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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  September 18, 2022 12:00am-1:01am AST

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is tolerated any for what so ever. beneath the surface lies the dog has died in british politics. the labour files are one on al jazeera. ah, which is here with every you. oh, a ah. this is al jazeera ah,
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hello, i'm marianna mossey. welcome to the news our life from london coming up in the next 60 minutes as ukraine exams, more bodies from a mass burial site. in the town of idiom, president zelinski says new evidence of torture has been found. and vows to identify all those responsible, tulsa, don't go. us president was washer of serious consequences if it uses chemical or tactical nuclear weapons in the war and ukraine. queen elizabeth's grandchildren hold a visual around her coffin as the cue to see her stretches to 17 hours and 70 years after they were declared extinct. cheaters are making a comeback in india and in sports. manchester city of gone top of the english premier li, erling holland helping the reigning champions to a 3 nail when over waltz.
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hello and welcome to the news our ukranian authorities of exude more bodies from a mass burial site in the town of idiom present. rodney zalinski says more than 10 torture chambers have now been found and liberated areas of harkey region is ian was reclaimed by ukrainian forces last week. dozens of forensic workers have been carefully digging through the wooded burial site. police experts say most of the bodies belong to civilians, but others are ukrainian soldiers. russia has repeatedly denied deliberately attacking civilians and a head of the pro russian administration, which abandon the area as accused ukraine of staging atrocities. or zalinski meanwhile is vowed that they will identify all those responsible for torture.
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scully, o'con wanted to call vonnie kimberlia particulars machine and 9. as the occupiers fled, they also dropped to torture device. lay slippery even at the railway station. we found a room for torture on $23.00 electric torture, coin envelope of both. hulu is just a train station. crew torture was a wide spread practice in the occupy territory. that is what the nazis did. we will establish all the identities of those who tortured our people who brought this atrocity from russia to our ukrainian land. but out his air is hotter. abdul hamid is in harkey than has more in the story. is 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 blogs, schools, pharmacies, the church. and so certainly a very desolate picture. and then these are now as investigators,
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as it are looking through what happened. they're 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 ward. 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 or pro russian forces in the eastern city of danielle . a saying at least 4 people have been killed there by shelling the mayor of the city, which is under russian control, says there are tax in the central part have done yet. in recent weeks, ukrainian soldiers of recaptured territory in the northeast in harkey, region,
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east and south of there rusher is concentrated forces enhance can done yet provinces to expand territory held by moscow back separately since 2014. will you, as president joe biden has warned vladimir putin against using chemical or nuclear weapons in ukraine to counter russia heavy losses. they're either made the remark in an interview with the american broadcast. as cbs says, rush will become even more of a pariah in the world. if atomic weapons, he is also vowing a strong response, russia has lost large areas of territory inside ukraine in recent weeks, as ukrainian troops push on with their counter offensive. when we're prudent is becoming embarrass, trim, pushed into a corner. and i wonder mister president, what you would say to him if he is considering using chemical or tactical nuclear weapons, don't don't go through to the face
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war from like anything since war 2. and the consequences of that would be what about with the u. s. response b, you think i would tell you if i knew exactly with course a martin will be consequential. they'll become more of a prior in the world than they ever ever been depending on the extent of what they do determine what responsible. oh, jabber tanti is live 1st now. washington, what prompted the president to make these remarks now? she am whitening pretty clearly. there a specific question from from a c b s reporter. it's an old trick in journalism that when you get someone like biden, you all can escalate tree hypothetical question. what would you do of russia use and use, or do you expect brighton to say you shouldn't use it? and it will be overwhelming, overwhelming response, and then cbs will get its eyeballs with which it desperately needs in an age of the
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internet and so on. but it is worth while then looking at what the intelligence agencies all saying about the potential of, of nuclear weapons being used in this, in this data. and it is true that we have have some, several intelligence agencies over the last few months, say yes, if putin is, feels he's in a corner, then there is a trance. he may, you may use nuclear weapons, although it has to be said again, always in response to questions, nothing proactive from the administration. because as i always then immediately follow up with, we have no evidence of nuclear weapons of being considered. but the example of william burns, ca, director in april comes to mind again aust, about the potential for nuclear weapons. he says yes, if putin is desperate but that he went into what that desperation would look like. that would be, he said, if nature intervene militarily on the ground explicitly and again, russia was getting some huge existential threat. then, then yes, there might be a potential for nuclear weapons. it's true, it's often pointed out that russia has
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a nuclear doctrine in which the use of tactical nuclear weapons can be used. they don't have a no 1st use policy, but i'm sort of the u. s. so does the u. k. so it is from so does pocket on the only countries that don't have a new but do have a new for us used policy, our india and china the other nations because we don't even know what his role means to do with its undeclared nuclear arsenal. but it's a lot calculate ambiguity, which means pretty much the same thing. we'll do whatever we want with nuclear weapons when we feel we have to. but it, it was another interesting insight into western journalism which is basically on his own every adversary of united states as a madman with his finger poised over the nuclear nuclear button. and that is from a lack of self awareness. i think about the reality in context and history of, of many of the conflicts we see around the world and, and the usaa meters and roll. all right, well thank you very much from washington. shebra tansy there and so adding to the pressure on rushes present. even india and china have expressed their concerns over
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the war and ukraine in recent days. it a regional summit, and just rand remote, he told him, now is not the time for war. while person himself admitted that his ally, china has questions and concerns. so let's discuss this and more with that alex, he told his a lecture, a modern european history at queen's university. belfast and of course have been reporting on the discovery in is ian and all this as ukraine makes rapid military advances in the northeast in harkey region, how much concern is there? would you say about how the russian president might respond if he does feel cornered and pressured? well, i think it depends on liam is perception of threats. i think there is a lot that she can escalate with before even considering nuclear weapons. i mean, it's widely acknowledged to main rockman problem is the like or from infantry troops. the numbers are on a feed on the ground because they only using professional army you know,
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as you can increase the control mobilization things you can use conscripts, you can use more advanced weapons which are not nuclear, can hidden in a ukrainian a civilian construction. so fossil, there's a lot of to escalate even before we come to nuclear weapons. so i thing you blew up and says will be the last thing and something which genetic, which is from the other sites or a segment need to intervention will be out of the red line for the revenue or has been going on for 6 months. now, do you sense any shift or perhaps even if it's a satellite, some kind of evolution in the possession of roches traditional allies, china and india? well, i think it was get big in them by to price the scale in density. and also the length of the, of the, of the conflict. nobody's happy about. busy i think given the there awesome leadership didn't expect to do for it to to, to last so long. so yeah,
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there are questions, but at the same time that there are concerns until mr. the both countries have their own politics to consider with relations with the west and so forth, particularly important for india, which is still trying to balance between between that of russia and the west list of which i know pops. ah, but yeah, no, that's it. no, but nobody's happy about it. there is a big turmoil. there's a issue of energy prices. but at the same time, china and india have like do been replacing western europe for as a, as a, as a bias of russian energy resources. and even if they had concerns, they didn't stop them from actually benefiting from by a russian lawyer. what a business going to know. as you say, that position is pragmatic. they have a strong political east economic and trading relationship with russia. but nonetheless, it global economy is under a great deal of pressure right now,
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both china and india facing their own issues domestically as well. what would they prefer for this one ukraine to and now? well, bob, it's not as a kind of the most important topic for them as it is for rush over year or europe or america, for example. i, you know, if you think about going in terms of china, china, strategically, extra benefits. because roger essentially has no where to goal, i had to turn it to china form. i economic dice, accustomed for technology inputs, for selling of its own energy and so forth at big discounts. and for china, kind of keeping russia away from the west, diseases. it is another strategic consideration with india, it's less saw in india and tradition in on the line country. it would, it's happy to buy russian or, and food and so forth. but ultimately,
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the whole turmoil in the world relating to energy and general instability, obviously, something they can do without. ah, but again, yeah, greg went to them is, is more of there's no in my research my, my understanding there's no good vis emotional, a engagement to the extent there is in europe in united states against russia. so it's much more pragmatic approach for both countries in from china. in particular, there is also very important strategic considerations as well. all right, thank you very much. alex t tough and quinn's university belfast give or in other developments have a 3rd un chanted ship is on its way to ethiopia after leaving ukraine, loaded with 30000 tons of grain. while food program partnership has already exported more than $90000.00 tons of which in the war torn country, ukrainian grain shipments have been severely limited since roches invasion, which forced the closure of blacks the ports as pacing to pressure on well food
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supplies, ports reopen in july under a deal between moscow and keith, it was broken by the un and tacky. all the main electricity lines has been reconnected at europe's largest nuclear power plant in southern ukraine. the u. s. nuclear watchdog says one of 4 lines to this apple region plant has been repaired and is once again supplying power from the ukrainian grid. all 4 of been down for the last 2 weeks of to fighting in the russian health facility. the 6 nuclear reactors have been shut down, but the fuel in them still needs cooling to avoid a meltdown. russia and ukraine of land each other for shelling near the facility. there was a surgeon volunteers joining ukrainian army shortly after russia started its invasion in february. this included women, and after more than 6 months into the war, some and our training men in house fight. gabriel elizondo is in a capital cave and spoke to some of those volunteers at this army training center
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near keith ukrainians, soldiers run through combat drills. they're practicing skills they'll need when they're deployed to the front lines. the instructor is 23 year old deanna. her nickname is sledge hammer of sic them, was it? see when i was growing up, i didn't have any thoughts about joining the army. but my brother joined when rushing invaded. i couldn't stay aside and watched. so i joined to there are 50000 women in ukrainian military of which 10000 are on the front lines. after russia invaded ukraine in february, there was an increase in women volunteering to join the military like natalia. so an inch go. a 38 year old hospital worker who on the 1st day of the war, signed up for the military when she was told, 90 percent of soldiers die in combat from bleeding. she is now training and how to
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translate her knowledge in 1st aid to the battlefield. her brother was killed by russian forces doctor went in within the pit of the v. i want to be on the front lines in the war, and i want to help my fellow soldiers because i want to win as soon as possible to being a lawyer in ukraine. unlike men, women are not obliged to register for mandatory military service, but that could be changing very soon. ukraine is considering making military service mandatory for women with specific skills lawyer, but said a decision would that be made until next year. for now, there are enough female volunteers willing to join. many like 25 year old katya. view it more than just a job. i am a patriot of my country. i cannot sit on my hands and do nothing in a country fighting a war and training new soldiers, no matter what their gender. gabriel's hondo algiers eda keith.
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a funeral service is taken place for a russian woman who is killed while fighting for ukraine. an owner god fired a 3 gun salute. his friends and comrades in arms gathered in cave, but he 4 year old all go seem. minova was remembered her courage, kindness, and service to ukraine. a coffee was draped. a coffin was draped in the blue and yellow ukrainian flag semen over had served for years, fighting against russian back separatists. you with the news, our life from london all still had on the program. u. s. house beacon nancy pelosi arrives in yerevan days off to border clashes between armenia and as a by john killed more than 200 soldiers. we speak to the sole survivor of a group of men, left stranded on a rock in northern pakistan during devastating floods. and in sport,
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canada step up, preparations out of their 1st appearance at amends. well comp since 1986 ah, the queen's 8 grand children have held a vigil around her coffin as she lies in state at westminster. hall princess william and harry stood guard alongside their cousins, out of the late monarchs. funeral on monday. earlier in the day, mourners had been doing for hours to pay their respects to the queen, received an unexpected royal visit. or a challenge has more in this now from london, tired and weary past the half way mark barked with many hours yet to go. it is at such a point in the queue to end all cues that you might expect spirits to sag the perfect moment then for this oh
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shows is windows supplies many with its deaf to common touch. no hurry. the new king and his son walked the line, meet him talking, laughing. i this was the royal saying, thank you to the throngs, waiting patiently to say their thanks to the late queen. with those in the right place to the right time, an extraordinary experience. we have just in the queue and then to be told just donte of it will be worth it and then we didn't really know what was going on. i began to find out that king charles owens an offense william, we're coming was just amazing upset, young tired lounge totally thrills. and then if we happen the time, this is now gone. i started to kick in and i now the spirits are just lifted.
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everybody in the crowds fell to it while it was electric chair. what a pleasure. and so good satan both together as well, which just was not expecting even half of our phenomenal at times the cues reached maximum capacity that has had to be paused. but for those willing to endure the reward is a personal moment. a debt repaid a memory for the ages. and this here, this is the exits. they have survived the mother of all cues. they came, they have waited. they've given their gratitude and now they're leaving. but it's not just the public that are coming to the respects of the queen's coffin leaders, a v i. p. 's have been arriving too. but with the world working the way that it does, i haven't had to wait 16 hours or so that these people have a candidate prime minister, just entreat, i and his wife sophie new zealand premier. just in austria's prime minister,
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anthony albany. the list of world leaders visiting the queen's lying in state will grow as more arrive for the funeral. on monday. finally on saturday, it was time for the queen's 8 grandchildren to stand vigil to her coffin william at the head, his brother at the foot. harry permitted away a military uniform for the 1st time since relinquishing royal duties. 2 years ago. a somber and formal reminder that a family and a nation law together will reach helen's how to 0 london.
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well as al jazeera alan fisher now a pause time for the public to pay their respects, the queen is starting to run out the $630.00 on monday, then head there will be no other people allowed to into westminster hall. as they prepare the coffin for the funeral service itself, no. at the moment the authorities are saying it's a 13 and a half hour wait. and so you really have to time this because those crowds could get bigger as they have during the day. not many people, still thousands but not as many people joined the line during the night. they tend to join during the day. so if you're trying to time it, you don't have much time left to join the line because when the authorities believe they have enough people and they will probably get to westminster hall somewhere around 6 o'clock on monday morning. that is when they will stop the line, but the authorities still believe that around 350000 people will file past the
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queen's coffin, as it lies in state and westminster hall, just over my shoulder or people joining the queue now to pay their respects to queen elizabeth have been told to expect a 17 hour wait. he has become an object of fascination across the u. k. a country that calls queuing and national past time. more than 300000 people filed past the coffin of queen elizabeth's own father, king george the 6th social historians credit his reign with reinforcing queuing culture, with millions lining up for rations during world war 2. official iranian estimates said that more than 10000000 people lined the route for i to laura hala homei nice funeral procession in 1989, which was a 6 of the country's population. 8 people were killed and 500 injured in the crush . but the record for the biggest crowd gathering to pay their respects is held by c
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. n ana dry. the chief minister of india's madras' state police estimate that 15000000 people turned out to pay their respects when he died in 969 cues are also associated with the soviet russia. huge line form past the 1st and mcdonald's. when it opened in moscow. and 990 with 30000 visitors served on launch day. professor tim newbern is the co author of orderly britain joins us now. why assume from the late district when it comes to this country where people love a q many people do? is it just about etiquette or is it, is it this the embodiment of something more i think it ought to be the embodiment of something more for a long time. this being an association of queuing with an apparent association between killing and national character. and it's not just sort of pregnancy thing,
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but i think people from other countries somehow associate carrying with, with professionals. but the reality is your introduction. so the keys can be found everywhere, historically, and cultural wherever we travel will find people wanting for various things. since the principles actually nothing particularly british about this, what separates us is the way we think about possibly the way we talk about the association. so that becoming better as historically, that's what separates. tell us more about the associations who just mentioning the, the doing for rations during world war 2. is that something that has become embedded in the se, in the national psyche that sort of prompts people to do this. and actually they do it with a great deal of patients, even if it stretches for miles and is hours long. i think people do it with patients. generally. everyone depends on circumstances, but historically,
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i think that's right. you know, this, this form of social conduct, the thing that we've come to call a kid and it's associated with british culture and national character became embed it is around the time of the 2nd all around the time of rationing and the shortage of goods. and so for a more particularly sort of the idea if you like the killing, the lining up, waiting often for long periods of time for everyday goods and often very, very little. it was somehow ating the war effort that this became association with the british up of it. and i think it's that's association which on the pins, the sense of this, this is something this tells you something about british national currents. but thereafter, i think the way in which britain learn to talk about boasts politicians. so church
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use, for example, in the fifty's as a, as a means of used to negatively the kind of continuing existence of cues banks. an illustration of the way in which the labor government was in his view filings of the country, partly the kind of continued political usage of ques, i think further cements in that sense that somehow we were, we were a nation of kids. now i think this is a can see, i think it's a fiction. i don't think there's anything particularly british about this. but the reality, the army, of course is the key issues that we're talking about today. and yesterday, in low the share extends and the degree to which we're talking about, including us now, will further of course cement that. somehow we are some sort of should accuse. and how do you explain that? because there are many people who won't have felt the need to come to london into q
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are, they will be satisfied with watching the live feed on, on their television screens. so is this just about allegiance to the molecule? is there something more here in the expression of, of grief and morning? is it almost like a sort of emotional spiritual pilgrimage that people for lemming? i think it's fundamentally symbolic wrong. rather than sort of breathing in, in, in any sort of app, right? they pay people, you know, the phrase wanting to pay their respects, i think captures much more of the moods of elements of the queue. the idea that the longest serving monarch whose recently people want to pay tribute pay respects in a variety of ways. and the q,
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i think forms fundamentally because of that reason, but after a while, once the queue reached a certain size, and once it started to be talked about with some regularity and reported upon, then it became a social moment in its own right. and i think that led a lot more people to want to join. not through. no, i don't mean next is why it's not a they still once in some, some sense paying their response. but they also talk dissipating in an event. i think it's very like holes lining up for 6 or 8 or 10 or 12 hours or more has come to symbolize something interesting and people have wanted to be a part of the q interestingly. and thank you very much for explaining some of that to us for us at tim newburn, are you with the news?
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our life from london still had, ah, and miss ex pistols to the crown out with image change during has 70 years and that fran taxes sends another bus out of my grades. the home of us nice present, carmella harris for this most gps right. as long awaited returns, action hits, major, bam, ah, hello, the skies are now clearing across the good part of at least a few showers coming in, falling on form that catastrophic flooding. air of low pressure responsible is now making his way toward ukraine, legacy of where to weather still in place for some, but nowhere near as intense as it has been. you can see the where to where the will
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be right across ukraine, pushing up into that western side of russia, scattering the showers. they're 2 in 2 were germany tech republic season where to weather the low countries to and that brisk wind still piling its way down across the north sea. so a chilly wind coming through here should be largely dry across the good part of eastern scotland and east in england. a few showers just around the irish sea coast are for cold night sunday. going on in to monday. it should be fine and dry for a good part of for the u. k. study, that is a case across sir. london should be fine and try settled whether therefore the queen's funeral or monday. try to cross much of france, one or 2 showers there in 2 central parts of spain and portugal, try to across a good part of northern africa. the heat has abated somewhat up towards northwest without you still getting up to 31 celsius falling back to route 25 there in rebec for your showers across central africa and big down. pause there across a good part of nigeria, right? the way to cynical, ah,
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the world can't take so be cancer in 2 months. as the main event gets closer to 0, it is here. every step of the way. i'm gonna go with updates from teens and fans across the globe range can expect some strong support here in with the spotlight on north and central america and canada build that 1st place. finishing, qualify all. will the us mexico or costa rica rise to the occasion? the count down on al jazeera, this struggling to keep p o from failing to prepare children for today's world. that some schools are changing. our kids have half the day in spanish and half the beginning with astonishing, so why? why did with rebel education early learning
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mexico on it just lou. ah, welcome back. look at the main stories now. ukrainian forties of exam, more bodies were mass burial site in the town of him. many shows signs of torture. president zalinski is vowed that ukraine will identify those responsible for torture and bring them to justice. meanwhile, us president joe biden is one of our team of fusion against using chemical nuclear weapons in you prior to counter it's heavy losses. that idence, as russia would become even more of a pariah world. and the queen's 8 grand children have held
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a vigil around her coffin as she lies in states at westminster. hall, you, it is to fall past is now expected to take around 17 hours or for more than 70 years. the queen was one of the most recognizable people in the world. she became a part of popular culture, are presented in art, television, and music. and may, would, looks at how queen elizabeth's image changed during her long reign. miss milton, 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 recognised 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,
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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 portrayal allows you to access her as a human being in a very informal way. and 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 said the queen was loud, brash and firmly anti establishment epistles ripped up the rule book on the world's most famous faith was z faced at
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a time when 25 years of her reign was being celebrated. the bbc bandit a many people were outraged by the bands behavior. 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 won't feeling very energized and didn't particularly want to buy into this jubilee. so i have to say, wow, i cost family frauding i often in the 18th, i think you may retracted 18000000 views on the week. even the usually eligible and few can forget the world of royalty sport and film colliding at the olympics. opening ceremony when the queen appeared to parachute out of a plane with james bond, or when she paid him a job with one of the grand sums, the queen elizabeth the seconds rein coincided with the rise of popular culture. even now the fascination of what lay beyond the iconic image is likely to continue
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. emma, who would al jazeera in london or us house beacon out c l o. c is arrived in armenia for talks with the prime minister. nicole passion, young white house as the visit is a show of support for the country off to fighting flat this week with other by john l. o. c is travelling with a delegation including california. congressman jackie's fire, who's of armenian descent, the american armenian community is called for more political focus on the crisis. more than 200 soldiers were killed in the most recent violence, but as he's 5 broken by moscow does appear to be holding. over a 100 people have marched the center of your yvonne, demanding the armenia, renounce its membership of the collective security treaty organization. justice, i mean, he is not protected by russia dominated security alliance and their calling for consul oppression with western countries that could help protect that sovereignty
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and tell, toil integrity. tony chang has been surveying the damage in one armenian village. this is the village of south in northeast mania, and you can see some of the damage there was sustained in the attack as an artillery show which had a bomb over here. and this is the house which we understand was occupied by family the time the windows 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,
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if fighting resumes the be very hard to step back or child's transferred isn't zante line on the as a by john side of the border behind me is a village or town. that's the very government of 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 all median troops. there was nothing in this area except miles and miles of land miles feels of land lines and armenian troops. since what the as aires go live liberation of this area around cairo back. they have built this town and the people that are moving back into it already. all id pays 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
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it is for them to be back here. how important it is for their children to grow up here. we've lost 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 at been known. you reports have come by incidents along the border between karen castanan tajikistan indicating that a cease fire there is also holding this lea crashes over a border dispute left at least 54 people dead. and the seas high was also reportedly violated on friday. i have countries accuse each other of carrying out attacks on outposts and nearby towns using tanks more says rocky artillery an
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assault drives kyrgyzstan is to try to state emergency on the at can it border region or cause it stands president has signed a decree, amending the constitution to call the country's capital a stunner again, and also extend the presidential term by 2 years. now, these changes are among reforms pushed by customs your might to kind of, of to violent protests in january which killed more than 200 people. the unrest was sparked by a rise in fuel prices, but also reflected widespread political discontent. presidential terms will now be 7 years, but limited to a single term. the capital was renamed nor so ton in 2019 in honor of the outgoing president. nor sultan, and as or by of now, iran's president has asked the interior ministry to investigate the death of a woman who had been detained for allegedly not complying with regulations on head coverings or her job. masa armine was arrested by iran's morality police. cctv
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footage was broadcasts on iranian tv, showing armine collapse him on the floor inside of police building into iran. police say she died from a heart attack and deny any wrong doing, but witnesses say she was beaten while inside of police fan protests are reported to have broken out in west and iran at annie's funeral. now the un children's agency is saying so called super floods in pakistan have left nearly 3 and a half 1000000 children in need of urgent help. unicef, a sang stagnant water, is lead to a rise in malaria, dangly, fever and diarrhea in rural regions. women and children, especially anyone whose malnourished or in poor health are particularly vulnerable government of the southern send province as more than 90000 people were treated in the province on thursday alone. the sole survivor among 5 taxi driver friends who were trapped on a rock by last month floods in pakistan has been telling al jazeera about his
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experience. a video of them desperately calling for help shocked the nation. our team met him to hear his story. met and i'm a lawyer. my name is rebecca. i am 24 years old. i'm one of the 5 people who are stuck in the flat. i can never forget the 25th of august. it was a wonderful day for us. it was early morning and it was raining heavily, so i decided to move my vehicle to a safe place. when i came down, my friends also joined. we've been moving towards the bazaar. we are we're, we saw the door and heading towards us. so we had an unclaimed, a big rock to seek refuge. we were soon sounded by a raging waters off in regards the deputy commissioner office to tell them that we were stuck on iraq. and 4 guards said to help us because our lives were i'd stay on the way this once we get bleeding for help for 5 hours, but there was no response. my friends were all panicking and what
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a great ballade was scared and gorgeous. father endorse him. baba, i have been disobedient. please forgive me. i will not the wife, i'm in a struggle of phone remodel on what belong unwitting re ours. we're also growing and calling the families to tell them that their lives were in danger and to pay for them. and would offer his prayers on a rock while the others were reciting words this from the good on just across from our religious and family members were trying to throw a ropes to save us. my friend stored me. i shouldn't grab that open go 1st and they tied me up, was certainly a big wave game smashing on the rock. and i was able to cling onto the rope. but all my friends respect the week, it is very painful for me that i could not do anything for my strength and critical . it was a helicopter for rescue, my friends would still be alive and with me, my friends were lost because of negligence of the authority of that not to get it
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when i got out of the door and my family tagged along and told me that our home week of shops and fields were all gone. after the incident, i felt in my heart that i should stand up for my people to the last brit and by a large help to serve might be. our buck is tiny brothers and sisters are sending aid and i am helping with distribution of food and medicine. it is my duty. i have nothing left, but i will do whatever i can for my people. i have dedicated my life that might be tropical storm. fiona has gained strength that has towards puerto rico, prompting whether officials to issue a hearken warning for the us territory. pharmacies of open shelters and urge people to remain in doors with predictions of heavy rain potential. lance light and severe flooding winds already being recorded of around around 100 kilometers per hour. it's previously batted various eastern caribbean islands with one death reported in the french territory of quite
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a lou. someone told me we are the live the tropical storm. fiona, which will pass through 7 perch reiko we already appealing to families effects. the storm is much more organized so it pays the greater restore our residents because our ground is already soaked. particularly tonight. we have the danger of landslide due to the amount of rain that is expected. a 2nd group of migrants including children, have been boss from texas to the home of us, vice president comalla, harrison washington. this is the governor of the usa of florida defended as decision to fly around 50 migrants to the island of martha's vineyard, in the state of massachusetts. the item is a democratic stronghold and a pulpy holiday spot of the country's political lead. it comes as a dispute over border security deepens, in the run up to us mid term elections in november instead of scrambling and worrying about a bunch of rich people and having 50, you know, by the way, they already bused them out. they're gone. they said they said we want every one,
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no one's illegal and they're gone within 48 hours. and so why not actually look at what's going on? there were more a sela corporate journalists and martha's vineyard today than have ever gone down to the southern border to look what's going on. why don't you go down there and look at some of those communities have to deal with every day. and he is our boss alone is a polish super star. she came to the top of this spanish me, tara, has that so i to break in sports. ah ah mm. i make up with,
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[000:00:00;00] with ah
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ah, she says it back in india, nearly 70 years after they became extinct that they were relocated from namibia in southern africa and released by india's prime minister on his birthday. and now the 12 are expected next month. anton monahan has mall it. this is the moment she has returned to india's national park. as brentwood, the big counts became extinct in the country. 70 years ago, the prime minister turned the handle to open their cage. you don't want to render modi hopes. the return will be a major boost. the nation's nature reserve sought it and hard hearted people are g dot a lot by today the cheetah has returned in soil and i would also say that along with these teachers, the nature loving consciousness of india has also been awakened. we fully thought
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of me that you just journey began in namibia. they were kate afloat. 8000 kilometers, start a new life and you habitat into no national park. they'll spend a month in this quarantine enclosure after that they'll be released into the wider park at 5000 square kilometers of forest and grass land. all 8 cats are equipped with special radio colors to track their movements. if you look at what's happening here with judah, it's going to become a keystone species and density where the pm was backing. it's going to drive conservation forward and understanding that conservation is required, not protection, and soccer for conservation. we need when solutions for all everything, for all the living creatures living in that area, be it federal dogs be it humans be in the brain species better to species and that she does. but some conservationists have doubts about the project. they say the
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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 cart before the horse without doing the unglamorous, but painstaking and very essential work of preparing the habitat, making sure that is sufficient duty 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 bleeding when they start reading they need more space. the group of 8 she is 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. conservationist hope the habitat will eventually support as many as 40 of them. but that's expected to take many years vented marlin al jazeera,
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tanya fall is for a fire in dela marian, thank you so much. manchester city of gone top of the english premier league, erling holland once again among the scores for the rank champions. there was a minutes, a silence ahead of cities, game at wolves to remember the life of queen elizabeth city then took the lead inside the 1st minute 3 jack relish allan scored, his 14th goal and the last 9 games to make it to no wolves had a player sent off for his city, wrapped up a 3 know when are so have a chance to return to the top when they play brent for it on sunday we had to believe to scarlet of golf and it's nice, you know, i think 2 players and 2 important pay as leaving of the general, the tendency to, to a score tables. and chris turns us, this is good. we have the feeling that in while we were gingerly we digure out were
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can critical of chances in few minutes. oh, son headed men came off the bench for a 13 minute hattrick to lead, taught him to his 6 to thrashing of lustre, the south rim. he was a primary leaves joint ta before last season and not recorded a goal and taught them last and gaze spurs. and now 2nd in the table level on points was city, but behind on goal difference, while lester or bottom of the table still looking for their 1st when of the season or it's loan, i have gone top, the spanish league after convincing home went against l. che doodles from the polish superstar robert le window ski help them 2 or 3 no victory. lewin dal ski has scored 11 goals and 8 games for his new team the season. it's forces, 5th street when and league, and takes them the point, clear of defending champions. well, which read it's the major darby on sunday. with ral aiming to return to the top of the table. carla lynch, lottie side of one, all 8 of their game so far this season at let it go. we'll be looking to head back after 2. no loss in the champions league against buyer lever tuesday for coach
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diego, see me on a, it's a $400.00 and 8th game in charge. i'm a team at the new club record. so you know, i'm lucky is a coach to have been able to spend. so many years with so many different players and so many changes someplace of left, some of arrived culture, his stay the same or players remain extremely committed. so i'm lucky as a coach wouldn't have lasted for so many years at a different club. that's for sure. canada stepping out preparations for their 1st world cap appearance since 1986. they've name their squad for friendly against house cat, her and to time world champions uruguayan. and finally, begin in november and canada will be hoping for a better showing than in $86.00 when they didn't win a game or even score a goal. next go. the united states in costa rica have also qualified from north and central america. michael ammonia is the costa rican defender his score the winning penalty and shoot him to the 2014 world cup and brazil that sent his side into the
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quarter finals. it was cost reek as best ever run at the finals. ammonia tells us in his own words about that decisive kick, went off lower to that, and they before taking that penalty kicks. i felt a lot of responsibility, a lot of commitment to my teammates, to myself and the country. i knew that there was an entire country watching over my shoulders and the history of costa rican football as well. it was such a great a means joy afterwards to see my teammates cry and laugh. at the same time. i felt so much pride and personal satisfaction, but at the same time i knew that i'd just done something very special. and the truth is that i was in shock. i lost my bearings, i sort of disconnected from the world for about 5 minutes. i can't really remember many of the things i've said or done in that moment is like after the world cup after brazil, god bless. i went to play in the middle east, specifically, and iran. and even there people reminded me of costa rica performance. and they
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remember it still to day. so as time passes, i feel that the significance of that moment continues to grow for us in costa rica calls to return one of the feature teams. and our latest well kept countdown show, which is focusing on north and central america. you can watch it here on al jazeera, on sunday at 1630 gmc homecoming and tennis road number one, carlos alcortez didn't quite go to plan. the spaniard was back in barcelona after winning the us open on sunday. it was a 19 year old 1st grand slam title, but the quick turnaround to represent his country and this davis cap tie didn't few favors. chris was beaten by felix edgar alley, semi as canada secured and upset when over spain. finally, andy murray could inspire britain to victory over the netherland letter. later paid his hiring larger fetters to leave the game with 20 grand some titles. i guess
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i was lucky to get to compete against him and some of the biggest matches and the biggest tournaments on the biggest stages in spore. yeah. like at the time i probably didn't appreciate it. march but no light looking back. it's pretty amazing is incredible. he's he achieved an 6 time mother g. p champion, mark mark has his returns, racing has been a bit bumpy on the rider crashed and saturdays qualifying ahead of the aragon grand prix in spain still finished to finish and 13th place. mark has, has returned to ford after missing the last 6 rounds of the championship as he was recovering from shoulder surgery, at least, francesco, when yan yeah, said a lap record to clench, hold position. okay, and that is all your sport for now. it's now back to marian and london. are it far thanks very much, just enough time to take you to germany now, ivy wells largest beer festival. october 1st is back off to 2 years of pandemic.
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cancellations. ah, in munich, the party was in full swing on saturday. the 1st day of the annual event, as is tradition of thousands of a lay to hose in the cloud, revellers down large bears, and pretzels, and enjoyed life music event usually attracts around $6000000.00 visitors in munich every year. as if the news, i'll see you in a couple of minutes, but more the days news ah
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ah. there was a time when the upper bank go river floods were enough to sustain lies in the northern colour, harry desert all year round. 3 but that's changing. we're one of 3 men in different parts of the alcove and go down as they faced drought wild animals and manmade threat in the constant fight for survival risk in it. all. botswana on al jazeera ah, a showcase of the best documentary films from across the network on al jazeera. the welcome kicks will be cancer in 2 months, as the main bent gets closer out as it is here, every step of the way. i'm going to go with updates with fans across the globe. things can expect some strong support here in hassle,
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with the spotlight on north and central america and canada build on that 1st place, finishing qualified. all will the us, mexico or costa rica rise to the occasion. the world can't count down. on al jazeera dantes semitism is of evil under a labor government, it will not be tolerated in any form. what so ever. beneath the surface lies a darker side in british politics, the labor files hot one on al jazeera. we understand the differences and similarities of culture across the world. so no matter where you call home will be even use in current affairs. that matter to you, i as ukraine exam is more bodies from a mass burial site in the town of is you him up president zalinski says new

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