tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera October 5, 2022 1:00pm-2:01pm AST
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this is al jazeera. ah, hello, i'm adrian. and again, this is that is a live from doha. coming up in the next 60 minutes. i'm pull brennan in birmingham u k, where we're just minutes away from prime minister list just giving her keynote speech and trying to re you nice had divided party blevins put in formerly claims parts of ukraine as washing territory, but on the grounds ukrainian forces of fighting back the tanks operating here a part of a wider counter offensive in the east. that is see great success in recent weeks. ah, the u. s. and south korea conducted military exercises in response to a missile test by north korea. hi,
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i'm side of hire to the latest sports are in judge makes baseball history. yankee saw hits is 62nd high run the season to break the 61 year old record legend. what to mary? ah, so we stop this nissan in the u. k. where the prime minister asked you to address her conservative party members in the coming hours. they've gathered in the city of birmingham for the annual conference. it's an opportunity for liz trust to rebuild her dwindling authority, which took a serious hit after a number of controversial policy announcements. unsightly unsure as to what to expect. but i'm hoping for certainty and economic credibility that reassure the markets. i'm sincerely hoping that we have none in the north since about cutting benefits. i am
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a one nation conservative and to my mind we have a property in this country whether they were 45, the tax or whether they're in the high tax bracket. and we, especially the cough that people move under blue now society, i'm looking forward to a good speech, shows a prime minister, dirty good job. and then we get back out that make the country better and actually go in and head and when the next election on our own marriage, esco life and to the conference in birmingham. how serious paul brandon is there? you heard what conservative party members had to say, paul is less trust going to give them what they want i think is going to be a very tall order. frankly fall is trust and i have said expectations are particularly low at this time around this annual conference normally are coming together of the party, a showcase of the parties achievement. and especially given the fact that she's only just a month in the job of prime minister, you expected
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a certain amount of unity in celebration. we've had none of that and we're expecting to hell is trust any minute now, in a very short speech, somewhere around 25 minutes, it's expected to be much shorter than the normal prime minister's speech. and as i say, expectations so low that if she manages mediocre, that would probably be regarded as a triumph. we know basically what she's going to say. she's going to pursue her agenda of growth and economic growth. and, but she's also going to give her not to the fact that the has been so much turmoil and disruption, and she's going to say whenever there is changed, there is disruption, not everybody will be in favor. but here's the point. she's trying to emphasize. but every one will benefit from the results. the reality is that it has divided her conservative party. it's even divided her government. there are certain government ministers who don't agree with the agenda that this trust is pursuing. she started, you turn already on the $45.00 pence in the pound rates of tax for high earnest
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that was being scrapped. it's now being kept after pressure from across the party and from outside the party. there is also pressure for her to make sure the benefits. these are the social security payments which are paid to lowest earners and those who can't work. and that those benefits rise in line with inflation rather than what seems to be her preference, which would be to rise in line with wages. now, wages arising at a lower rate than inflation that has been a real dividing line between her own cabinets. so ministers saying that they, they won't support what deceptively be a real terms cut in benefits for the poorest in society. so there's a lot of ground for, it's a cover, but a very short speech that we're expecting. and yeah it's, it's going to be a tall order in such a short period of time, given the turmoil of the last few days. as you say, it's been a, a bruising few days for the new government. one can hardly imagine it, it making a having made up a worse start. i can she reassert her authority though, as,
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as has it gone too far now? well, what's interesting, there was a pole. ah, it was done by j l park nice and it went out and asked conservative, well, i asked voters in general not just conservative members or voters. what get to get from adjectives as to how they regarded less trust and i'll give you some of the results incompetent. was the most common adjective that was used useless or so figured very highly they made a word, cloud, untrustworthy, dangerous. other words that were a little lower down, but nevertheless that you are in the top 10 idiot. clueless disaster also applied. you can see that the sentiments regarding less trust in the wider you k at the moment, certainly among voters is not favorable. and i think the other thing is the dynamic here at conference. it's very quiet here at the moment. there is a rail strike taking place across large parts of the u. k to day. and that means that many m. p 's many delegates from this conference actually left early. they
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went home last night. they didn't stick around for the prime minister speech. people already dismantled. many of the stands around here. so it doesn't have the kind of buzz that you would expect for a prime minister's speech. i. yes, it, her authority a, her credibility, both of this trust, the prime minister and her chance that quasi quoting have taken a hammering in the last 4 days. and frankly, in the last month since she took over such a strong contrast compared to what the opposition labor party at their conference at last week, they looked like very much a party that was together and on a government in waiting. that's right, and i was at the i was at the labor party conference up in liverpool just a week ago and that the, the contrast was, was not as you, as you say. and what was other also interesting, i think it was festival, the labor party themselves seemed a lot more together, a lot more disciplined. the rifts of old, within the labor party, appeared to have been souls with i and discipline from the, from the party leadership. very much in contrast to the situation that you got
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going on here in the conservative party conference. and the other thing that was interesting was the number of businesses that had gone to the labor party conference to buy tickets, to go and attend and smooth and exhibit and, and basically get time with the front shadow front bench ministers to, to press their case. now that indicates to me that business is seeing which way the political winds are blowing, and they're realizing that perhaps they need some pivots away from the conservatives. the conservatives chances of really getting reelected in 2 years time when the next election happens off are less than they were. and that perhaps the labor party is, is not a government and waiting, but certainly a party that you need, sir. so, investing in as far as businesses go pulling, they've begun the preamble video in the hall. there are so let's trust is now less than 3 minutes away. well, we'll take some of her speech, at least some of it may be all of it when she begins to speak. in the meantime. uh
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paul, let let out. i'll stay with you. um. what is the british public making of all of this? if, if there were an election to morrow, the poll show that the conservative certainly wouldn't when it would be no the that, i mean i haven't seen a poll that coincided with this conference, but there was a pole just done before the conference took place and they put labor at more than 50 percent. i think it's 54 percent. and the conservatives down on 21 percent. now that is startling. their 33 percent spread at between the yeah, the 2 parties and on the fact that the conservatives are the ruling party, the governing party here in the u. k. that is really a very grimma position for the the ruling conservators to be in a so it does appear that the public sentiments has turned very much against them. and i think it's a matter of confidence. you know, you look at the turmoil or over the past 10 days, essentially since quasi crossing,
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the conservative chancellor announced this or that this startling economic package parts of which franklin late the labor party agree with the reduction of basic rate income tax. for example, from 20 pencil, the pound down to 19 pencils pound. but then had the whole agenda, hijacked and, and the focus put on this my own goal, if you like, of deciding to do away with the $45.00 pence in the pound tax rate, which was, levied against the highest earnest. it meant the conservatives were accused of being the party for the rich, the party for the one percent. and at a time when they were going into winter where the cost of energy is a real issue, i'm for businesses and for homeowners and for domestic customers. often living crisis that we are not out of okay, despite the government's energy support, capital is going to be a real issue. doesn't look good. objects bad, aren't many. thanks to the, to pull brenda. we'll come back to you in just a few moments less trust the prime minister has now taken place at the podium,
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enthusiastic applause, her from the party faithful on her own cabinet for sitting at the front. let's listen to what the prime minister has to say. hey my friend is going to be with you here and bob again, it's fantastic to see the craze across the sky line, building new buildings, the busy track causing down the street and the bowl standing proudly at the heart
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of bothering him. my friend, this is walter city, with a toy a maya looks like it's all good and surprising. it's 6. 0 and then the street is a human dying. and i know the side may have been house and is also delivering new jobs and investment . this is what modern conservatism looks like. let's get tory may as elected in london. i think we gather it by cool time, the united kingdom. these are the stormy days. together,
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we've more on the data of queen elizabeth the 2nd. the role on which modern britain was felt when now in a new era, under k charles, the 3rd, we're dealing with the global economic crisis cause like coded and by putins, a pulling war and you cry. in these tough times, we need to stop. i'm determined to get worse and maybe to get us through the tenant has a to put us on a stronger footing as a nation. i'm driven in this mission by my firm belief in the british people. i believe the, you know bad. how to spend your money to get on in life and to realize your ambitions
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might not is walls. conservatism is about. it's a belief in freedom, in fair play, and the great potential of the british people. so i'm not going to tell you what to do or what to say, or how to live your life. i'm not interested in how many people one offers you buy a supermarket, or how you spend your time or in that to signaling. i'm not interested in just talking about things, but actually in doing face, what i'm interested in is your hope. some fears that you feel every day. can you get a good job locally? is it safe to walk down the high street late at night? can you get a doctor's appointment? i know how you feel because i have the same hopes and fears. i want what you want. i forced to get where i am today. i called to get jobs
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to get it, hey, rises and gets on the housing ladder. i've juggled my career with raising 2 wonderful daughters. i know how it feels to have your potential dismissed by those who think they know better. i remember is a young girl being presented on a plane with a junior house dispatch. meanwhile, my brothers were given julia pilot badges. it wasn't the only time in my life, though i'd been treated differently for bay female for not fitting it. it made me angry, and it made me determined, determined to change things. so other people didn't feel the same way.
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i remember growing up mainly where i thought too many children being let down, let down by low expectations, let down by a labor council who were more interested in political correctness than they were in school standards. but i was lucky to be brought up in a family that cared about education. they told me the value of hard work, an enterprise. and i stand here today as the 1st prime minister of our country to have gone to a comprehensive school. that taught me 2 things. one is that we have huge talent across our country and to say
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that we're not making enough of it. this is a great country. i'm so proud of who we are and what we stanfull. but i know that we can do better, and i know that we must do better. and that's why i entered politics. i want to live in a country where hard works rewarded, where women can walk home safely at nights, where our children have a better future. to deliver this, we need to get greeted me think we cannot have any more drift and delay out this vital tod. let's remember where we were. when i entered downing street, i've heard energy bills were predicted to us all above 6000 pounds a year. we faced the highest tax burden that our country had had the 70 years. and we were told that we could do nothing about it. i didn't think sad that things
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had to be that way. i knew that inaction would be unconscionable. families would have been unable to heed that house businesses would have gotten lost job would have been lost. and we would have was public services including vietnam chest . i couldn't allow this to happen. i refused to consign them all great country to decline. my eyeball made on entering downing street. mm hm. mm
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lights are all in my speech, my friends, i'm going to talk about the anti grey's coalition. i think they arrived in the hall a bit too early through a few minutes. but what we did is we acted we made sure that the typical household energy bill. busy shouldn't be more than around $2500.00 pounds a year this winter. next. we followed up with a major action to support businesses over the winter, where determined to shield people from astronomically high bills. so much so that we are doing more in this country to protect people from the energy crisis than any other country in europe.
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more response to the energy crisis was the biggest part of all many budget. it was the biggest part for a good reason because we had to do it. but it's not the only challenge we face. fatigue along our economy hasn't grave as strongly as it should have done. i know what it is like to live somewhere that isn't feeling the benefits of economic growth. i grew up in paisley and in leads in the eighty's and ninety's. i've seen the boarded up shops. i've seen people left with no hope turning to drugs . i've seen families struggling to put food on the table. low grade isn't just numbers on a spreadsheet. low grade means level wages, fewer opportunities,
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less money to spend on the things that make life better. it means our country falling behind other countries, including those who threaten our way of life. and it means the parts of our country that i really care about falling even further behind. that is what we must level up our country in a conservative way, ensuring every where everyone can get all homeward. it's wrong to invest only in the places that a thriving as economic models often have it. we need to fund the further behind. first of the too long, the political debate has been dominated by the argument about how we distribute a limited economic pie. instead,
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we need to grow the pie so that everyone gets the biggest life is why i'm determined to take a new approach. a break is out of this high tax, low growth cycle, and that's hold our plan is about it's about getting the economy growing. rebuilding britain, 3 rifle. the scale of this challenge is a mess war in europe for the 1st time in a generation. a more uncertain world, the aftermath of caves it and a global economic crisis. that is why important we need to do things differently. we need to step up as the last few weeks of show it will be difficult. whenever this change, there is a disruption and not everybody will be in favor of change. but everyone will
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benefit from the results. a growing economy and nothing we have a clear plan to deliver. i have 3 priorities for our economy. growth growth, i mean, more money in people's pockets, it means businesses creating new jobs. grace means people folk can feel secure and they can plan for their future. fundamentally, growth helps people for fail, their hopes and their dreams. and that's why our dynamic new chancellor and i will be taking action in 3 areas. festival we will lower
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the goal. we will lower our tax burden over the summer. 7 we had a robust debate and the conservative policy will always be the policy of low taxes . things is the right thing to do, morally and economically, morally, because the state doesn't spend it. so money is, spends the people's money economically. because if people keep more of their money, they are inspired to do more of what they do best. that's what grows the economy. when the government plays too big, a role people fail, smola high taxes media felix last was while working the extra well going
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for a better job or setting you up your own business. that's my friends is why we are cutting taxes. we've already got somebody helping people on the housing ladder, especially 1st time buyers were reversing the increase in national insurance from next month. and we're keeping corporation tax at 19 percent the low in the g 20. we're also helping $31000000.00 working people by cutting the basic rate of income tax we need to be internationally competitive with all tax rates attracting the best
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talent, cutting taxes. it helps us face the global economic crisis, putting up assign the britain is open for business that says that the abolition of the $45.00 p tax rates became a distraction from the major parts of our great plan. that is why we're no longer proceeding with it. i guess it and i have listened. secondly, we will keep an eye in grid on the nation's finances. i believe in fiscal responsibility, i believe in getting value for the taxpayer. i believe in sound money. and elaine state, i remember my shock opening my 1st paycheck to see how much money the tax man had
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taken out. i know this feeling is replicated across the country. and now we must always be careful with tax payers. money is why this government will always be fiscally responsible. we. * are in extraordinary times, it would have been wrong not to have preceded rapidly with our energy and tax plan . i am clear, we cannot pay the way to sustainable economic growth without fiscal responsibility . so we will bring down that as a proportion of our national income. oh, we'll saying rising interest rates worldwide in the way,
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could putin's war and coded the federal reserve has been hiking, rates in america, and a signal ball rises to come. inflation is high across the world's major economies. we will do what we can as a government to support homeowners, such as cutting stop duty. but it's right, the interest rates are independently set by the bank of england, and the politicians do not decide on this. the chancellor and the governor will keep closely coordinating our monetary and fiscal policy and the chances are and i, i will complete lock step on this. hopefully we will drive economic reform use to build our country for a new era. we're taking a new approach based on what is worked before. previously we face barriers to
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growth like militant unions, nationalized industries, an outdated city regulation. now we must break down the barriers to growth, builds up in our system over decades. decisions take too long, buttons on businesses, a team high infrastructure projects get delayed for years and years and years. as a result, we've seen economic growth check. houses haven't been built where they and needed a wanted. and we've become of us as a nation to doing things differently. i love business. i love and surprise. i love people who take responsibility, start their own businesses and invest they generate from it, they create new jobs and they power all success. and i want to see more of that.
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that's why we will back business to the hilt. we're cutting taxes, we're simplifying red tape to help businesses realize their ambitions and listen to our new investment, things we'll do, helping us level up across the country. we're going to be inspired by the great hubs of industry like whole bill here in the west midlands. and that whole savings in places like care and around the country will deliver. we will to create designs in england, scotland, wales, and northern ireland. now is the time to harness the power of free enterprise to transform our country and show that our greatest days lie ahead. this is the united kingdom of his best working together and getting our economy growing. and we will face down the separatists. he threatened to pull apart our
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precious union, our family next year we will have the global investment summit. this will show the, well, the top investors. there's no, we're better to invest than the u. k. and we're seizing the new found freedoms outside the european union. where the party who got great sit down and we will realize on the promise of grants that we're building an economy, which makes the most of the huge opportunities breaks it offers by the end of the year. all you read say will be consigned to history.
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and we will ensure that regulation is pro business and pro growth leaving the you gives us a chance to do things differently and we need more of that. that's why i had a coming weeks, my team of ministers, or set out more about what we're going to do to get rich and moving. will make it easier to build homes to afford child care and to get super bowl bad will help you set up your own business and get a mobile phone signal wherever you are in the country. we are in full time, but i want you to know that day in day out. i'm thinking about how we get this country moving. i'm working flat out to make sure people can get through this crisis. so let me be clear,
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we have your back. that is why the government took decisive action to tackle the energy crisis is why we're pushing ahead with our plan for growth. economic growth makes life better and easier for everyone and it will level up our country. i know this is what people want to see. economic growth will mean that we can afford great public services such as schools, the police and the n h s. all fantastic deputy prime minister and health secretary will deliver for patients. so they can expect a g p appointment within 2 weeks. she will ensure that those who need urgent care will be seen on the same day
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and she will get our balances on their foster and she will improve a any to the game. oh. 7 0, and he almost to say you can so everyone gets the cath daily. daily, that same speech that very sure i have say, mistrust. that boy by her party faithful, the british prime minister addressing or the conservative party conference. although the speech was interrupted by interrupted by an environment protested from rad greenpeace stormy days, she said, these are in tough times. we need to step up. she's determined to get britain
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moving. that is driven by her firm belief in the british people she. so i fought to get where i am today. i know how it feels to have your potential dismissed. i stand before you as the 1st british prime minister to attended a comprehensive watch, a state school in britain. i know we can do better, and we must do better. she said, we are doing more to protect people from the energy crisis than any other country in europe. i know that a lot of people that will take issue with that. we need to fund the furthest behind 1st, on taxes. she said that cutting taxes is white, morally and economically. however, her government will always be fiscally responsible, responsible, and will bring down debt as a proportion of g d. p. and we will realize the promise of briggs that she said, let's bring it out. there is a port brennan then who was listening to that speech? he's at the conference in breton. will that be enough? do you think, paul, to win back the party faithful to win them around?
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well, it's always difficult to say that the party faithful, that a here are inside that hall on those certainly endeavor to speak to them as soon as that speech finishes. i think we're in the final straits of the speech at the moment. all the grabbing as many people as we possibly can afterwards, but she suddenly hitting all the correct touch stones. you know, you the humanity, for example. she said july, i understand your fears. i share your fears, i get the same fears she portrayed herself as you mentioned there as the 1st prime minister to have gone through a comprehensive stool, a school of state school in texas star contrast to so many prime ministers and senior politicians in the past. who have gone to private schools, eaten oxford, those got psych eaten and other independence private schools. and she was also hitting the economic points that we talked about before. the speech the briefings were correct in the sense that she was saying that there will be pain. there will be disruption, but that's a can effectively she's portraying it as natural consequence of the change that she
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says is so necessary for the u. k. at to long she said the u. k. had languished with low growth and this chick up the back side essentially is what she believes is necessary for britain. ah, that will be difficulties. she spoke about it as a tempest and she said that she would see britain through the tempest. but yet a recognition of the the difficulties, but in effect what she is arguing is that the ends justify the means. okay, paul, i know ill continue to listen on that. we'll be back with you a little later of a further analysis many thanks paul burnett. at the conservative party conference in birmingham russia as president vladimir putin aside into law, the annexation of 4 ukrainian regions a week of the separatist referendums that keep at its allies called a sham. but the kremlin now controls less of those regions that it did when the votes were held. there's
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a lot of areas that russia says that it's annex these are the 4 regions that voted in those referendums at a joint. russia, the area in red showing what russian forces are now in control of moscow says that all of done ask andrew hans will be part of its federation, even though it's not in full control of those provinces. as for cason and zapora gea further south, many areas outside moscow's control and a kremlin has yet to clarify what exactly it's claiming to will you enough yet. the ukrainian army is carrying out a pretty fast and powerful advance in the south of our country as part of the current offensive operation. thus, dozens of settlements have already been liberated from the russian sham referendum . this week alone is in the course on reaching him the cock, heave reason to hands and don't ask. reasons altogether says that our warriors do not stomach us, and it's only a matter of time before we oust the occupier from our land. here let's go live, not who ukraine's capital key val 0. we're a challenge as their rory,
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we've seen ukrainian forces making significant progress in both the northeast of the country and the south. why have they been able to make such a dent in russian hill territory? well, ever since the united states began supply ukraine with precision strike capability systems like high mas unexcused, a shells, the ukrainians have been using these to, to strike target deep behind russian line. things like ama dumps command centers and bridges. this added to russia's acute man power shortages after 7 months of casualty. heavy fighting means that the russians essentially have culminated what is combination. well, it's a miniature concept which basically describes the points at which your army is so exhausted that it cons advance any further. what that means is that the ukrainians now have the initiative and other military concepts,
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which means you get to dictate what happens on the battlefield, where when and how and the ukrainians a using this very well. they are keeping the russians guessing about where they're going to strike next. mostly be northern. so it might be in the northeast of the country and a cock if that's why we've seen the kind of russian collapses in certain sections of the, from the russians. just don't know where the ukrainians are gonna hit them next. and even when they do know that week now, and they don't really have the defenses to be able to stop it. does it mean that there are the guardians, can keep on advancing indefinitely? will probably not, we've got winds coming, the conditions on the battlefield are going to be getting worse and worse, multi ramaya that will slow things down. plus, we also have at some point, soon, the mobilized russian forces starting to get to the front on mass. so the credit is know that they have a window of opportunity at the moment. i'm trying to maximize it. don't worry,
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challenge, since the latest and from keith other to moscow. i'll just here is 100 bow. is there. russia been losing ground for weeks now? what is the reaction there in moscow? yes, adrian little has been said with regard to this specific subject so far except that they'll talk about nato being involved in this operation. the russians are no longer fighting, only that you can unions. they are talking about mercenary armies involved and the sophisticated weapons being supplied by the west. there are many questions asked creating the streets and even by journalists and on t v screens, even on russian official tv screens, debates talking about these retreats, not understanding what's going on. so to these questions, there is a lot of expectation, but the higher command here,
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russia should respond to that earlier today, the criminal spokesman bitterly pest cove was asked by journalists whether the operation, the status of the operation as she will change. because there have been rumors about this over the last couple of days. so far there is no change in, in, in the, in that a she, me of the operation. because the room has talked about a change from special military operation into a counter counter terrorism operation. he said that he's that there are 2 of the of the, of the, of the command, a chief as zeros. muhammad vall, our lives in mosque of many thanks. monmouth, in eastern ukraine, keeps forces of pushing forward after the capture of the town of lima. and last week, shall stratford is there in the don't ask region where he met one of the units that's part of the counter offensive. the drive to tank positions on the eastern
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front is often along muddy isolated roads hidden in the forest. under wet autumn leaves, we find ukrainian soldiers with the 5th assault tank regiment tanks here who be vital preventing a russian advance as ukrainian troops continue a counter offensive that has recently taken thousands of square kilometers from russian forces. the forest will offer less cover from russian drones and as strikes in the coming weeks and months. heavy machine gunfire echoes through the trees throng of the final preparations. the signal to move is given the near full to year old t 72 tank moves out from under the trees. it's a 5 minute drive to it's firing position, exposing the crew to russia. we follow it to a nearby field and within
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a minute the tell tale winding sales signal. it will fire in seconds. a minute later, a 2nd blast for the tank has moved into its operating position. we understand that they are firing a russian positions about 3 kilometers from here. the tanks, operating here are part of a wider counter offensive in the east. that is seen great success in recent weeks. time now is of the essence moved back into color before russian forces locate the following position and reply this tank. a soldier tells us, is one of around a 100 that russian soldiers abandoned. in the past month when they fled, the ongoing ukrainian army advanced. suddenly, the sound of a jet fighter approaching we struggled to see it through the
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leaves, apart with its screams of the head. alexander says he has a wife and child waiting for him when the war is over. but he doesn't know when that will be. we are here for another one on our role as a tank regimen is very important because we are preventing russian forces from moving forward as our troops advanced. bicola tells me he's not worried about the possibility of a push by thousands of new russian conscripts as part of russian president vladimir putin. so called partial mobilization. don't matter. how many men they, they bring to it don't matter for us. our mashing guns can shoot what kind of father on the minutes if you shoot 5 or 50, i don't think our machine gun us will be tired. ukrainian military says it's
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winning back territory in the east bit by bit day by day. so far. evidence on the battlefield, at least, suggests moscow's military response is yet to come. cha, stuff, al jazeera, eastern grade, or some european countries of clothes that borders for russian tourists, others like germany or offering those who refused to fight a chance to apply for asylum. more than 60000 russians entered the e u, and the week after president vladimir putin announced a partial mobilization step. faster reports from berlin. constantine talk was cross the border from st. petersburg to finland. 2 days after flattered me, put in mobilization order, just before the country decided to stop russians with 2 as fees, as from entering. we'd personally, whenever supported this was our garden today. anyways, nicholas vision was like a final push for us. ideally we want to go to
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newton lance because that's where people like us would feel comfortable because of sanctions. it's been difficult for russians to enter the european union. hundreds of thousands have gone to georgia. turkey or carfax done. the german government offered russians who don't want to fight in ukraine, the option of applying for asylum. if you would have to join a war at which you would have to come into crimes against humanity. and you don't want that and you leave and you would be highly punished then also that is the ground for protection in europe as a whole. not only in germany, europe is divided on how to treat the many thousands of russians who are leaving the country. now to run the risk of being sent to you, great to fight some countries like germany and france, see the departure as an opportunity to we can put in finland and the baltic state
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say they're worried about security. mark homan called left russia at the start of the war last february, and applied for asylum in germany. he wants europe against offering russians asylum, in part because germany is now housing more than 1000000 ukrainian refugees. problem is that most of them as you pro russian people and what they will do, they will fight with the cranium. they will fight with the europeans. but those who come, they need to go through a very, very strict process of her distinguishing who you are. constantine understands the concerns but appeals to europe to let the russians enter. i would think that if europe would allow this to be an shoot or loss for russia and maybe put in origin and hbo in cape house on this war and trying to come up with a unified response,
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the european commission sat claims for asylum must be considered on a case by case basis, that called on airlines and border agents to thoroughly check all russians wanting to travel to europe. step, fasten al jazeera berlin, the u. s. south korea and japan are conducting military drills in response to north korea's missile launch on tuesday. the u. s. navy is flagship aircraft carrier headed to the sea of japan for training with the south koreans, us fighter jets of also carried out drills with japan young's nuclear capable ballistic missile was the 1st to fly over japan in 5 years. will ru tensioners help to focus attention on the demilitarized zone, running 250 kilometers across the korean peninsula. the d. m. z acts as a buffer between the 2 sides that are still technically at war. it's also a big draw for visitors, rama bryan took a military guided tour into the area the truce village, japan man john where the signing of the armistice and did the korean war nearly 70
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years ago. it's a good barometer of the current mood on the korean peninsula. when we visited 3 years ago, border guards and tourists were clearly visible on the north korean side. to day, no one as the north has virtually cut itself off from the outside world. since the start of the pandemic, even more recently than what i have not even seen, the commercial building with the demarcation line that leaders stepped across amidst summit diplomacy hopes 3 years ago. now weeds grow on the northern side of it and in 2019 the military dispensed with their weapons and helmets. in a further sign of improving relations with the hopes, soldiers from both sides of the line would be able to mingle freely to day. that still hasn't happened where they were never able to come to an agreement on that. so that did not one of developing all the only signs of life on the northern side farm workers in distant fields. but on the southern side with restrictions because
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of the pandemic and the fear of swine flu being lifted, this border area is accessible once more, as one of the world's most heavily fortified borders. the dmc continues to fascinate and people are expected to come back once more in large numbers, just as relations across this divide into an you and unpredictable phase. for some that the attraction of such a hot border, new hiking trails have been created. a new observation post has been opened for visitors to peer into the north. a new attractions like this cable car offers rides into previously restricted areas. once you've signed an agreement to stick by the rules, a ride to spend time in the middle of the mine fields on a tense border. that current developments seem to ensure will keep up the tension levels. rob mcbride al jazeera on the demilitarized zone, that she has nobel prize for chemistry has been announced to was awarded to carolyn
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bazzi, our morton, mehldau, and berries sharp lost, the trio being recognized for discovering technologies that help with building molecular compounds. a price for chemistry fall as those for medicine and physics, which were announced earlier this week. let's go live to stockholm and there was poor reese, is there another trio of prize? wonderful. yes, i did. and we never know we'll have any i day really. who's going to win these prizes before it's announced? there are certain things we look out for when the announcement is made. one, whether a woman will actually win this prize before to day. it was only 7 women against a $190.00 men. we also looked to see if as a repeat winner, before that i only one person had ever won this prize twice. and we look to see if these are recent breakthroughs and really we've got all 3 carolyn at the top, se, becoming only the 8th woman's when this prize,
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barry shop las getting his 2nd nobel prize. and this, at this research that they've pioneered is quite recent in the last 20 years and it's still being developed now. it's all about clicking. it's how molecules are joined together. much like you might joined together 2 straps on a rucksack with a buckle, it was buried shop las who 1st coined the term click chemistry and around 2000 to join monic molecules together in this fashion. and he and morton mailed all then and developed it. so could be done faster using copper and then a betsy took it to a new level, making sure that it could be used in biological processes without affecting at the living organism. now if we could bring in urine or christ, who is the chair of the nobel committee? hey, installed home. now you're on. you've described this as a real revolution,
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but what's the, what's the practical uses for this technology? well, since theory concept, the click chemistry is based on them making molecules by putting together building blocks you can, you can build are very complex molecules by, you know, assembling different types of building blocks. and you can them, for example, make polymers. you can make your drug molecules in this building block manner. it's almost like legal, you know, you're put pieces together and read the made pieces together and you can make new materials modify surfaces on materials. so they are enormous mansell applications and also in the biological area, which is for totes, is to look in follow biological molecules in real time. if you're touch glowing or shining molecules to them. so that are big. their big area has become
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urine or quest from the nobel committee at the chair of the nobel committee. here. adrian, as you mentioned, we've all already had some of the prizes. we're going to have a literature here in stock home tomorrow than the pace prize in oslo back half economics. but for the chemistry prize, a revolution that started just with a little click for a sliver in stockholm, and in fact paul, 5 for sport, his sorrow. thanks very much. i jam or new york yankees star are in judges. made baseball history after setting a new american big record for home runs in a single season. ah, we could only 62nd time or the year came against the texas rangers on tuesday, just breaks the league record set by roger maris 61 years ago. he's only disappointed, though that the moment came during an away game. would have been great to do it at
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yankee stadium in front of our home fans, but i know a lot of their yankee fans, the trouble they travel. well, there's a lot of yankee fancier tonight and, you know, get a chance to share that experience with the fans and, you know, that's, that's what it's about for me. well, the atlanta braves are also celebrating after the team clinched their fist consecutive national league east title. the moment came when kennedy jensen recorded his 41st save in there 21. when at the miami mullins, it gave the brains the game victory. they needed to be certain of finishing above the new york mets in the divisional championship. i'm moving on to inter milan. they may be struggling and it's the syria, but they sure sprung a surprise to barcelona and the champions league group stage, turkish international high conchella. no, lou got the only goal in the match at the sand. pharaoh in 1st half, still pitched time after break, foster thought they'd got an equalizer, but pedigrees, effort was ruled out over a half ball in the build up. you can see it then. now that's
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a 2nd defeat in this competition for barcelona. who now sit 3rd in the group title table rather both into and bossa have plenty to do to. so by amena finishing top of the group, they made it 3 wins from 3 off to thrashing victoria pilsen, 5 mail at home. leroy san a. the star of the show with 2 goals for bion and in group a, the italian league leaders napoli laid down a big marker and amsterdam, they were 61. when is that ajax to keep up there, a 100 percent winning start? giovanni simeon e, rounding off a great night for his side. liverpool a 2nd in the table off to winning the old british clash with ranges. that ain't filled. trent, alexander arnold, set them on their way to a 2 nil when, which was wrapped up the 2nd hall from the penalties bought by no one other than mohammed philip. now this season, surprise package club, bruce have taken another big step towards the knockout stages
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a to know when over at let's co madrid kept up their perfect thought to the competition for toby by eleven's cousin in the other group for the moment. let's o sports and now, but i will be back in a few hours. you will indeed survey thanks data 1300 hours gmc saw and i will get back past the full time whistle for this news hour. but tom will be back, should kick off another half an hour to use it just a moment. sorry about the lights. ah mm hm. frank assessments, if the united states felt that you're running a good program, was there to build
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a nuclear weapon they would assign to view by informed opinions. i believe that armenia and other virginia should have bilateral negotiations. we've been holding that for many times. critical debate is the commonwealth now still something that king charles will take on in depth analysis of the data global headlines inside story on al jazeera. which side is winning chaos or control guy? what does the new forever proxy war mean for america and nato? as long as americans keep consuming prices are going to keep going up. why didn't joe biden, the inflation comic? how did we get so much raw? the quizzical look at us politics. the bottom line. the u. s. is always of interest to people. all right, the world people pay attention to what we're doing here and i'll just, he was very good at bringing the news to the world from here. ah.
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