tv The Stream Al Jazeera October 6, 2022 10:30pm-11:01pm AST
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then, but the door is being opened to more female writers. the swedish academy has given itself the task of awarding nobel prizes to a wide range of authors, fewer to the western world, and more to women. but to really get optically of the statistics historically appear catastrophic that we can't put right. what happened in the 19 hundred's. they weren't many female researches then. but now we're on the way to a balance, and we don't have to strain ourselves. it's natural to go in that direction nor come no expect to. so more of her books, at least here in stock home, where there was a rush on for the works of last year's winner. townsend is abdul rosin garner? math office? do sales go up? well, you could say a 1000 fold because they are often and no authors who, when, so it's from 0 to a 100, your orders as soon as is announced. that age, 82 l no, is the 1st french woman to receive this prize, but again, rewarded at last 48 years after her debut novel,
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paul reese al jazeera stock home. ah, look at the main stories now. at least 38 people, including 23 children, have been killed in a shooting a knife attack at a day care center. in the northeast of thailand, children were aged from 2 to 5 years old. most of them were stamped to death. the attack was a former policeman who was facing trial on drug charges after the shooting kill his wife and child at home or for killing himself. ukrainian authorities, 8 these 4 people have been killed in rush and strike on residential buildings in the southern city of zap or roger. the injured include a 3 year old, according to the regional governor, ukraine's foreign minister is accused russia deliberately striking civilians to so fear in law. the leave is of $44.00 european countries are in prague at a 1st meeting of the new summit and aimed at dress some of the pressing issues
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facing the continent, including the fall out of washes invasion of ukraine. leaders are discussing share challenges like migration security and the energy crisis. this meeting key, so it's still important. this would be the, the 1st one, and she'll be in puerto newton vitro. so we should assume, joined tenant, and refuse to serve challenge you soon will have your children to address. oh, which room to our to to improve the tro, parisha jordan lucian. no. the 2 or more more stability or security more more please. at least 18 people have been killed and 2 separate bo accidents in greece coast. god says one boat capsized off the island of less boss. it was carrying at least 40 people trying to migrate to europe. a 2nd incident happened further south in the island of cathedra. dozens of people, including many children, were rescued after a boat carrying up to a 100 people, hit rocks and sank in high winds. and india is
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testing samples of cough syrup produce for export by made in pharmaceuticals, off to the well health organizations that they would link to the deaths of $66.00 children in the gambia. the w. h chose that the deaths were from acute kidney injuries and lab sample show each of the 4 serves made by the indian company contains unacceptable amounts of contaminants those are the headlines this how the stream is the program coming up next, looking at attitudes inside russia to the ongoing war in ukraine. ah ah,
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i answered the ok. you're watching the stream president who, teens popularity ratings have remained very high. is the beginning of the russian invasion of ukraine that was back on february the 24th of this year. they remain high until he announced the drafting of 3300000 russian men. and then the popularity just dropped just the big. we spoke to some russians a little bit earlier. this is what they told us about that. and we come in the morning and among the 1st things that i did check, i'm going to use the most trad whole thing the taken. imagine though days is the partial liberalization of the country has become a general one. and my partner, my friends, will go to the so called special iteration, and i'm not even talking now about multiple arguments that have had with ms. barrons, because approach and lee, older generation support the actions of our president. and now me and
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men like me, young man like me, i have to very high or run out a freshman. and i know so many young men who already leave the country and it's sad. and now i actually and depression. i can find what i shouldn't do. a 100 vouch is reporting for audi 0 from moscow in russia. how many good have you? what are you seeing? what are you hearing from the russians that you've met so far? yes, i mean that i, since i have this, you know, double thinking about what's going on. on the one hand, the like the idea of a great osher that put in trying to sell to them. of course, the civilization that history and invincible washer,
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facing the west. they're trying to protect its values to protect its history and its future generations and so on. so they that, i mean at the call when you talk to them they, they, they like this idea. but when it comes to mobilizing their loved ones with the war, it's a different story. so they talk in these 2 in these 2 themes. you know, the one hand, they like put in a has some popularity. let's, let's say acknowledge that great popularity actually. now, but at the same time, as you said, you know, it's all, they don't like how the war is conducted. they don't even like the idea of invading another country. many of them tell you, ukraine is ayesha, it's part of russia. they talk about the shell history that russia rush actually began in ukraine in the key key that so on. they say all of this, but when it comes to the action of going, crossing the border and killing people to get territory at what many of them don't
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like that idea, particularly it becomes worse when they are personally asked to go and join us. those 2 people said and about them organization asked me, they also were very confused about it. i can go into the edition like i have one more thought i wanted to ask you about. and that was your ability to report freely . because at the very beginning of the russian invasion of ukraine, russians went, and now to call that invasion of war, it was a special military operation. how are you able to report on what is happening? quite honestly, before i came here, i was, i was a bit uncertain about how to go about this. i wasn't sure what to say, and i was hesitant. and when i came here, i got to know that things are not that difficult, at least for foreign reporters. i'm the only red line really i'm,
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i'm taught again and again here, the only red line is if you report on casualties along russian soldiers. and if you take that, we should take that not from the official source of the ministry of defense, the other daily briefing about the casualties and what's happening in the front line. never, never tried to do that because that sort of line list that us is ok. i beg of us. but i, if i was able to report everything to stay with you to analyze, to give my opinion and so on. sometimes, you know, in a very limited sense of the word, but, you know, to figure out what's going on and what the people say i'm, i'm a, val, thank you so much. joining us lie from moscow in russia, telling us some with the feeling down on the ground from what rush is a feeling about the russian evasion of ukraine today. thank you, man. it said i conversation. are russian sorry, hang on. what is happening in ukraine? the russian invasion, the special military operation, however you want to describe it. are they souring on that?
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here is a comment section. be part of today. shut donnie . i conversation stanislaus natalia, albert, thank you for being part of ashley today. santas lab, welcome. please introduce yourself to audience around the world. really sure most go. i'm stanislaw bishop, ph. d in political science and what you're at moscow said university it to happen italia, welcome, please say hello to our audience around the world. hello, my name is natalia and i am president and founder of russia foundation. good to have you and albert, welcome to the stream. please introduce yourself to audience. hello, i'm a good time for my students. and so if it's a book and now i'm a runaway or refugee or emigrant into ok. thank you albert natalie. i started off, i am just going to do a little recap status. laugh as to how we got from february,
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the 24th to where we all right now. so every 24th of course, was the date when russia invaded ukraine. and there was a lot of pro government sentiment that jumped up. russians were very happy. many of them go to september, the 21st, that's when president vladimir putin announces his pan to mobilize 300000 troops and then the timber cobra protest. this protest breaking out, of course, russia and men fleeing the country cuz they're worried that they're going to be draft a status lab. when you talk to the students that you teach, when you discuss what is happening in ukraine, all they keen on how president putin is doing and how the russian military is doing right now. what are you hearing? well, generally speaking, my students are mostly foreign students, mostly from china, by the way, so we're not discussing the current issues very deeply. but at the same time,
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of course, people feel certain uneasiness when asking me as a russian about the situation on the ground. and the general, of course, students are what they are, they want peace and they don't understand why the conflict between russia and ukraine could not be ended through diplomatic negotiations. so they just don't know. i do not understand why in the 21st century, we have to go to war or to special lives, reparation to decide our issues that, that the general point and about the, the current mood, let's say of the russians today. well, as margaret thatcher say, they're sad, there is no such thing as a society, right? so there are individual man, women and families. the same applies to russia. so some people back in february,
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they applauded. the idea of was launching the special needs reparation. but there were other people like myself who were really perplexed because i didn't see any good outcome for, for this, for, for these, for these convene, you know, because i'm to pro ukrainian big, but because i'm for russian. so for russia and as my country, i don't see, and still i still do not see good outcomes for rush natalia, we have fewer who are watching right now and they have questions and thoughts. i'm going to share a couple of them with you. so this one comes from one of our viewers who says finally, russians are starting to realize that expansion is, was a thing of the past and only bring misery for both the attacking country and the defending country. that's an opinion for somebody who's been following what's been happening in russia and ukraine. italia, what are your thoughts?
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well, 1st of all, i think that the important to call things as they are and ration in regional re grading didn't start on february 24th of your pocket in for 1014. and we had an extension of what happened on february 24th was just the in you stage of this war who came invasion of grain. and it's also important to understand that there are products that are opted in ration not just optimization, wasn't the sample box all this year, especially after the full scale invasion rations lip assessing almost every day. there was only one day or 2, but then for june 15th, when no one was detained for, and i will protest. and that even before my applications had dug them for thousands of people in jail, just so i was the, with the head to the hundreds of thousands, the rush and fled russia before again, this model is ation. on september 21. that was,
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it was there. if russia heard the printer for the moment, because again, there was a lot of support from the war who didn't care what was happening because it is because again, those with them to the war were mostly for us. the region for russia mostly a national public. so many russians didn't feel impact of the war, but when we started to, in fact, everybody of the family of 43 nation happening is now bigger, we have the most or even bigger brought us. 6 even more locations, emergency vacations from russia, this 2 weeks i'll but i will be listening to, to russian reserve if they've been caught up to serve. and they seem quite happy about being caught up and being drafted. let me play the comments 1st of all
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and then i'd really like to hear why you decided you didn't want to fight for your country. they have listened to the service. it means it must be like this because president putin has already answered this question. if he ordered mobile is ation, not a total, but a partial one, it means everything is not that scary. it means he knows what he's doing. he's a clever person. only fit up the full speed ahead for mother russia. this way, there is no fear any more. listen you albert, so you served in the army, you were formerly in the army, but you decided you were going to leave russia. so you don't get drafted in again. why? if after after being brought to the army 10 years ago, and after all my negative experience in the russian army, i became a political activists in the and to them in the beginning of the 20 and
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2012. and so so it's the experience. so the army and the experience of the faith volumes that i suffered in, in this, an army, a made me made me a political activist. and so in the, in the 2020, to their reaction. my reaction as we can use the lift liberal was of those. and so if you consider the president is a dictator, you see you consider as you'll state as a repressive state, repressed of for all form for the whole people. so that the war that was launched by the state and by this president the you, you see it is a criminal war in which you don't want to take part. i'm going to show
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up the popularity ratings of president putin as they've changed from august all the way through to september. i'm going to show this for you so you can see it at home or wherever you're viewing from. so is the country going in the right direction? 67 percent? yes, 60 percent. not so much. this is after the draft was announced. do you approve of putins activities as present? 83 percent? yes. in august. 77 percent. not so much in september. these ratings are still high, sanisha have why? well, 1st of all, we're speaking about a tiny percentage of the population who actually agreed to answer these questions actually in these times because to the best of my knowledge, it's about maybe only one or 2 in 10 persons. so about 20 percent just agreed to answer. and of course, if we agreed to answer and they are,
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let's say cognizant or if they're afraid that they can make it wrong. so to speak, answers. so the percentage of those who say that they support the current government or in sections, i mean it's, it gives us some would distorted picture of course, of reality at the same time. if we do not see too much protests nowadays doesn't, doesn't mean that people once again, applaud what's going on. because back into d, i mean let's, let's face it during this of the, most of the period of this millage reparation. it was waged on the russian side by the professionals. maybe that's why it's called special, needed reparation. so special guys did the job, right. and so many people were basically opposed to to, to these a conflict they still remained in russia proper and didn't,
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didn't want to, to flee because they were against the but still it did not effect their lives so much. but when these a partial normalization was announced, or stay, the be relied that now it's, it's their problem and not the problem of military professionals and at the same time for, for some, it gave teacher that something may be going not according to the original plan, right? if you have to draft more people to the army than well, something is maybe something is changing in the general attitude of the russian authorities on how to wage these nodes reparation and how to, how to win it if it's possible. of course, i completely agree with that. yes, it's very difficult to trust the opinion polls, especially when you have repressed as much of the country as a denial of
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a question about the war or support to the gramlin geno. ah, it's much higher than the prior to the invasion. and the as i said, the project immediately the see a lot of activity that people do in on the ground that i love the derailing train for the computer center on fire. just a lot of ethnic minority groups appear to started to are in for inform the community about this the war and trying to explain how to terminate the contracts. how to avoid members ation like that because never had such a vibrant ethnic minority community it because marcia is muslim, they live on time zone conference. but there's also because over 190 minority millennial to them i use as a can on for by the graham and sense we paid the chance of being sent to pain. if
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you ask them, republicans, what i'm higher than yard and region read what to do with you to die. and this for, for photo does ample sort of that person. somebody is 9 times more or less from divine than from just now 3 times. so our oldest regions, software more and the people they're doing much more to start to save the community . so we're still emitted vide, run the activity. and we spoke to alina and alina is the director of the nordic ukraine forum. she had a very particular clean to view on the russian men who decided that they would rather flee russia than be drafted. this is what she told us earlier. you are in the last month, there are thousands of people who live in the russia due to the mobility, zation and the country. they should stay in russia and europe shouldn't have opened
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the borders because this people have glorified before in ukraine. this people have protested when the genocide was going on in bullshit being. and so the only thing that made them go to the street and go to europe was the fact that they will be killed in this war. moreover, for europe, it is a security issue because this people have the imperial colonial consciousness and tomorrow they will be ask him to have the russian goals where they are now. they are not weak. jim's, they are those who need to stop the voice that their country has started out. we have a number of people online who are trying to work out what poaching strategy is. and as a former member of the military, you might be able to help us out a little bit. one viewer says the putting became overconfident because in georgia, things went his way. and then again in crimea. and he thought he could do it
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a 3rd time. again, returning to ukraine. do you think that's the military strategy? vanished fairly quickly where we're not expecting anybody to be upset about this for a move in where takeover didn't work that way. what do you think, how, but my, all my military experience, my army army experience had nothing to do with the military, with the army. it was just about washing. com. no. and so it was not, it was definitely the album you have about as much, much experience as the people in i you tube comment section. so that's what they would say. i would say you probably have more than they did. i was, i wasn't, i wasn't even allowed to to take her to take her rifle by her. i think i, he, i want to move on to another. so here son is laughing. this is really about the
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economic impact of what this special military operation the russian invasion of ukraine is having on russia. this is yvonne, she spoke to us a little bit earlier. there's been an ongoing debate as to whether western sanctions have been doing enough to hurt the russian economy. but with putins recent mobilization decree and legal annexation of for you, cranium territory. we ventured into a new phase of the war, where the russian economy will be directed toward prioritizing war time efforts. and the russian workforce is facing, at minimum, a, lots of hundreds of thousands of workers. this is occurring at the same time, the global energy prices are falling, the u as preparing to ban purchases of russian oil and the west is preparing new sanctions and an oil price cap against russia. all of this will likely undermine consumer confidence and a long term growth potential of the russian economy. i'm wondering kind of club is the impact of sanctions. is that now impacting how russians are feeling about
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war in ukraine? well 1st of all, just for the record, i completely disagree with the statement by the previous sticker. the ukrainian female was said that all the russians are responsible. so i think these are viewed is cannibalistic. so it's sceptical, i think so. and to return to your question, well, generally speaking, of course, nowadays the prices are not skyrocketing, right? so, but a lot of people just tend to buy less and to say more because they nowadays they cannot plan for, for the future. so they're horizons of planning. so to speak, they shrunk from let's say, a couple of years to a couple of weeks or a couple of days. that's the problem. moreover, when i ask those who are supporting the special major gratian i ask and simple
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question, do you release the glue? think than if we win this when this fight, the irregular russian people like us will live better and it will be more secure than the wood that when, when we lived, ah, becca, prior to the 24th of february. can you realistically say that this? oh, no repression will make us all more prosperous and more secure and fear. let's say that they are very uneasy in answering this question. they say something like, well, we don't know, it remains to be seen, but nobody said that, of course we'll, we'll live more ah, now happily and i will have more on prosperity. i want to bring a mosley scene tack conversation, and that is the voice of president putin who here is addressing government and
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suggesting that it's the west to is committing war and atrocities against russia rather than russia do not in ukraine. let's have a look at this, let's go say with me and i want to emphasize once again and precisely in its greed and in the intention to maintain its unlimited power. there are real reasons for the hybrid war that the collective west is waging against russia. they don't want freedom for us. they want to see us as a colony. they don't want equal co operation. but robbery. they want to see us not as a free society, but as a crowd of solace, slaves for them. what they see as a direct threat to them. our thought and philosophy therefore the encroach on to our philosophers, our culture, an art is a danger to them and therefore they are trying to ban it. our development and
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prosperity is also a threat to them. competition is growing, they don't need russia at all, but we need her so much going on or online on, are you chip comment? section t t, there's no peace until russians leave. every inch of you canyon territory. putin let the russian people will be drained of their wealth, and one more thought here. russia will pay the bill for the crimes committed against ukraine. and also russians are good people, is the presidency. that is the problem. so many thoughts going on hair on an online conversation, but thank you, stylus lab, natalia and albert for helping us explore what russians feeling about the ukraine invasion. at the moment. i'm watching everybody. i see next time the catch ah, ah,
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join me, mark them on hill as we take on the big issues from the state of democracy around the world to the struggles faced by the under represented. we will challenge the conventional wisdom up front on al jazeera, emergency services across bank. coke are receiving $60000.00 a snake related pulls a year. the reason why we found more snacks and houses, i trust, the aggressive expansion of the city. they don't have a choice because their natural habitat isn't there anymore. there's one place in the home to the city where they're welcome. they're coming out now with a king cobra, which is the largest venomous snakes in the world. this is one of the few places where they melt. the event of this is the red cross snake bomb. a regional hub to and t been in production below the center produces enough empty venom to most of south east asia. there are some parts of the world where supplies are desperately showed. ah.
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