tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera September 20, 2022 1:00pm-2:01pm AST
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hello, i'm tom mccrae. this is the news. how alive from durham coming up in the next 60 minutes? ah, after causing catastrophic damage and puerto rico hurricane fiona brings heavy, rain and flesh floods to the caribbean. demands for justice and accountability in the international criminal court. for the murder of al jazeera journal, assuring barclay by israeli forces russia. if i sit back in the eastern, la hans can donate scroggins as ukraine's counter offensive gains momentum. ah, freedom of the 22 years. a course in the us cautious the murder conviction of a man whose christ riveted listeners all the popular podcasts serial. and it's for pakistan getting ready to host a land ma, cricket series, england, the return supply that 1st international matches in pakistan for 17 years.
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ah, a major storm is ripping through the caribbean. hurricane fiona has brought to renewal brain, strong winds and flesh floods to the region earlier it caused widespread damage and knocked out power. and puerto rico. petticoat hind reports a sign of an island hit again. this bridge built after the last hurricane to hit puerto rico washed away 2 days before the 5th anniversary of hurricane maria. now fiona maria was a category for fiona, a one. but the devastation appears to be just as widespread. real love, love going there. this is the plots of river from the bridge and com, or you, it is approximately 10 feet from hitting the bridge. this is crazy. the governor of puerto rico has called the damage catastrophic. it more just idea in many areas
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that had never seen flooding, there has been an unprecedented accumulation of water. in fact, in many areas, it was greater than what we saw during hurricane maria. my, your up to 76 centimeters of rain was forecasted to fall in some parts of puerto rico houses. businesses washed away, landslides are continuing, and more than 1300000 people are without electricity and will likely stay that way for days or weeks. many also don't have access to clean water. you're not at my age, i've never seen anything like this before. i have no words to describe this. oh, it destroyed everything. everything has been affected. it all has to be v boats. all this. more than 1000 people had to be rescued. and now fiona has moved on to the dominican republic, the damage there, also widespread as fiona brought wind of more than 140 kilometers per hour window.
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well, i'll tell you the truth. i didn't sleep. i was sitting behind that door because the wind was strong enough. that would have taken me with everything. i woke up for a m because the house was one large pool. fiona is expected to strengthen in the coming days as it next bears down on the bahamas and turks and keiko's and likely bermuda as well. particle haine al jazeera l g 0 meteorologist stevenson fox is on sit with us. and even though you've been tracking the storm, haven't you? yeah, that's right tom. so at the moment it's now making its way across the turks and k cost already. so it's pulling away from the caribbean. but we are looking at some very big showers, small heavy downfalls coming in across the dominican republic and was still so some lavish. i was coming across a good part of puerto rico, actually. so we're not quite out of the woods just yet. you can see the storm they're just showing up on the satellite pitcher. and that is the location of the storm, which will make its way further north, as, as he sweep through the next 24 hours or so. currently,
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with winds around $185.00 classes per hour as we were hearing, gusts of around 220 kilometers per hour. so it is a major storm as a category 3 hurricane. this one. very, very heavy rain. i got half a meter of rainy, one or 2 spots as we go through the next couple days. a storm sir, there will be widespread flooding, and of course, also the risk of mudslides. so there we go. you can see how it is pulling away from hispaniola. making its way further northwards. as we go on into the middle part of the week, it is clear still plenty of shabbas for the dominican republic at all. so for haiti though, and still a few showers, coming into that western side of puerto rico, we close in on turks and k, cause she can see the storm just making its way over. grant hurt at the moment actually. so big rain, big winds now pushing through as we go on into wednesday. it picks up, remember that 185 or up to 220 kilometers per hour now. so it's a category for hurricane, very powerful system. this one,
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making its way further northwards, gathering more strength over the warm waters. and by the end of the week tom, it'll make his way across bermuda. thank you very much. everton lynch of hair and at least 2 people have died. and one of the most powerful storms the country has ever seen. typhoon named the dull, made landfall on the southern islands of key issue on sunday. it's since weekends to a tropical storm, but has caused blackouts and tens of thousands of homes. and middle is now moving north. a complaint has been filed with the international criminal court to demand justice and accountability for the killing of al jazeera journalist. sure, in our clay by israeli forces. a group of journalists filed the case on behalf of sharina family. the palestinian american journalist was shot on the head by israeli forces while on assignments in the occupied with bank in may. sharon was with al jazeera for 25 years covering is rails illegal,
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occupation. stevenson is long for us at the hague. instead, how important is the stip and trying to get some sort of justice for her family while this is, of course, very important, or we heard a very compelling appeal by the brother of 1st serene abu ugly here at the international criminal court. saying that the family should not wait another day after waiting for 4 months for justice, for serene. and also the rather sad that he, she is not, was not only a great human being and a great journalist, but also a great aunt for his children. so there's a sort of a last resort. bate maybe so to speak her, although the groups here, the palestinian press syndicate, and also the international federation for journalists really also are putting pressure on the united states because of sharin sir. american citizenship to start is an independent investigation, but they really also want now the international criminal court to take up this case
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and i'm joined here by one of the lawyers for the family at jana. eat well, she has filed 25 around 25 pages of this formal complaint. how hopeful are you that the criminal court will pick up this case? well, and this case is an important case. it is emblematic of a wider issue. the systematic targeting of journalists in palestine and so we are hopeful that the prosecutor will look at it seriously. and to make a determination that it is a priority in his investigation. you said more than 47 journalists have been killed in israel since the last 2 decades. $47.00 plus. that's a huge number. what happened to all these cases? well, they were forgotten, were not forgotten by their family members. excuse me. oh, the, by the authorities, they have not been investigated. and that is the main issue here. there has been no independent and impartial criminal investigation of these matters. and as such,
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there is a burdening culture of impunity and acceptance that it is part of the norm that journalist covering situations of protest, or violets, or even just covering m security operations are a target. and that's fine. well, it's not fine. these things need to be properly investigated because otherwise, as the world looks on me to struggle a collective shrug and the cases fall into a list am on a file. and no one has justice, no one has accountability. you even said it would be a shame for us all if this impunity, of killing jealous would continue. it'll be a shame on us all. and the more we fail to address this issue, and the more we turn, we are, we'll flee blind to it in palestine, but as it in across the world, i mean, we've seen journals targeted in ukraine, and there has been outrage and the has been discussion of how it is unknown,
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the is unlawful, and it must be investigated, and the more it continues and the failure to achieve real accountability continues, the more jonas will be harassed and they will not be able to carry out the work safely as they should, that they have every right to do well, some strong words here. thank you so much for joining us. said today. well, what happened is that last year at the criminal court, international criminal court decided that they do have jurisdiction in the palestinian those territories. so de says, the reason why there is some hope here by the palestinian organisations by palestinian journalist, but also by the palestinian government that there will eventually be the star of an investigation. actually, i have to say the investigation has already started and they want these killings of journalists not only sharing a broccoli, but they also filed cases of killings of other journalists to this court. and i hope that this all will be part of this great grant investigation to quite as doing into what they call the situation and palestine. thank you very much for that
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update that stevenson a lie for us at the hague. ukrainian forces counter offensive in the east is gaining momentum and bertha lu. hence scan to don. it's christians, russia and russian backed separatists had been in complete control of the uria. burnt cave says it's now retaken. the village of bueller? horrific are in no hands. this video released on social media appears to show ukrainian soldiers walking into the town on monday. well, let's go live to gabriel. elizondo and keith. i know ukrainian forces continue to gain ground on the front line don't though they are especially in the northeast where ukrainian counter offensive there continues and it continues to push east, remember copy on sc and is you him the 2 cities in the,
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the how to cave region that were recaptured by the ukrainians and last week and now the ukrainians have moved east from there about 25 kilometers east. ah, from those 2 cities, which means they are now in to the don't ask region of ukraine. they are now and a counter offensive and based on what we're hearing from a reports from the front lines, ukrainians are now on a counter offensive around a city called lehman city of about 25000 people. a town if you will. but it's critical and strategic because it is in don't ask what is considered potentially an area that the russians have wanted to gain full control over. and it's also a town with the major rail line that runs through the transit hub if the ukrainians can recapture lemon. which appears like they are trying to do at this very hour, that would be another victory for the ukrainians. and again,
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put the russians on defense in don't ask. they only control about half of don't ask right now. and also the ukrainians appear to now be encroaching on the front lines, some of the villages and settlements on the front lines. in who hans as well, don't ask who hans make up the don bass region that russia so desperately wants to control all of a while the ukrainians make these advances on the battlefields and analysts whether they be in london, washington dc, or even warsaw are starting to think about what potential victory could look like for the ukrainians in this war, we decided to spend a day and keep asking ukrainians themselves. the very simple question, how do you define potential victory in this war? and this is what they had to tell us. on a recent day in downtown keith with ukraine, seizing the momentum,
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we asked people to define victory in the war against russia. when our territory was crimea, dom boss nickerson will be ukranian again. her old russians ogle buyers will give back to russia. nebo, blue betrothed bought a hold, may be the will convict that because they will kill an old people. crimea for many years. victory includes reclaiming the southern peninsula, annexed by russia, 2014. but we need to make the whole country free glued and crimea. i know there are many people in the european union which who still do not believe in that i believe and we believe that it happens time pass. and the, this happens for some, it's about joining military alliances. i yeah. had that is sure. oh yeah, in my opinion we have to join litle as soon as possible, but only with the support of our partners. can we guarantee our independence and
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wellbeing this war made us stronger, more powerful. we started to believe in ourselves more weakness, finishing, and for others. victory is about making russia pay. ah, but a more had, we have to reset our borders to where they were in 1991. when we gained independence from the soviet union. the victory is also when russia will pay reparations to ukrainians to all those have lost their family in their homes. in this invasion, victory means a strong ukraine, that nobody will ever try to conquer again, it was the ukrainian military counter offensive that retook the entire harder cave region. back from the russians, certainly has boosted morale, but ukrainians also know that with russia still in control of about 75 percent of the don boss. more than half of zap arissa and all of the had sown region is very well, could be a long war in a country where for most the only debate is not if ukraine eventually will win,
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but what victory will look like when it does kick gabriel. what's up behind russia's plan and moving its submarines away from crimea? yeah, this is related to russia's very important navy weighing it called the black sea fleet. it's been based in crimea, the peninsula in southern ukraine. ah, that russia annexed in 2014. this black sea fleet has been based there, but according to the u. k, military intelligence, russia has been moving some of its nuclear power submarines. ringback from there about 500 kilometers away towards and in a russian port. why is this important or significant 2 reasons? number one, it shows that the russians are potentially feel as though this black sea fleet is
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under threat from the ukrainians. and quite frankly, is already the cranes have ha bombed an air wing of the black sea fleet in crimea. and also is remembered april, a sank, a very important russian ship of the back see fleet as well. so it also shows as well that the russians feel they need to move this out to safer area because it be much harder for the ukrainians to strike directly on russian territory. and these would be out of the range of ukrainian missiles. bottom line though is what we're seeing is this is another sign on the battlefield that russia, in, at least in some places, continues to be on the run. gabrielle elizondo, a for us and keith, thank you. 4 of the 5 european union countries bordering russia, began turning away russian tourists at midnight on monday to to the war and ukraine
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. poland, estonia, latvia and lithuania, imposed the new restrictions. finland has cut back on visa appointments for russians, but has decided to remain open to them. but plenty more ahead on this news. allan including members of south africa's police union call for better wages, were live in the protests with her room with hussar pretoria. we speak to eliminate men who went to extreme lengths to withdraw his own money from a bank, sitting off a chain reaction that lead to banks closing for 3 days and in sport fans of this nfl team. i left praying for one of the players after an on field collision. and he's here with that store. ah, the units it says 11 children were killed in an air strike by me in mars military. the attack happened on
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a school in the northwestern region of sa gang. the joined her says it was targeting rebels hiding in the area. the schools administrator says after the initial strike around 80 soldiers entered the school, which is in a buddhist monastery. more than 20 people were injured. with tennessee, as so called anti terrorism police, have detained senior opposition. politician and former prime minister ali laurie it maria to enter and out a party leader rashid gucci were initially brought in for questioning. on monday, our party official says the 2 men are accused of sending fighters to syria. larry yet is expected to appear in court on wednesday. so how did sincere get here? the 20 years ago it held its 1st referendum. the goal was to amend the 1959 constitution and changed the presidential mandate that allowed then president spin ali to run for more than 3 terms. nearly 100 percent of voters who participated
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voted yes. and there was nearly a full house turnout. lynn december 2021 president. case said, announced plans to reform the constitution calling it the revolution constitution. and july 2022 tennesseans voted in a referendum with a landslide victory of 94 percent voting yes. but only 30 percent of the countries . 7000000 people registered voters actually took part in that paul la decarlo all is a member of another party and former member of the tennessee in parliament. he joins us now from london. thank you very much for being on the program. what's a, your reaction festival, to the accusations against the 2 members of your party? well, the interrogation had nothing to do yesterday with the issue of sending fighters to syria, actually. i mean, it is an anti gay. i think this is not
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a victim today. for i say it's failure, he's failure in, in attending to the what the changes and people are waiting. so he's failing them and he needs to give them a fight. and again, i say it needs to push away and to marginalize all these opposition. so he needs to get rid of any serious opposition and the main one would be he has elections and he needs to secure that these election would not bring any free vote voice. so this is what's happening. it is just to propaganda campaign. and then just rushing straight forward into war with the changes in the people that i with the, all the country. what do you make of the timing of the questioning? as i have said, the timing right now is going through a did and harsh social crisis. so i say it needs to bring in the attention of
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it isn't people towards something else towards the so called terrorism. and towards now he needs to give them a scapegoat. and what's better than another? this has not, this is not the 1st time it's been done. and i don't think that they say we succeed . he's failed and he would fail again. so the timing, just because of his crises he's going through. and that is why, as i said, he needs a scapegoat, and what's better than having a scapegoat when president kind of side asked of the government and to solve the parliament, he says he wants to deal with corruption and government. what do you think he's actually hoping to achieve? to me he's, he's, he's made think worse because corruption is really worse. right? not going to last, but you know, they say it's worse than the, than the time during the, during ben ali here. so he's, he's not,
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he's not doing anything for the symptoms and people he just fighting his own fight . so i don't think that they say he's, he's, he lives with, he lives in his planet and he said, and then he's just bring making things worse. i mean, trying to get into math, that he's not the 1st one that we will have to be screen, resist what he's doing and we are standing by the needs and the cause of it. and he's and people, and we will continue fighting what he's doing. this is the only way to regain our democracy. we gain our peace. and again, that's an easy and you said you're going to continue fighting nesbit. so we does this assuming frank down, i actually leave your party. i mean, we are still political party. we will resist in
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a civil manners with our partners. we are fighting this, all the museums with all the democrats in the country. and we have, there is no other way. we only need and caught up on all the, i mean all the, all those who are supporting democracy in the world to stand by these. the last i mean model of democracy in the country in the region is the model of. ready moderation more than a consensus. the failure engineer will call for more ready condition or lesson. and this is what i said is bringing in the can to the country is drugging the country. it was a very dangerous tree. and i don't think that the word must just stop and watch without doing anything from our part, we are confident that we are on the right path that we are not alone and that we are with it isn't. ready people and that we are progressing painfully. yes,
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but we'll, we'll keep doing it. and it is the role of the international community to blades role in supporting the credit process and democrats in the country. thank you so much for your time that i'm at. got all life for us from london. thank south africa's police in prison. civil rights union has taken to the streets of the capital pretoria to demand higher wages for jake to the government's offer of a 3 percent increase of hiring. natasha joins us now for tory at those protests. and can you give us a sense of what's happening where you are now? ah, you know, in some countries it's rare to see the police, a prison official protesting, but union is here in south africa. say this is their way of trying to get the god men here to do something about the high cost of living. they say they can't survive with the rising cost of food and fuel. at the only way they'll try to get
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politician to listen to them to come out on the street to add to that. for africa, they're dealing with a crippling energy crisis at the moment. they can go for hours and again without electricity because of the aging power. lazenby voltages, corruption within government and is made. presidents are a lot more say cancel this trip to the united nations general assembly to come back to that africa to deal with those prices. the editors, the problem is tripling the economy, businesses con, function o, at functioning at hot the capacity at the out there, it could be more job losses. now these are people with job. and so what about those who don't have work here in south africa is estimated more than a 3rd. a people here in the country don't have were they also want something done about the rising costs of to include prices. these people, whenever they march clock in the capital of rhetoric, in my class, people on the side the road you are selling things like sweets of fruit, more days to make in me. and they're saying i live
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a part of the country to come to this part of the country of a tory up pulled me, i get jobs and there's nothing and they're frustrated and they are angry. god must say the government is under a lot of pressure because even if it wanted to increase salaries, it may be difficult. where's the money to come from? you challenge ahead force of africa, the most industrialized economy on the african continent. they thank you very much for your time and harry matessa in pretoria for us. but still he had all knell jazeera kenyon schools. the justice says the world bids farewell to queen elizabeth the seconds and in sport of rough night for the angels bicycle action coming up. ah ah
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hello, we got some much needed rifle starting to push its way to north western pass. if you have, it does make very slow progress, if the trip and i being see this band of class, but she's been rolling in from the atlantic running into our area of high pressure here. so that's tending to ease the wetter weather, dab some tout, and ray will get through where to weather is further east. we got 2 hours of low pressure, one just around ukraine, and another one up towards the western side of russia. bring you some big down, pause and across the region here is that where so whether that we have through barouche through polar and pushing all the way down towards see a hungarian plane over the next couple of days. that will bring some rather heavy down. pause in still a few showers into central parts of europe. germany still some snow there just around the alps. and that wet, whether she could see to start to push his way into western scotland may be into northern ireland. western parts of arden should see some wet weather by the time we come to wednesday as clarence roy into central parts of europe. still some very heavy right eye, which was a yeast and particularly down towards the southeast and lie be showers to across
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that he'd been home and then international anti corruption excellence award boat. now for your hero, lou ah, you're watching al jazeera reminder of our top stories, the sour hurricane fiona has gained strength as it continues to rip through the caribbean. the storm is lashing the region with heavy rhymes and strong winds. at
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least 2 people have died. a complaint has been filed with the international criminal court, demanding accountability for the killing of al jazeera journal, assuring i will outlay. it's the 2nd such case since she was shot in the hid by israeli forces. and my ukranian forces counter offensive in the east is gaining momentum in both their homes and on it screeches russia and russian. beck. separatists had been in complete control of the area. but keith says it's now retaken the village in husk. ah un secretary general, antonia quoterush opened the un general assembly in new york with a brief tribute to queen elizabeth. he also highlighted the major issues facing the world, such as the war in ukraine and climate change. kristen salumi reports, ah,
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the un kicked off its annual global gathering with the tribute to its host planet earth, and a nod to the many issues threatening its inhabitants. we meet at the moment of great burial foot, all walls conflict, since climate catastrophe, mistrust in the vision, poverty, inequality and discrimination. oh dramatic visuals meant to inspire action to protect the environment. in dramatic words. first from american poet, amanda gorman. i only ask that you care before it's too late. that's you live away or, and awake that she lead with love in hours of hates. i challenge you to feed this call. i dare you to shape our fate next from global pop sensation, black pink. we can't deny that the climate crisis is getting worse. there isn't
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a single moment to lose. nobel laureate malala use of sy focused on education, which has seen setbacks globally. thanks to coven and conflict. in countries like if you are via ukraine in other countries. i given good again is of otto out of the classroom. if you are serious about creating a safe and sustainable future for the children, then be serious about education. my a feruki was once the captain of the afghan girls robotics team. now, girls like her are forbidden from attending school, but i wanted to let you know a single existence in the society. thousands of guilt may never return back to school. many have already been married though. climate covered and
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conflict, all 3 continued to weigh on the un workload with poor countries suffering the most . but in the words of the secretary, general geopolitical divides are putting us all at rest. oh dad and i'm singing sensation. angelica joe ended the event on an upbeat note come to say it will be the most powerful countries in the world in the crosshairs. kristin salumi al jazeera, the united nation was some of the world's most powerful leaders, joined prisons, royal family, to say farewell to queen elizabeth, the 2nd hundreds of thousands of people packed the streets of london to catch a glimpse of the funeral procession. harry faucet reports in solemn silence. the queen's coffin was borne from westminster hall on to the gun carriage, pulled by sailors and a tradition begun with a funeral of queen victoria. ah,
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on the coffin, a distillation of this public directory person lives in the monica crown, or in sceptre, besides favorite flowers chosen by the king in a hand with his mother. him charles followed the coffin, and that his family on the short journey to westminster abbey. oh, and on towards the altar, late queen's children and grandchildren, accompanied now by their spouses and her great grandchild george and charlotte. we gather from across the nation from the commonwealth. and from the nations of the world, some 500 foreign dignitaries were in the abbey to mark this moment, including the queen's 14th us president and 15th british prime minister, whom she invited to form a government just 2 days before her death. ah
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. but above the politics she been created that the service should fall most on her constant christian faith that featured the favorite him. the lord is my shepherd. service in life. hope in death. all who follows the queen's example and inspiration of trust and faith in god can with her say we will meet again the in north carolina, 2 minute funds observed across the country before the queen's piper brought the state close to 4 days, the people had been
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a spectacle as they queued and file past the queen's coffin. now they were still witnessing an extraordinary spectacle on spool before them a parade of hundreds which service men and women from the u. k. in the commonwealth . over the course of 70 years, queen elizabeth the 2nd came to embody the idea of monarchy in this country, a symbol and a person woven into the fabric of daily life. for those here now on the streets outside, buckingham palace, a last chance to say goodbye, transferred to the state, hers the coffins. progress slowed again as it neared wind to cancel. so long, meticulous planning. this was a day of undeniable beauty, but images grand and intimate insides in georgia chapel, the service of committal british history, separated into royal ages, the jacket b in the george and the victorian each defining a particular time a particular society. the merciful goodness of the lord. endure is forever and
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ever. the 2nd elizabethan age was so long and so such change it seems to defy that kind of definition. it is now though ended the queen load into the rule vault. oh. days ago he would have sunrise anthem now it's sung for him. later away from the cameras would come the final burial service closest family laying to rest, a matriarch alongside her husband or force it just 0. monday before had been mohammed allah tear is guitars ambassador to the united kingdom. he attended monday state funeral service and he joins us from london. thank you very much for being on the program. can you festival give us a sense of just how big an occasion yesterday was? thank you for having me. what a privilege to be part of the sermon yesterday, to honor her majesty the queen,
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her service for the de cation, 70 years of reigning kingdom, north denial, and the service was beautiful. by all means, i mean there is no words can describe how things went in a very smooth, an orderly manner for the everything seems to have been pre planned as i've heard and all with her majesty's input. and obviously it was a moving moment for me. me to be representing my country in this occasion. it was a huge on a privilege just in regards to cut us recent relationship with brit. how is the monarchy viewed? now, do you think it's viewed in the same light as it, as it was before and will continue to be in the future? and we have a long standing relationship with the british monarchy. wouldn't british people on
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public and that goes well over a century. our relationship has grown in strengths over the years. ready our royalty in british monarchy have held that very strong relationship and continuously engage with one another and different occasions. i think with king charles the 3rd coming into our relationship will just continue to deliver to, to develop further. given that he has a very good understanding of our part of the world, and we very much appreciate his role as a parent throughout the time that he has been in that post in, in, in talking about issues that matter to us in the middle east. how do you think of britain's role in the gulf region has evolved in the past 70 years? you know, during the queen's long reign?
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well, the history with britain is not one that is mod, with conflict. like any other region. i mean, the relationship with the gulf and britain is one that started off on switching of development. so we were at the tail end of let's say, the colonial era. and thus the gulf was not, let's say occupied by any foreign forces. and the relationship with britain brought to the gulf was development more, more so to speak. and, and we came to see with britain the growth that we experienced today. so there is no historical negative for a context. let's put it that way. and so that in, in a way allowed for this relationship to grow and prosper to the, to the extent that the gulf, dave stands as the lot the 3rd largest trading partner with the u. k. off to the u
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. s. in europe. and that is just testimony to, to how strong relationships are and, and the, and the history but to the, the, on the ends. it just looking ahead. weird to us, cut us a, it's relationship with britain and its influence in the region under king charles now. oh, we see that king charles will bring a lot of what a value to demand key in the u. k. given that he has deep understanding about the world. i mean, so as a majesty the queen who has been cut on numerous times and has hosted many about heads of states on state visits here in the u. k. but i'm very much optimistic
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about the role his majesty king chose a 3rd is going to take, has monarch and i very much hopeful that with his rain that cut her and the u. k. will keep strengthening the relationships and work on and collaborate together on global challenges. i know from his time as a crown prince, king charles keen interest is on issues of global concern to all of us climate change from security and so on and so forth. and so these, these subjects are about pressing today as they were then when he was crime, prince. and i think that we will continue to work with the u. k. on these matters and, and beyond. so i'm very much hopeful and to work with the broad household and to see how we can work together and collaborate with u. k. government as well in working on multiple fields that are of mutual interest. and thank you so
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much for your time today. that is for had been mohammed a thea. i think you the katara ambassador to the united kingdom. thanks for having with a dis as queen elizabeth has prompted debate about the royal family and its colonial legacy. in kenya, survivors of britain's abuses suffered in the 1950s just after elizabeth because became queen. recall what happened. welcome with of reports. wow. i didn't get, no, you funny, moth thank a says she was repeatedly struck in the legs with an axe when she was detained in a concentration camp run by british colonialists. it was in the 1950s. her husband was one of the leaders of a rebel movement, frustrated by colonial land grabbing its fighters, wanted kenyatta to have independence from british rule in matlab. okay. what they do. yeah. and they never apologized that neither did we get compensation. we just
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came home and suffered in poverty. i spent so much time in detention and our children suffered throughout research. as a british colonial authorities detained hundreds of thousands of people. both fighters known as mile mile and suspected sympathizes and killed tens of thousands of them. one of the camps was right here is now part of a school. the teachers say, this building we were new prisoners were held before being taken in here for interrogations. castration and rape were used to extract confessions and intelligence as well as beatings, so severe they will often fatal the crackdown since came to be known as one of the worst atrocities of the british empire. and the gun founded as empire which queen elizabeth became the figurehead when she was crowned in 1952 in kenya,
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a british colony at the time when her father died. and she became queen the mamma, rebellion, and the brutal crackdown began shortly after. the british government didn't acknowledge the atrocities for more than half a century until 9 years ago, when it compensated a group of about 5000 torture victims. though i was asked whom we take was among the lawyers representing them in court in london. he says the settlement was a step forward, but about $200000.00 more victims were there, surviving descendants were left destitute and deserved compensation for abuses. passing a we offer might just to, the queen presents a wonderful opportunity for the can you got to come out even as a cor, gradually the new key come out on requires the british government to please they are. but in bringing a no notable closure to this matter,
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tony wasn't among the group who are compensated and says she can't afford a lawyer. neither is she among those on social media, expressing anger had britton's monarchy or former empire following the queen's death. but she says it's still not too late for the british government to say, sorry, and make commend malcolm web al jazeera weaker. kenya, the us judge has ordered the release of a man whose conviction for murdering his ex girlfriend inspired one of the most popular podcasts of all time. and then sides case was the subject of the true crime podcast serial. it revealed flores and the police investigation said may still face prosecution. she returns the reports. i say it was free from a baltimore court house wearing a gps monitor. while this conviction for murdering his ex girlfriend has been
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overturned, he is still under suspicion for the crime. however, the judge agreed with prosecutors that they were serious questions about the integrity of the trial which led to him being jailed for the past 23 years were not yet declaring, not yet declaring ad non sorry to interfere. but we are declaring that in the interest of fairness and justice, he is entitled to a new trial. the conviction grew worldwide attention as a result of the pilot in crime, comcast serial. the 1st we got airing in 2014. each episode meticulously recounted the details of the case, as well as inconsistencies in the investigation. now, authorities admit that even as they prosecuted, sire, it was known that they were 2 alternative suspects that were not disclosed. and they accept that key cell phone location day to use. this evidence was flawed. but the family of hyman li, who was 18 years old when she was strangled and buried in a park, say they've been blindsided by science release. they say the state conducted the
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appeal without sufficiently consulting them. they want the truth to come out of it . the truth is that somebody else killed their sister daughter and they want to know that more than anybody, they were shut out of the legal process court and the state attorney's office, and there was, it was inexcusable. a question being of would prosecutors reexamined the case without the podcast, whatever the outcome of this case, it has the very least reveals yet another example of prosecutorial misconduct. and it raises the question, once again of how many others are serving jail time in the us, based on flawed convictions, she ever can see al jazeera, less time for sport, his andy, thank you so much. so will england's characters are a bounce of playing that 1st international match in pakistan the 17 years a t 20 series will start encouraging later on shoes. they england last to pakistan back in 2005, no international cricket was played in practice on the 6 years after an attack on
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the shore lancaster by gunman in 2009. england word you to find pakistan last year, but pulled out you to quote, increasing concerns about traveling to the region england, the captain by mo, now he whose grandfather was born in pakistan. but my roots being from here and to lead england in such a big series and a historic series, it's huge. it's very proud moment for me and my family, my mom and dad and everybody. so of course that my family is very happy and my, my friends, my community and everybody who i feel like i represent, they're very happy for me and by more kept in england in any game, anywhere in the world. this is a huge on i got a bit of background, 2009 attack results had an injury to several shrine. conflict is, is one of the killing of 6 policemen who civilians soaring seems to begin to return in 2015 impact on host to the 1st home testing more than
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a decade against drill anchor. that was in 2019 in england plans have taken part in pakistan's domestic t 20 competition. marinelli represented the molten wilson's in 2021. so now it's a former england cricket robbie bo power who played alongside my way in the pac on super li grubby. thank you so much for joining his hair analogy 0. you of course, to spend quite a lot of time in pakistan in recent years. what sort of receptions you think the england players can expect the i was, i think an amazing reception. i mean, they'll be welcomed with open arms, it different just it taste toll very hospitable. and they just love the love, the fact that they've got cricket, they're an international cricket coming back there. i mean that the fans just over the moon about it and it's so hard to realize what actually means to them if you're not there and you know, seen it with your own eyes. so i think i think it will be a great welcome for, for the lindsey and robbie of the other countries have,
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have returns pack on and played recently, but it's a bit of added significance to england going back there now. yeah, i think so with, you know, with all the history with england and cricket, one of the, one of the major nations that england off, i think it's a matter of point in the last time was 2005. i mean, at such a long time it was a great series in 2005, it showed back to ball in 90 plus on average, you know, throughout that series it was a great series to watch. and it's been such a long time. i think it's, it is a special moment that in the, not troubling that. i mean do you think, to some extent english cricket let pakistan down a little bit by pulling out of that. so last year, particularly when we remember packets and coming to england at the height of the pandemic. look, i think it be, it's difficult for us to say it will be so easy for me to sit here and say, well,
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let them down because i've been, you know, i, i went during the sales and, and i got just, you know, i got used to it and i got to see it all. so be really easy for me to say, you know, england yet, english should travel, but it doesn't work that way. you know they do, they play the never taught pakistan on. never be near pakistan to take crickets. so, i mean, the closer that would've been as india so you know, it's such a tough one to say whether or not it was what it was, the security report was what it was and, and you just got to go with that the time. but i think what we need to focus on is that the fact that in and all that and a series is about to happen, and that's what we should all be looking forward to. and rather you've played alongside marinello many times. how much will this to mean to him, particularly as he's captain for these games?
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i think it's a matter form for him. you know, it's sort of reminds me when i 1st went to india with my roots being in india to go back and play in india with, you know, a lot more cricketing heroes. but from it is a special moment. and i think you'll be especially mom for him, the family. i'm sure his family will be travelling, he's his father. he propose his parents, he's brothers, maybe so i think it's a, it's an amazing opportunity for him to play pakistan. you know, he might not get and i don't if you need to play back on with england so and he should really enjoy it. and then this is even more special. and just finally, rob atc england or pakistan is serious content as to when the the t 20 woke up. yes. so the pressure on the move so far forward with that with the t 20 cricket since the p s l that just, you know, and
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a lot of it or not someplace travelers both in a lot of different leaks. so they game is really gone upwards. you know, some of the best photos in the world to very, very good openness and good lower hits is there's more so, i mean, they start out quite nicely. i think, pakistan. and obviously england, we know from england off in the short format have been for many years now and, you know, in those conditions in australia which england up pretty good. i think in the school another runs. i think the main challenge for, for english is going to be can the defense course keep the opposition to lower school as and that that's going to be the main challenge. but of course england are master content that we have be roughly about power. joining us from london, thanks so much fits armor of a. thank you. now the head of castles woke up organizing committee says preparations are on track in the countries and a good place to welcome the world has come out. the water has been speaking at the
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concord summit in new york. they're just over 60 days to go in are until the middle east's 1st will cupcakes off all like stadiums have been completed and the same venue, which will host the final was officially opened early. this month toward he says, this will be a tournament for the whole region that about over $400000.00 people, expressing an interest to being volunteer. we've got, you know, right now volunteer. you know, we're going to, we're going to be having 20000 volunteers. significant portion of them are coming from obviously, considering that and the community didn't talk. but significant, fortunate comes from the world. i think i'm not mistaken. the saudi, you eat egypt. there's a huge excitement not only to attend the funds from the performance in the world, but also to me part of the tournament to be part of history being made well this month. the world cup can't down show is focusing on north and central america. the us mexico, costa rica, and canada, that seems who qualified from that region you can watch a hit on al jazeera next on wednesday at 1130 g m. c. now buffalo bills play at
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dane jackson was hospitalized after being accidentally injured by a teammate. jackson suffered a neck injury late in the 1st half during this game against the tennessee titans game to life in any 10 minutes. while he received treatment on the field player. also since issued a same as saying the quarterback does have a full movement in his extremities. i mean, you go from the real part of it to your guys as you go from being a coach to just being a human when, when i'm out there watching him getting loaded in the ambulance and surreal. that's a real moment. and so, but just praying for him, an unfortunate situation and for an 8 straight season, the los angeles angels have missed out on the playoffs. the japanese star show high
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. oh, tony who is named the american legs most valuable player in 2021 for once, couldn't save his team this 91 last to the seattle mariners confirmed another season of disappointment for the anxious. okay, that is how your sports is, are looking for it. so, thanks very much and a. well that said for me, tom mccrae for this news albert adrian front again, we'll be back in just a moment. with more of the day's news. it's coming up next. ah ah. and
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the well takes of it as elaine, the bank gets closer out as it is here, every step of the way i'm gonna go with updates from fans across the globe. things can expect some strong support here in with the spotlight on north and central america. and canada build that 1st place. finishing qualify, poll will the us, mexico will costa rica rise to the occasion? the local countdown on al jazeera mm. holding the powerful to account. as we examined, the u. s. is role in the world on al jazeera foot. paula delta and a pioneer bruce sport. he lost the chance to play for his country, but won a legal battle that paid the way for a generation of brazilian players. footballing legendary council introduces one scene of penalized by his club for its political beliefs. he took power into his
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