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tv   News  Al Jazeera  September 27, 2022 2:00am-2:31am AST

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to challenge soviets aero methodologies through making, creating and performing a generation of children into the trailblazers off tomorrow. after school armenia, part of the rebel education series on al jazeera. ah, i agree, i'll jesse around with it. ah, ah. as public anger grows, the kremlin admits mistakes while mobilizing reserve us to fight in ukraine.
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ah, hello, i'm money inside. this is out there, live from also coming up. an experiment like could avert planetary dissolves to a nasa spacecraft is about to crash into an app store. it also be live in mexico's cap to where hundreds demand justice to the 43 students who went missing 8 years ago. and the british pound hits a 15 year, lo, against the dollar's fees, grow about the stability of b. case finance. the kremlin has admitted that it made mistakes in its mobilization of hundreds of thousands of reservists to fight sydney crane. the move has sparked anger protests and an exodus of russian men. demonstrations had been held across the country,
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ma'am vow his mo, from moscow. this is an army enlistment center in siberia. a young man opens fire, reportedly upset, but his best friend had been called up to fight whilst ill im scott is more than 6000 kilometers from ukraine, but the war is no longer distant here. restaurant done is much closer to the fighting, just across the border from ukraine. the emotion here, sadness, fear, and defiles. everybody is scared. the main thing is for him to come back alive and healthy. good. i'm positive. i will come back alive and healthy. it's going to be okay, i'm a sergeant in the reserve as the reservists leave for the front line in admission from the kremlin that it has made mistakes,
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implementing the draft of them. though when you're on the hood company, oh, i'm normal, wrong girl, want you to election ridge national menu here. yes. yes. oh, yeah. you don't want injury. most of those who don't want to fight, haven't protested. they simply left thousands of cars queuing at the border with georgia, ah, frustration breaking out among those stuck to the 20 kilometer long q. those who have made it to george's capital to belushi say they feel safe here. the more giggle you by you said the last northbrook of la, say raleigh. v. like many others,
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fear that against our will to could draft us to go and kill peaceful people in ukraine. we are completely against his war. i can recall it for what it is. it's not an operation. it's a war which russia is conducting on the territory of ukraine for us, like for others, but scary to die and to kill others. and for what we don't understand. therefore, we decided to flee. at this time, we're going to leave the child ah, back and russia. sporadic protests continue. jackwoods is the capital city of the saudi public. ah, these people choose traditional dance to demonstrate their opposition to the draft . 24 of them were reported to the data, arrested recognition by the kremlin, that mistakes had been made. the raft may or may not be enough to calm the protest about maybe beside the point if russia and next is large parts of eastern ukraine,
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with the drawing of the frontiers enabler moscow to use enemies, to defend what will be the motherland mohammed one, a da 0, moscow. the u. s. has warned russia that using nuclear weapons in ukraine would have catastrophic consequences. it's after russia's foreign minister pledged full protection regions, annexed in separatist referendums in ukraine. the rights are being held and for ukrainian regions occupied by russian forces. ukraine on its western allies say the referendums are a sham and won't be recognized internationally. on the other, hamid has more from 3 bd in ukraine. they for of voting. there's one more to go. before the polling closes. i will. what we are hearing is we're good news that is coming from really across the front lines in those occupied areas. according to, for example,
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the mayor of her soul or was up or reject, turned out is quite high in the lowest in of the 3 of these 4 region is in the upper re just so far, 51 percent. and then it goes much higher in places like done yet, where the pro russian separate is have been ruling since basically in 2014. now there is an issue, is that what do those figures represent? how many people do they really are present? considering that ever since 2014, you had a lot of civilians leaving those areas from don. yes. and again, you had more leaving a the onset of this war in february. and then the same thing for the upper region. her son in the upper region, really the russians control only half of that region and so on. they do nearly control it all, but there is a belt of village villages that has been re captured by the ukrainians over the
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past few months. so what does that represent in numbers? how many people actually voted is very difficult to find that at this stage i was example, regio was our team over the last few days, and they were a lot of people coming out, coming out from cities like many doleful to port of bird yags going thumbs up reject, coming from guns. and so we have these convoys of up to 50 cars showing up several times a day. so people were still trying to get out of there while the referendum is ongoing . now in just a few minutes nasa will attempt, some thing humanity has never ever done before. the space agency is going to deliberately crash a spacecraft into an asteroid. millions of a kilometers away. we can even look at life pictures as it heads for it's target.
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that's focused on that small don't there? the double asteroid redirection test or dos dot spaceship launched last november. and we'll strike the asteroid, which is what we can see that light don't. they're just moving. the camera is actually inside the dark spacecraft focusing on that at target over that. so that's about 22000 kilometers per hour. is the rate at which it, which it's moving. and what is the name of all? this is the test, whether we could stop objects from hitting earth by slightly changing that trajectory. so let's see if we can have a listen to nasa's mission team and, and see exactly what they're up to just before. the mission takes place. that of relief, a little group, and i let this go. i have worked for this month so long and now we can no longer do anything that moment is just coming up there. but i think they're ready. i think
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they're there at that point. you know, i was, you're getting some shots of elaina, adams, the systems engineer and you can see the excitement in her voice. she's so ready to, to show the success of this mission. awesome. 5 minutes out, which we're coming up on. now the team will be hands off 2 and a half minutes from impact. smart now which has been guiding the spacecraft. aton must be for 4 hours full. all so step away. stop any maneuvers. dark will simply be coasting to its fate. this is blockbuster stuff. oh yeah, oh yeah. we are there. yeah, i have front row tickets and we are very soon about to open up these airwaves in the mission operation center will stay plugged in all the way through impact. remember at this point 5 minutes? no more. come out. smart now will be possible, but team is watching it just like you and me and the rest of us. well,
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if you just joining us, we're about to watch a nasa spacecraft deliberately slide into an asteroid. we were just listening to nasa the rob reynolds has more on how exactly the mission will work. this is double asteroid redirection test or dart is a 570 kilograms spacecraft launched in november 2021. traveling more than 6 kilometers per 2nd. it is on track to smash itself to pieces on the surface of a small asteroid called di, more force, 11000000 kilometers from earth. the object is to alter die more forces trajectory, slightly small messages about the flexion not disruption. it's not the hollywood blockbuster of blowing it into a bunch of pieces. small nudge, find it many years in advance, and that adds up to a big change in position with time to the asteroids path will be studied by earth, observatories, and satellites for years to come. there more force itself is not on
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a course to collide with earth. but mass of objects have struck numerous times in our planets history. one of the biggest in recent times was the tune, goosgo event. a meteor that exploded over a remote and uninhabited area of siberia in 19 o 8 flattening 80000000 trees over an area of 2000 kilometers. still 65000000 years ago, a huge object crashed near the yucatan peninsula, causing global devastation. scientists believe that impact is directly linked to the extinction of the dinosaurs to prevent humanity from going the way of the t rex . scientists and engineers hope to develop a system to nudge threatening asteroids away from earth. once they are identified. once you find the asteroid and you have its orbit, you really can't be in this position where you have the warning time where you really would be able to do things decades in advance. and that's completely
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realistic. the impact will be captured by the spacecraft on board camera, promising a dramatic view of an experiment which may 1 day be remembered as helping prevent armageddon. rob reynolds al jazeera. okay, less return. now add back to nasa and have a listen to what they are saying about the mission. absolutely. liquor impact. get em us the main thing. all right. the team a standing just recognizing this moment years in the making. it is really nice to see them relax a little bit, get off from those computers of it and glue to and just appreciate this moment. yeah. and they've earned this and it's just great to see him there. this is so cool already. we have another major milestone. we are now 2 minutes and a half from impact and smart enough to stop maneuvering the spacecraft. start is
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now coasting towards more force and we hope in to be this re book just so this will be i'm sure you've heard it many times tonight, humanities 1st ever, ever attempt at trying to move another celestial body should be spend also our 1st attempt ever to execute a mission in sole purpose of planetary defense. so what an exciting, exciting time. yeah, and i'm starting see di morphis start to come into view there. you can see it's starting to take shape. i'm starting to see individual boulders on duty most unbelievable livable clarity of images. there's thing on in our projected miss distance is going to be about 17 meters. all right. 0 one. this is total scope. round telescopes on every continent on earth. yeah. a bit. it does not look like one
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single rock boy, we're getting close. 14000 miles per hour, lori 14000 miles per hour. and remember, you know, 45 minutes ago 55 minutes ago. we couldn't even resolve this, this objects in space. and now we are, you can see us 0 in, in right on target. and we're now dropping the clock and we'll go by loss of signal to confirm impact. right? yes, ma'am, and we'll get that loss of signal. and then we'll hear from lena adams, again, letting us know that we like it will be crystal clear. and i think so, i think we're starting to see more more resolution in fact, look at that. did the most is even coming out of the view. we're now just seeing di morphis, this remarkable stuff. oh my goodness,
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look at that. looks like control system settling down, angular rates. look really good. think we're going to get the investigation teams from the pictures. wow. no, no, come on. we can do better than that. or to see those individual boulders there and see shadows fact it's amazing guys. oh my goodness. look at the boat. yeah. looks to me like her headed straight in oh wow. oh my goodness. wow. born 3 what?
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oh my gosh. wow. i didn't get your confirmation. oh, think we got it. maybe with town. oh fantastic. oh wow. what a moment. very few words can really come through this moment. this was beautiful to watch. i know what a team came and when an accomplishment team a few weeks ago they had their last dress rehearsal. here with you just said, joining us. what we've just seen is
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a moment in history and nasa spacecraft deliberately slamming into an asteroids all in the name of planetary protection. or what we could see there as the asteroid was getting close and close. it was the camera was actually on dots, which is the spacecraft which collided straight into that asteroid. let's get more and there speak and speak to amy thompson. she's a contributor at space dot com which is an online space. nice platform. it's really interesting. i was watching your face amy as her, as this moment of history was unfolding, clearly very exciting for you to see this moment happen. it's momentous, isn't it? sure. it is. it really is to, you know, sit here and watch what looked like one, you know, spec impact of just just in hanging in the black to then be 2 different asteroids.
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and then to be able to see the surface and to see the, the rocks and the boulders and all the rubble that's on the surface. and then, you know, to imagine that the spacecraft just smacked right into that. it's very exciting. and that spacecraft now gone is meds it's, it's no longer the yes it it's no longer the. so remind a new i mind were minus the points of this mission and what would they, what are they trying to achieve? so they are trying with the spacecraft by smacking into demarco's. they are hoping to effect it's orbit. so essentially to move its trajectory even the slightest bit will be a success. and this is a type of technology that nasa, you know, and other space agencies around the world could scale up to be able to push bigger astoria maybe in the future. because if they can find an asteroid that has the
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potential for impacting earth and get a jump on it, never had that a little a little bit of push goes a long way. and how tricky was it to get this miss and ride to actually achieve the, the trajectory and to actually achieve the impact? i'm extremely tricky. so the dart spacecraft uses a star tracking system to navigate and it takes observations and compares them to pictures that we have that are known of what stars are in the sky and what position . and so it uses that to hone in on this turning hit. that is basically like a small football stadium. it's about as wide as the washington monument is tall. and that is a very small object that it has to hit, but it did it. and, and so will actually, has happened now, i mean, it, has it disintegrated into a 1000000 little pieces?
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is there a potential that some of these pieces could then actually come down on to us? do we know what's going to happen there? yeah. okay. so they will probably, i'm, i'm assuming it formed some type of impact crater whenever it slammed into it. so there are pieces left. they are probably on the surface of the asteroid. so the really exciting part is coming up because there are some cubes, sat, sat hitched a ride there, little small satellites that hitched a ride with a dart. so they were deployed a few days ago and they are going to be flying around the asteroid and taking pictures. i'm recording video of the moment that it impacted the asteroids so that scientists can use those images to you know, figure out what happens when the spacecraft slammed into an asteroid. what kind of you know projectiles do we have coming off and then ground based telescopes all
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around the world were trained on to this specific asteroid system and have been taking all sorts of observations so that the scientists will know exactly how much they were able to affect, di morphis's, m. orbit. and just to be clear, that's what this is about, isn't it? it's, it's not about a, it's not about disruption. it's about deflecting it. correct? yes. okay, really, really good to talk to you. and. ah august their amy from space dot com. thank you. hundreds of people running in mexico city to mark the 8th anniversary of the disappearance of 43 students. the group was kidnapped because they were traveling to a demonstration in 2014 and haven't been seen alive. and investigators say the students were handed over to a drug cartel by corrupt police megs,
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case president has appealed for a peaceful rally off to several police officers. were injured when violence broke out. similar purchase on friday. john holman, is their 1st aid mexico city, so it's been an emotional day. what are people saying say the protest? oh, actually a little bit with right now go. 2 police behind us and to protest to misrepresent this is not a huge running back to some for testers who could find various things at a place to buy some tow to say troy for one of the show. and the police have been trying to contain the situation a little bit, but seem to sound like take as you can see symbol now. but i think this is just indicative of the frustrations around this case is now
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a kid in the southwest submit for 43 some good. 6 good, the government tried to say that it was a local dying. who did it in cahoots with local police, but it's turned out this year is that the new government a new but the current administration said no, this is actually a crime. it in both all the levels of the mexican state we're talking local, but also talking federal and also talking about the on the that they belong to. people kick off the years in which the government investigation didn't seem to get anywhere. it was written with corruption alagood that finally just with just recently it's up to the government a couple of months ago. putting out that report. they've now submitted to attorney general, a
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sports that they had to out with according to reports. and those people included figures within the army. so what a lot of protest is here are thinking that this is the current administration was looking good news should have come up with where it's maybe not a little frustration. it's more, it's a more, a disappeared to the students. are you seeing in the pictures behind it? wow. ok. many things that don't holman buffers in mexico city, the border between columbia and venezuela has officially reopened off to being shot for 7 years. the 2 sides cut diplomatic ties in 2019 it's all to columbia's
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government recognized that as well as opposition leader as president, following a disputed election hurricane eons growing stronger as it heads towards the west and tip of cuba. thousands of people preparing to leave their homes in the province of pina del rio storm surge of more than 4 meters is expected. lebanon's parliament has passed its budget for 2022, a key demand by the international monetary fund for a bailout package to tackle its economic meltdown. the official right for customs tax revenue be increased tenfold to $15000.00 lebanese pounds to a dollar. the government's budget is set at $1100000000.00, while revenue stands at $810000000.00. salaries for all public sector workers, including the army and security forces will be tripled. many of them, and less than $50.00 a month. now as the budget was discussed, were tied,
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soldiers broke through security code and trying to reach parliament. the protesters was stopped by security. i am on money has been stolen. what are they discussing, the capital control, or which budget they have stolen it already? what remains these nothing left breaking? oh so no, no, no one should. they pushed us. it's a shame your arm. soldiers like them don't they respect us. we are protesting for all, for example, asking for their canal rights. i mean, if you want to know the valley of the u. k. pound has stabilized. some was out of frantic, early trading. so it plunged by nearly 5 percent against the u. s. dollar. markets had been reacting with skepticism since the british government unveiled a package of tax cuts combined with a massive increase and public borrowing. oh, brennan, explains sterling plunged to near parity with the u. s. dollar early on monday. the
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pound dropping by 4.85 percent to a dollar and 3 cents that fall on top of a 3.6 percent dropped last friday. investors and analysts clearly skeptical of friday shock and or many budget by the u. k. chancellor quasi quad tank and invest as a bulky does a lot of into just in, in terms of it, they amount of debt that will come on line. and given that we are a coolest, a current account deficit nation, that means that we are reliant on international save as foreign savers to really fund that deficit. and it, if they don't like the fundamentals in the u. k, that a lined up for them. well, it had to have to fund it, and that's why sterling has been on this downward path. what spooked investors was friday's announcement of the u. case. biggest tax cuts in 50 years. cuts that will be funded by $48000000000.00 in extra government. borrowing, walking between government offices flanked by an assistant, the u. k. chancellor declined to comment on the markets. turmoil counselor. what
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are you going to do about the term on, on the markets this morning? so i'm going to make a comment there. what it late in the to noon a statement was issued to try to calm investors. it emphasized that unlike friday's announcements, further upcoming policies due in october, november, will be assessed by the independent forecasting body. the opposition labor party is here in liverpool at its annual conference across crossings. opposite number rachel reeves port scorn on the government's policy of trickle down economics sick quasi clots, and was fanning the flames of a national emergency. it gives me great pleasure to introduce our shadow. chancellor. sterling is down at means higher prices as the costs of imports rise, the cost of government borrowing is up. that means more taxpayers,
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money will go into paying the interest on, on government debt. and in turn, that means the cost of boring for working people will now go up to with higher mortgage repayments, the families, the government plan to kickstart growth by cutting taxes appears to run entirely counter to the bank of england's efforts to control inflation. amid intense speculation, the bank may call an emergency meeting to raise interest rates. the bank issued a statement saying that the regular scheduled meeting would be sufficient. it did those say it wouldn't hesitate to raise interest rates if required. i think until that fundamental ahead lot. so to speak, between what the fiscal side is doing and the central bank is trying to do. i think once an equation is resolved, then only we'll get more clarity on where the u. k. economy and a yuki assets are headed by mid afternoon. sterling had recovered its early losses and was trading at a $1.08, but that still more than 20 percent down on its value of a year ago. and the turmoil appears far from over. paul brennan,
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al jazeera liverpool. the head of iran's nuclear agencies is allegations that his country breached international agreements of fabrications by israel mohammed as salami. spoke of the meeting of the un nuclear watchdog in vienna, where the revival of that ra nuclear deal is on the agenda. israel has frequently accused him wrong of enriching uranium pulse, agreed limits, heat on solving a masonic. iran has an exemplary record of cooperation with the agent. we would like to clarify that there are no undeclared nuclear materials or activities in iraq. all allegations are really based on false and fabricated information provided by the occupying ready regime mcdaniel is amec republic of around truly expect the agency to provide a report on a more professional and impartial manner on ah .

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