tv News Al Jazeera September 17, 2022 7:00pm-7:31pm AST
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i want with updates across the glove things can expect some strong support here in customer with the spotlight on north and central america. can canada build on that 1st place? finishing, qualify all. will the us, mexico will costa rica rise to the occasion? the worst got countdown on al jazeera. don't you so much ism isn't even under a labor government. it will not be tolerated in any form. what? so ever. beneath the surface lies the dog has died in british politics. the labour files are one on al jazeera. ah ukrainian investigate his fine signs of possible russian war crimes after the discovery of a mass burial site in the city of idiom. ah,
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hello, i'm emily anglin. this is al jazeera live from dough house coming up. ah, greg is john, declare a state of emergency in its border region after dozens of people are killed during fighting with tajikistan, a russian broken seas fire between its ally, armenia and as a by john and are gonna care about colds. and now that some say moscow isn't doing enough and following the death of the queen opinion is divided in the new case, ethnic minorities, about monarchy. welcome to the program. we begin in ukraine, where president vladimir zalinski says investigators have found evidence of torture
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among bodies found in a mass burial size in the northeastern city of idiom. at least 450 bodies have been discovered just days after the city was re captured from russian forces and its allies. some of them were found with their hands tied behind their backs. the president says, this is proof of possible russian walk rhymes order, abdel hamid reports from hi keith. this looking gruesome on many levels. this is, is im, 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, 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 size, at least 440 graves there, some of them, apparently,
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with more than one person buried in the same plot. and investigators have to sift through all of this to figure out what happened is certainly a place where you really see the real tall of this war. 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 a story of the moment unknown. ukraine says some of the bodies exudes, show signs of torture. but 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,
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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 rubble to whom we people had to pay for the burial. and if he didn't have money than they were buried with a number, sometimes they put signs like woman with a red coat. those who were burying were may be local fixes russians and separatists from don yet. and lou hence, russia invaded if 2 in the early days of the war,
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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 anna wonders how she is going to face the approaching winter. she says some people froze to death alone in their homes. at the beginning of the war. sitting on the bench near by august says most of the different happen with of on the leave. i can say it's a mass grave. people wearied the deed. anyway, they could any gardens and squeeze the russian, made in scene to tame, to exhume the bodies from around the city and took them near the cemetery. she's hoping to find her husband through 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 fined the de burial site. investigators
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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 does that mean alger 0? it's zoom. dozens of people have been killed in fighting this wake along. the border between kurdistan and to g cust on. both countries accused each other of carrying out attacks on towns. no major incidents were reported overnight, but a cease fire was reportedly violated on friday. kingston has declared a state of emergency in the back can border region. could you talk to glove was curtis dan's ambassador to the u. s. he says the tensions are part of a long running border dispute. well, clearly it, as it gets done, is attempting to put pressure into your stand again, concessions on the stations on the board on the patient. as you said, for almost half of a border has not been to limited yet. there is a patient for process is going
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a bit slow. there's also an attempt to get access and control over water resources. there's a curious done, has a key water distribution of facilities that also distribute water into the job done . but there's 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 char, your stance. so with the number of people that had to be evacuated, more than 100000 was you know, 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 just done has had a leader for many years now and is looking at is looking at
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transferring power to his son who is occupying senior government position. so some are interior done. look at the latest or continued to military confrontation as an attempt to valley support around the leadership and the transfer of power within the family. i mania and as a by john, i blame each other for a flare up in violence on a border this week. more than 200 soldiers have been killed in the fighting. russia has broken a se, se 5 between the countries that appears to be holding presidents, let me put in, says his country can continue to mediate 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
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answer to the question about resources. we've still got enough of them. child stratford tells us what's happening on the as a, by john side of the border behind me is a village or town. that's the as airy 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. busy the as aires go live liberation of this area 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 i have been very emotional describing
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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, any chan has been surveying the damage in the valley village of sucked. this is the village of southgate in ne, armenian, 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 shop windows
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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 cease fire 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 the be very hard to step back. a mania as a by john cook is done and to jake has done are all former soviet states against independence in 1991. when the u. s. s broke a pot, creating new borders, and in many cases, contested one's tensions caused by those have led to conflicts between neighbors,
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which is a gera garcia and the director of the regional study center. it says the violence is mainly because of the changing dynamic of russian power. russia isn't a positional weakness, not spray the security, not confidence, and rushes, both distracted and overwhelming. why it's failed invasion? are you great? what's interesting is the parallel between our media or john with care he started saw both cases demonstrate a new trend or vacuum of russian inaction on willis and capacity to respond by russia. perception is as important as reality. and both perception and reality here are defined by russian weakness this only emboldened over john to which are media and didn't courage talk to song with a curity song. the 2nd woman here within this q is also
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a victory for authoritarian leadership 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 form on the horizon where no matter what happens in ukraine, we're going to be faced with and i agree, isolated russia. so this short term, you know, to be by russia distracted by you, re, may be replaced, it is for russia, lashing out all of its neighbors. has extends president, his signed a new law, limiting the length of presidential terms and reverting to the old name of the central asian countries capitol. it's the latest step by custom joe mont, to kind of breaking with the legacy of his predecessor no cell time. and as a by have the bill limits presidential terms to 170 period. it also reinstates the
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capitals name. as is tana, it was changed to sell time in 2019, in honor of the outgoing president. blaze in iran had been ordered to investigate the death of a woman who died in hospital after being arrested masa a mean these families say she was beaten after being detained by the so called morality place. police say she had a heart attack. they say have a it was released showing a many entering a police building and hi ron. she didn't speak to a place woman who touches her head scuff. maney then falls over, grabbing a chair before collapsing on the floor, still ahead on al jazeera and melissa that i'm getting costa rica we're the number of this place we've got, i was, has more than doubled in less than a year. putting a strain on the countries asylum system and cheaters make it come back in india
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after 70. ah, richard, he has begun the full world copies on its way to recover your travel package to the 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 her pradesh 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 dish. certainly on sunday and we've got wet and windy weather swirling around the bay of bengal. that's gonna 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 northwest with pakistan, seeing lots of sunshine in clear skies. the temperature in the whole picking up to the high thirty's by tuesday, now was a move to east asia. all eyes are on super typhoon and nan model that has become
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a violent storm. it's expected to make landfall in the que shoe islands. we are talking very powerful winds, as well as exceptional amounts of rain. we could see landslides and mud slides 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 hon 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, official airline, the journey, a mineral central to the quest for team. 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,
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poisoning the environment with dire health consequences for those living in their shadow. the cost of cobalt people empower on a jetta. ah ah. have them watching out a 0? i'm emily anglin. he is a reminder of our top stories. the sam ukraine's president says investigators have found the evidence of torture among bodies found in a mass burial sites. in the city of idiom, hundreds of bodies were found after the area was re taken from russian forces. the un is sending attain to assess evidence of possible vote. at least 24 people have been killed in fighting this week on the border between coast on and to cheek has
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done no major incidents were reported overnight, but a ceasefire was purportedly violated the day before and armenia and azerbaijan, blaming each other for a flare up in violence, this wake on the border more than $200.00 soldiers had been killed in that fighting russia mediated a ceasefire that appears to be holding awe . king charles the 3rd has grated paypal queuing in london to pay their respects to the light queen lying in state at westminster home. ah, the king and his son, prince william, spoke to people who be waiting in line for hours to wait to view the queen's coffin . he's currently over 16 hours. earlier. alj is here is harry force at spoke to the archbishop of canterbury. justin well be in the queue. he will be one of the people
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presiding over the queen's funeral on monday. i think this morning, given the temperature, the length of the queue and it's over night, is the most moving moment. i've seen this just and prefer the so cheerful, you know, those the police are all saying to us, oh, snow grumpiness. you know, there's almost no instance one or 2 people fell over and needed help from the st. john's ambulance. but this just her a determination to pay give thanks for the queen and alma, her service. and you've been involved in preparations for this event for many years . i mean, what stands out for you? how? how do you assess what's, what's happening right now? what i, what stands out for me is the visible lack of being sort of in a flurry arbitrator. it's just,
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let's do this and we just put the plan into operation. and like all plans, you know, when you get into operation, they don't always work quite as you expect or you see something new and they just say, okay, we'll address this way. and they're so well planned that it's very easy for them to adjust and terms it's superbly prepared. and again, that's the determination of every one from cleaners to the, the prime minister. to make sure that this on us, the queen. let's bring in the alan fish and now he joins us from that q in london. hello there allen. the queens, 8 children al 8 grandchildren ran. there are planning to stand vigil by their grandmother's coffin. no doubt. that's going to be a moving scene to witness. that's right. now a lot of the people moving past here joined the line about 8 o'clock this morning,
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830 this morning. so they have been in line. no for just about 8 hours. they probably have another 2 to 3 hours to go before they get in westminster hall to see over there at behind, by my shoulder, than the might be lucky. they might be in the hall when the grandchildren take their posts in the vigil in front of the queen's coffin, they will be led by the new era parent here in the united kingdom, prince william. he will be in military uniform. at the foot of the coffin will be prince harry, and surprisingly he will also be in uniform. no, you remember that the other day when he walked behind the queen's coffin, as it moved from buckingham palace. as that was, he was in a morning suit and had his medals on his chest, but was not in uniform. the intention is that he will wear uniform at the request of the king. he hasn't been wearing uniform for the last 2 years when he essentially relinquished all his royal rules. but the king has asked that he will uniform this time round over the uniform of the british army. you remember,
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he served 10 years in the army with 2 deployments to afghanistan. he will be joined at the coffin with the children of princess anne, prince andrew, and also prince edward said, there will be 8 of them around the coffin and we know that the 4 children of the queen held their vigil just a last evening. so this is the grandchildren's chance to say their final farewells and allan, how is that key behind ye fairing is any one's enthusiasm, whining at this point while i spoke to some people and they felt as if as the vin on their feet for the best part of 10 hours that they were almost like running a madison. they were coming close to the end. and so they were getting the euphoria of being close to the bridge, which they will cross over into the gardens where they will get at the passes. they will go through the security check and then they went to the hall. every one i've spoken to things, it was absolutely worth it. and even just a few hours ago, i was speaking to people who were showing up looking for at the end of the line.
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and they were going to join. now remember at $630.00 on monday morning is when the hall will close to the public. that means at some point on sunday, they will see to the line that said, no more, you won't get there in time. so be interesting to see who times it just perfectly get sent to line, but imagine the devastation if you've been waiting all weekend. and you get there at the end, they say, i'm sorry you can't make it. but this lying itself passing as it does through many famous landmark, like the houses of parliament at tower bridge, the london, i all of those things. this is become a landmark on it, so, and with many tourists stopping to take pictures at all, those famous points and every one in the line. also stopping to take pictures as well. you can hear some tune behind me. that's been the sort of atmosphere in this line and i did a quick bit of calculation. it's about 1500 people an hour that are moving through
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here and this stretches for kilometer. so that gives you the size of the, the crowd at the authorities estimate will be somewhere in the region of 332350000 people that will pay their respects to the queen. i lived in london for 17 years. i have never seen this city as busy as this extraordinary saint banks had painting that picture far as alan fish and my address in london. opinions on the monarchy seemed to be divided in the u. k. though as, as had beg, traveled to the north of england to say how people there are reacting to the pomp and ceremony. the queen's youngest son, prince edward greets the crowd. in manchester. the city is known for its diversity ah, arts, culture and being a trend setter and it's hard to escape the fact the queen has died, but not every one is in the mood for the royal funeral. sharleen is
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a community worker. she feels the monarchy is detached from black communities. if come to this country will not felt quite welcome is that lot raisins in, in england and them. and when you blackie, do you know it and feel it. unfortunately, no matter how you try and ignore, right. and it just feels like that is a big issue in the, in england. and she's never said anything. young men in the local barbershop are also discussing what dominating the news respectively. i don't really bother him with others that are these moments of silence and strike to know that because of the queen that this is irritating a bit. garza thing hasn't been done not been one year. the queen hasn't been looking for or heard from her room situ. sure, kim elizabeth has said, okay, we've read millions of or billions, even though we have, are we redistributed to the law, even manser. so as far as that, so, as are all the hypotheticals we could say, controls could do this,
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created was we could do king king harry or whoever the next king is. could do this would never do the seems to be a generational divide here. some young people from ethnic minorities born and bred in the u. k. question, the purpose of the monarchy. but others who 1st arrived here as immigrants feel more of an affinity to the late queen, king charles and the political establishment such as but met the queen and fondly remembers his conversations with her fiercely top. when she came close to his met king charles 3 times and feels ethnic minorities our lot to the monarchy. somebody like myself who came to this country over 50 years ago as a 10 year old town of very difficult towns are very different. there was a lot of orphan racism and hostile towards the middle community under this government, under this monarchy and this queen who has given us that stability. so we should appreciate an honor her majesty the queen. but he acknowledges criticisms over
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british colonialism and its empire honor the lady who as part of the commonwealth represented over 2600000000 people. that's a 3rd of the world population. so by all means, the criticism can be looked at, but now is not the time. latest polls suggest support for the whole family in the u . k. remain strong. but the memory and legacy of empire appears to have left ethnic minority communities divide. it. i said big, i was just for the north of england. the u. n. children's agency says so called super floods in pakistan have left nearly 3 and a half 1000000 children in urgent need of help. unicef says stagnant mortar has led to an increase in malaria, dingey, fever and diarrhea. women and children, many malnourished and in poor health. in rural regions, a particularly vulnerable government of the southern seemed provinces. more than 900000 people were traded in the province on thursday. alone got me bullshit. it's
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extremely hot and was swamped by flood water. so we not only swim in this water. we also drink it because we have no other drinking water. we're not getting any clean water from the government, so we have no other option except to drink this. like water sheet is have made a come back in india and nearly 70 years after they became extinct. there. they were relocated from member b. i in southern africa, another 12 are expected next month as into one of them. this is the moment she has returned to india's national park. the big cats became extinct in the country 70 years ago decided the prime minister turned the handle to open their cage. you don't want to render mowdy hopes, the return will be a major boost. the nation's nature reserve sought it and hard hearted people are g done. lord, bye to day. the cheater has returned to indian soil and i would also say that along
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with these teeth, that nature loving consciousness of india has also been awakened with full force. he the teacher's journey began in namibia. they were caged and flown, 8000 kilometers, start a new life and you have a tap into new national park. they'll spend a month in this quarantine enclosure after that they'll be released into the white or park at 5000 square kilometers of forest and grass land. all 8 cats are equipped with special radio callers to track their movements. if you look at what's happening here with the g, the, it's going to become a keystone species and definitely with the p. m. o 's backing. it's going to drive conservation forward and understanding that conservation is required, not protection and folk of conservation. we need when solutions for all everything, for all the living creatures living in that area, be it federal dogs be
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a human being, the brain species better to species and that she does. but some conservationists have doubts about the project. they say the projects near $12000000.00 of funding will be better spent on directly boosting the local economy. other say the habitat isn't suitable nor big enough for me. definitely put the cock before the horse without doing the unglamorous, but painstaking and very essential work of preparing the habitat, making sure that is sufficient area of making sure it's of sufficient quality with sufficient prayer species sufficient connectivity. we have now got the animals, the animals need a hole, the animals will hopefully settle down and start leading. when they start reading they need more space. the group of 8 cheaters will be joined by 12 more from south africa next month. the cheetah may be the world's fastest land mammal but permanently re establishing them in the wild is a slow process. conservationists hope the habitat will vent.
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