to fact people in person. i'm sure there is a genuine amount of respect and gratitude for this among the rural family because it is a monumental event. but i'm pretty sure also that they will have been keen to, to show the king here. or there has been a very managed efforts to make sure that he is with people as much as possible in these days since his mother's death. i think given that it is a transition from a monarch who range for 70 years, really embodying the whole idea of monarchy, look for so many they want to ensure that that transition managed as well as possible and giving the king as much possible in time in front of his, of his new subjects. and so along with that we've been speaking to people up and down the queue over the last few days. one of those we managed to stop a little bit earlier on in the day was the archbishop of canterbury justin welding . i think this morning, given the temperature,
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the length of the q and it's over night is the most moving moment. i've seen of this just and people are so cheerful. you know, there's the police are all saying to her, so it's no grumpiness. you know, there's almost no instance one or 2 people fell over and needed help from the st. john's ambulance, but there's just her a determination to pay give thanks for the queen and alma her service. are i? well, a bit of rehearsals, sir, still taking place. tell us about that. that's right. yes. people here talked about, pausing for about an hour or so in the queue overnight. i will know similarly morning rehearsals, in london, but also not far away in windsor. they were rehearsals to off to the state funeral . on monday the queen's coffin will be taken 1st on
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a horse or on the gun carriage drawn by horses and then by herse to windsor castle . so they were rehearsing that last stage of the journey into the castle gates. and then there will be a committal service, a public committal service at saint george's chapel. and that will really be the final major public broadcast event of the day of these 10 days of national morning. and after then there will be a private burial service for the members of the royal family. and there will be another element of the that the mix of public and private, later on on saturday, when the king, with the queen's rather 8 grand children, will stand vigil around the coffin inside westminster. all right, thanks so much for the update. how great in las vegas, the 2nd was the most recognizable person in the world. she's become a part of popular culture represented in arts, television, and music. emma hayward looks at how the queen's image is changed during her long
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reign. the crown brought the british queen to a new world wide audience. 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, an 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, 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 about modern development and in port trail allows you to
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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 got said, the queen was loud, brash and firmly anti establishment. epistles ripped up the rule book on the world's most famous faith was defaced at a time when 25 years of a reign was being celebrated. the bbc bandit, many people were outraged by the bands behavior. it tapped into a, a kind of resentment about the queen. you know, she was having her jubilee at a time. and a lot of people weren't feeling very energized and didn't particularly want to buy into this jubilee. i'm to say hi. and i cost family frauding my off my in the
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eighty's. everything image attracted with 80000000 viewers on the british this week . and even with homer will usually untouchable, wouldn't escape the satire. and few can forget the worlds 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 emma hayward, al jazeera in london. large numbers of people from nicaragua, applying for asylum and neighboring custody car are straining the countries refugees. system are sandra, ram p at is in san jose, where he met some of those who say, well, have to wait up to 8 years to get an appointment. alejandro bid in
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a family of struggle to make a living in costa rica since clean the car. i were unable to find a formal job. she sometimes cooks for a local organization helping other women like her many. mm hm. and i already sent that like a message. she's among the hundreds of thousands of nicaraguans who have crossed into neighboring costa rican, the past 4 years. to escape reprisals from the government of danielle or digger for taking part in pay government protests said they or her living they had become impossible. once targeted we were always exposed. my daughter was persecuted and threatened. my husband was shot. same with my brother in law. i mean, i also received death threats, but only 100 hopes for quickly obtaining refugee status were dashed by every rocker . see, i'm prepared for so many applicants. and she says, employers do not recognize the costa rican government issued cards. he didn't define them as asylum seekers. somehow when we remain in the bazaar migratory limbo
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migration services say they will give you an answer. in 3 months we have been waiting for for years. others like youth, political activists mighty allowed, but other who fled after 4 of her closest colleagues were captured and tortured, says she has been given an appointment for 2030 apis advocate. i have thoroughly documented the abuses and persecution. i have been a victim of it and it has become impossible to her grace and her people have an appointment scheduled for 2015. she leaving us in the legal uncertainty for years migration official fe. they're dealing with more than 200000 pending applications with a least another 50000 people fail waiting to start the process. putting a major strain on cassandra rica island services, the government that knowledge is the delays and the difficulties nicaraguans are facing in the country. the says it's simply overwhelmed by the him. put him promise
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you in 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. that he is not alone in his struggles 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 refresher at home without a major international push to assist or a countries like costa rica families like kelly hundreds, will continue to struggle. allison and the answer is yes and was a cheaters have arrived back in india nearly 70 years after they became extinct there. this is the moment the indian prime minister released 8 of the animals into a quarantine enclosure in one of the national parks in central india. they were relocated from the movie or in southern africa and of the 12 are expected now.

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