tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera October 7, 2022 1:00pm-2:01pm AST
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this is al jazeera. ah. hello there, i'm miss darcy at hey, this is the news i live from our headquarters here in durham, coming up in the next 60 minutes. this is nobel peace prize as awarded to a jail that beller russian activist along with the russian and the ukranian human rights organization. they haven't made an outstanding effort to document war crimes, human rights abuses, and the abuse of power. should gas prices be kept? european union leaders hold talks on how to contain soaring energy costs. we report from ukraine's eastern town of buck much bird struggling to hold back a russian push. and thailand's prime minister visits the childcare center that was
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attacked on thursday in the nation's west mass shooting. i'm john gets rosco with the sports fans and argentina clash with police leaving at least one person dead and more than 100. fortunately, injured during a match involving the country's biggest team. ah, well we begin this news hour with this. he has no bell peace prize, which has been awarded to a jailed bell russian rights activist, the russian rights group, memorial and the ukranian center for civil liberties. alice b elliot ski has been leading a nearly 30 year campaign for the development of civil society in bel ruth. but he has been in prison since last year on tax evasion charges. memorial is one of russia's oldest human rights organizations. it was set up to uncover the abuses that were carried out in soviet era prisons. russia shop that group last year,
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and ukraine center for civil liberties was established in 2007 to promote human rights. they have for many years, promoted the right to criticized power and protect the fundamental rights of citizens. they have made an outstanding effort to document war crimes, human rights abuses, and the abuse of power. together they demonstrate the significance of civil society. poor peas and democracy allow gentle has worn out from osler, paris, ross anderson, the chairperson of the 5 person committee appointed by the norwegian parliament that makes this decision stopped speaking a short while ago. after taking some questions from the media. one individual to organization is named as the nobel peace, lawrence for 2022,
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mrs. rice. anderson saying that in challenging times it was felt appropriate to address the fact that we are in the midst of a war. not just a war with huge ramifications for all the people of europe, but also with global a global context in terms of nuclear threats and food shortages. she called it a bleak backdrop indeed that had of course, been suggestions ahead of this that a lot of his landscape ukrainian president might have been in the frame warranty, the ukrainian people, the committee instead has gone for these 3 individuals that mrs. brice allison said were chosen one individual and 2 groups for the work of all the men and women involved in them in 3 neighboring countries involved in this conflict to try and further the aims of human rights and of peace. well, let's bring in front via ciocca. he is a bell, russian opposition, politician and also the senior advisor to atlanta, to kind of scott, the leader of the bell russian democratic movement. franak is in paris and joins us
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now. live mister b a choke. i understand you joined the nobel committee and calling for mister b. l. yep, skis, release. now, how realistic do you think that is? so we didn't know that i will be at school will receive this price, but we are super, super at dish. this is the best person to receive this price because for many years, but as could begin the symbol of the global fight against tyranny. and for rights of ordinary people of rights of villaroo ships. he started his career as that freedom fighter against the soviet union in the eighty's, when he fought for religious independence. let you fault against lucretia, this regime she was in prison. and right now, she's finally recognized by novel commitee for this whole life dedicated to something. what the entire world called human rights. oh, let me ask you then about his potential release because we had the chair woman of the committee speaking about how she hopes that might happen, but wasn't optimistic about it. how do you feel?
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i'm sure i list bernacki and 1000 the father political prisoners were in jail right now. they will be released in order to release polanski. we should hold more pressure on the resume. more sanctions, more restrictions and location can butcher. this is the only way, because nor will commitee, they recognize bernacki also because they wanted to raise awareness around him and their own. he's important working billers, but of course, lucas younger himself. he will not release bernacki on the because of mobile prices . now it is bernacki became even bigger and the me from shanker because he is recognizing this in more than the work. well, the chairwoman of the committee when she spoke about their choice also said she wanted to highlight links between these 3 countries. been talking about how do you feel as relationships? i think bellingers and your brain are in the same fight. they're in the same boat. they're fighting for their freedom for freedom of their people and for independence
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because pollutants, russia, the doesn't recognize the very existence of the others and your brain. it doesn't want our society dish to beat them all, or it could be free. they don't want human rights to exist at all. they don't think that human rights moss, discuss the toll and memorial, the organization, which is working in russia, which used to work in russia. that's another example of resistance to put in despite all the fear, all the terror of putting russia, these brave people from the morial, they reminded about depression and about human rights. you speak about ukraine and better is being in a similar position. now obviously the price is being awarded at the moment within the context of the war. a new cran. how is that shifted things on the ground for you and batteries? the law has changed everything right now we are fight in love just for our free elections in the morrison. we are fighting for our state would because russian
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troops, i'm jealous barrett or if they're on the south and they are launching me sales every month on ukrainian. see this? because lucas shameka, he's that puppet of fusion. and he base his that back to put him in 2020 lucas hancock corregidor, brutally correct. on the uprising nation, fortune came to beatrice to support looper. shanker. with money, with people with soldiers and the right now they are interconnected, they're in the same team and that boss for the world and the best for ability since historically, these 2 bloody dictators under the ask iraq be asked united states and the world to put balance and ukraine and our fight for freedom on the top of the agenda. well, you say it's part of a broader fight, but i want to focus 15 minutes here on better. it's now given that much of the better russian political opposition right now is either in jail or an exile. where do you see the movement? now, what are your expectations going forward? i think the movement is united right now. all the demographic forces united,
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their own step law, much mosca, who is the lead in figure. and one election she went at went, she agreed with united transition cabinets sort of government in exile. and we want to greg the elite people around progression guy. we want to show them, don't be with this crazy guy and borrower change of the bright side joint joined the democratic movement. and now when students troops are leaving ukraine were doing this weekend im wickersham, case, wicked in as well. there is a new window of opportunity to for us, but we need to be united to be strong. and we need to of course, i believe we have lost mr via ciocca there. and, but let's move on because another woody is the ukranian organization, the center for civil liberties had out on me and joins us now from ukrainian city of the ne pro. i can you give us a bit of background here on, on the sense of the civil liberties? well, it is an organization that was created back in 2007 and at the beginning,
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really their role was more or less like any human rights organization, which is monitoring law, enforcers, enforcement agencies, the judicial, local authorities to make sure that they were complied in compliance with human rights. now that changed back in 2014, during the year, my dad protest that led to the conflict. we are in add a de moment. they started investigating crimes committed more than a 100 people had died. when the former president of the den president, victoria nicole, which was ousted and fled to russia, and since they have been also a investigating political persecution, for example, in crimea next peninsula, that was the next back in 2014. there also are, have been investigating war crime and they don't boss. and that actually they stepped up all of that since this conflict started back in february and had
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a given all of that. how challenging is that document war crimes now while fighting is ongoing, man, well, you claim has been actually been a very adamant of investigating war crimes during the conflicts at very high risk, sometimes for those investigators that you find on the ground. but date has been cataloging everything they found so far. the general prosecutor said there's more than $30000.00 cases and that's on the increase. we've seen them in the field each time the is a village or a town. we captured the 1st people in just after the soldiers, all these war crime investigators are these and gino's who are helping in decay in building the case. we're also talking and interviewing people, trying to figure out, had there been torture cases, had there been execution cases?
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what has been going on and they do that meticulously in every village in every town that has been liberated as you have the big cases like what we have seen those mass graves, north of keep in boucher. but you also have a smaller cases that happened in the villages, bodies that are buried by the side of the road or in a backyard that often. and i've seen that happen when they exude them, they tune them around and they find that that bullet was shot in the back of the head of the person. so everything is being catalog. and at some point, ukraine is very confident that it will have a very strong case against russia. what other made that with that reaction for us from the ne pro, thank you so much water. well, let's get the view from moscow. now the group memorial that has said that winning the nobel peace prize award was recognition of its human rights work in russia. non val joins us now from moscow. i know the committee says they weren't addressing
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person directly with this prize, but i imagine he has some opinions about their choice. while it searches early to gauge the, your reactions here in moscow about this service to what's already known is that this is not the predictably going to be seen favorably here in mall score. because this is the 2nd year in a row. when a russian or organization or, or individual who is not well seen by the government has this nobel prize last year, it was dmitri more out of the founder of an o via gazette, a journalist who's seen here as a dissident. so this also comes in the framework of the war that is going on, and russia, seeing the nobel committee as a, a partial in the, in the, in it's in its decisions. this sir, the memorial was founded basically during the last years of the soviet union,
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iraq and it used to document the human rights abuses during the soviet to e. r. until, until, until recently used to the that used to announce the names of victims in the red square, if a year or by ill. so it's not favorably seen here. russia and that company did last year in a decision by the high court to liquidate the organization. on the basis or, or on the accusation that they violated the requirements or did not meet the requirements of the so called law on foreign agents. so at that organization is not functioning in russia anymore. and this granting of the prize to them must be seen here in moscow. i'm just, you know, but assuming it must be seen here moscow as just another act, or just another element, or added to what is going on in the west against russia. every, every individual or organization that is seen as you know, a gazed russian interests is awarded and, and,
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and encouraged in the west. none of our that live with us from moscow. thank you so much ma'am. while they're still plenty more ahead, few this news hour, including pakistan. take stock of the damage and lives lost in record flooding and asks, what happens next? by some migrants living in south africa are taking the government to court. and they transport manchester united, it bounce back, following a nightmare loss against their crosstown rivals. ah, no european union leaders are meeting to tackle the continents energy crisis and the war in ukraine. friday's talks and prague are expected to focus on securing energy supplies as winter approaches. bills of thawed as e u. countries slash supplies of russian gas. let's speak to step boss and she
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joins us now live from prague. so obviously plenty to discuss there today. can you talk us through the agenda? well, the main topic here will be the price of gas. if there's anything, all the $27.00 member member states agree on that, the price of gas has to go down. it's far too expensive. it is 4 times higher than last year, and 11 times higher than the year before, people are really struggling to pay to energy bills and companies are going bankrupt. but what they're not agreeing about is how to do this. it's been this suggesting of this price kept this maximum price of for gas, but is a real defined within to you about this. countries like germany than that. let's denmark, the richer country. so to say, are really worried about the supply of gas. if you put a maximum price on it, the other countries, the more poor country, so to speak of poland, italy, greece,
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they say this price kept is very necessary. otherwise their population simply can't cope with this price. so it's creating a real divide solidarity. it's really, it's at right now. so the president of the european commission was left on the layer really pointed out at the beginning of today that it's russia, the invasion and ukraine that brought europe in this position. so this is what she had to say at the start of the day. and as you prices are skyrocketing. but if you look over the last 7 months, you can see that russia has deliberately and systematically cuts the gas supply to the european union. but we've been able to compensate, we've been able to compensate with filling our storage as by 90 percent. now we're just trying to discuss how we can limit the peak and the energy prices at the manipulation of energy prices by step. there are a plethora proposals and seems to deal with the energy crisis and someone more
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contentious than others. yes, absolutely. there is this proposal, le bipolar and italy agrees and belgium to have some kind of fluctuating price gap . so to say, so a price cap, a maximum price for gas, but you can leave it alone basically if the supply of guys is running low. so this is a proposal is sort of a compromise that they're discussing today. but i just spoke to a dutch diplomat and he says, well, this proposal is interesting for the outlines, but we are not there yet because they're really worried if you put a max on the price of gas, that people simply are not going to limit their use of gas, and that's something that they really want to achieve here because otherwise this probably won't go away. so we're not expecting any solutions today, but there is hope that there will be more details about a common approach or common measures that they hope to take. and the next few weeks
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step and they're keeping an eye on this talk for us in prague. thanks so much step . well, as step just alluded to 15, you members of called for an e, you wide gas price cap. but others including germany and the netherlands, are opposed. so what are the options for the block? now, one of them is negotiating a so called corridor of prices, imports from suppliers like norway in the u. s. this involves having an upper and lower price limit, which will be lower than current rates. poland, belgian italy, and brief calling for a dynamic car at all, which will apply for all wholesale gas sales, not just lawyers agreed with main supplies. another proposal is a price kept specifically on gas used for generating electricity. spain and portugal have been trying since june, and germany for its past has gone ahead with a nearly 200000000000 dollar package to help businesses and consumers, but will subsidize the actual market price, which is very different from the capital. the actual price paid to supply as well. let's bring in hi may conjure use an editor at energy analysis company,
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energy intelligence, he's in london and joins us now from there. now i'm a number of options on the table that pros and cons reach. i want to start with the idea of subsidies, not really sounds very expensive. it is, it is quite expensive. that is true. the problem about subsidizing any kind of price of energy is that it incentivizes consumption that is pricing in the, in the free market. in the free liberalized market works like the stock market, a prices go up and down based on supply and demand. if you subsidize it, it means basically that you're allowed to, to consume more and that is one of the worries about not only the substance, the subsidies, but also any of the price comes on the table. well, if a price cap or subsidies could drive up consumption when supplies a low, how might that affect the entire energy crisis going forward?
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it's extremely important. so one of the things that we have to consider is that the crisis that we're in at the moment is a supply crisis. we are short of gas. think for many reasons. the main reason is that russia has reduce the amount of supply in the market is the more precipitated that of course, and therefore europe needs gas. so as mrs. wonder lie and said storage egg, natural gas storage facilities are quite high in this winter. but the question is, what will happen next winter? so we have a cold winter in the next few months that supply buffer will deplete. that means that europe needs to buy more gas in the summer in preparation for next winter. and there is the expectation that will be absolutely no gas and next year, just because of the escalation of the war. so if something is done to not allow
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that supply to come in, that is affecting the pricing mechanism to attract that gas into europe. then we will have a problem. well, let's talk about the idea of the price cap right now, then dynamic or otherwise. now we know moscow is already said that they won't sell their gas if any kind of a calf is implemented in various countries. so how realistic is a cap of any sort it's difficult to know. this is the, the proposals that have come out in the last few days are the closest that i think the public and the industry has known of these proposals. but one of these, the fears of some of the european countries, especially the ones that still are receiving natural natural gas from russia. country next, lakia for example, is that once these are implemented, the russia will say no more gas for you. and then it's, it will be a problem, but i mean another, another thing that's very important to,
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to understand is that the, the, the industry that is the energy industry and the traders that supply disgust, that allow disgust to come into europe. also need to be consulted and they are quite afraid that by interfering in the market a discuss will be able to come to europe so that europe ian union needs to be very clear. and he's to speak to the industry and a layout. it's proposes very clearly because at the moment there's a lot of uncertainty and a lot of a worry why widespread worry. because the detail of these proposals are not known at the show. well, within all of the politics, i believe, nor way is now the biggest gas supplies in the u. k. will began, does that change things if at all not necessarily. norway has been a big help for, for the european union, but norway cannot supply all the gas the europe needs. and the just the, the amount of gas that russia supply that is 4040 something percent last year. it's
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just too massive. so at the moment, the incremental volumes that europe has been receiving has been mostly from liquefied natural gas. that his gas in the global market comes by ships into europe . and that is the main worry in the market that if you do impose price cup and that is why there's also the talk about the dynamic price companies. you can move the, the cap can move with the market, let's say in order for price, for gas not to be priced out of the market. that is so that you can still be competitive with other bias or around the world such as asia. so at the moment, china, for example, if not buying gas, and that is really for europe, because that means that there's a liquefied natural gas available in the market. if there's a cold winter, if policy changes in china, where they eliminate, but the coven restrictions are currently in place. then europe will have to compete
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in price with a large by your world, such as china. but it's not only china, it's also japan. it's maria. so this is the worry of the worry of the market at the moment. indeed, a very challenging winter i had for your time a contra then editor at the energy analysis company, energy intelligence, speaking to us from london. thank you for sharing your expertise with us. i may are returning to the war, ukrainian authorities say at least 11 people have been killed, and russian strikes on residential buildings in the southern city of parisha, ukraine's foreign minister dmitri caliber has accused russia have deliberately striking civilians to so fear moscow claims to have a next, the region even though its forces do not control all of us. after retaking thousands of square kilometers encounter offensives in recent weeks, the ukrainian army is struggling to hold back a russian push on the eastern town of background. that's despite the use of sophisticated weapons from western allies. and there is charles stratford reports
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now from bartlett, that's in the denette, screeching. it's a deadly game of hide and seek looming cranes. houston frontline soldiers with the 26th artillery brigade will new with this 155 caliber german howitzer to which farm position russian forces are in the eastern outskirts of mood . the cannon is targeting russian supply and artillery positions beyond the town. it takes around 40 seconds for the shell to reach its target. the subject story is adjusted of the information from drones and spotters monitoring the target zone. this german mo ball howitzer has a range of around 30 kilometers. and it's weapons like this from the west that have
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given the ukrainians a fighting chance. back on the cover, the men load more charges and prepare to far again. my impression of i am not sure the sky, if your disease we are covering our troops who are defending buck boat because it is a key point. our task is the destruction of places where there is a concentration of manpower and batteries of firing positions. we walk out through feels crisscross with mud churned by ukrainian artillery tanks, pauses on the road to town. smoke rises seconds off to what we are told was a ukrainian and he missile system intercepting a russian rocket lines of ukrainian foot soldiers, head to positions nearby 9 mile normal in buff. moved explosions echoed through the near empty streets.
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here suddenly the scree of a jet fighter overhead with the air throwing all their forces at the town artillery air power. even helicopters are attacking our positions. they are approaching during night and day away and it's their elite units and mercenaries you leave. there are no regular russian troops left here. few people remain here. bookshelves and beds hang me their private lives. in summit personal places ripped apart. we are told to people remain buried under the rubble of this apartment block. thrown chest along a cheshire cheshire. the shelling never stopped z and i stay here to look after my mother. she is old and frail. things have gone a lot worse. wisdom weaponry has helped the ukrainian army wind back more territory
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in a month than russian forces took 5 for the defense of bar mood remains one of ukraine's biggest challenges on the east of line shall strafford al jazeera beaumont grand or meanwhile u. s. president joe biden has warned the wild is now at its greatest risk of nuclear armageddon since 1962 cuban missile crisis rushes present that i'm a person has made threats to you is tactical nuclear weapons in ukraine. biden says pearson is serious about using new care war fan face of russia's military setbacks . i'll still had here all. now does it take a look at what's going on at the london film festival? as filmmakers experiment with new technologies and it's going telling and, and for the son of a formula, one legend struggles to many the through this if we conditions with
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with it's been raining for days in eastern australia. however, one slow moving storms here, we'll chat about that in one sec, but 1st toward the west suns out in perth that allows your temperature to climb to 23 degrees. okay. these are slow moving storms across the east, stretching from central areas of queensland into central eastern portions of new south wales. are the past 24 hours sidney scooping up a 100 millimeters of rain. and we saw about 300000 lightning strikes across new south wales, of course. now sydney, you're in your what is steer on record? breaking a 72 year old record afternoon zealand. all of those weather alerts have been dropped, wins have shifted around temperatures are on the way up, but you can probably see this mess behind me. that's going to dance in to the south
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island as we head towards the start of the week. swooping in to the southern alps and the foothills off to southeast asia. we go and there is the risk of seeing some serious flooding in bangkok. authorities have warned in time getting striped with some pretty solid bands of rain, southern vietnam and southern cambodia. still some showers in the forecast across china's yangtze river valley in o for japan, that whites and wendy combo we had in tokyo. well, that's now out over the pacific, but still a bris northwest went that's it soon. a bit. ah, the british political with the labor party is a criminal conspiracy against its members. newly obtained documents reveal members silenced, suspended, and falstaff, mike gord, says unbelievable, and free speech was shot down an exclusive investigation. the labour
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files ought to, on al jazeera, a 3rd of the country is under water. more than 33000000, all suffering from hunger disease, and displacement. the word stories about children were drinking from the same water we did. khaki was floating al jazeera questions. the climate change play a role in the deadly down for climate change is here to speak with the full report pakistan the great deluge on al jazeera. oh, oh oh oh,
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hello again. you're watching al jazeera and i'm this tells you 10 dot huh. let's remind you about top stories, the salad, the nobel peace prize for 2022 has been awarded to a jail to beller russian rights activists and a russian and a ukrainian human rights organization. fellow russian allas, bailey upkeep, russia's memorial and the ukrainian organization. the center for civil liberties were hailed by the committee for the european union leaders all musing, to tackle the contents energy crisis and the war in ukraine. friday's talks and prague are expected to focus on securing energy supplies as winter approaches. meanwhile, ukrainian authorities say at least 11 people have been killed in russian strikes on, eventually buildings in the southern city. felicia. now thailand's prime minister, prior shallow cha, has visited a childcare center that was attacked on thursday. the nation is mourning the death of at least $37.00 people, including $23.00 children,
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flags across the country are flying at half staff. the motive is not yet known. tony chang has more now from long while ample. this is the area where the families have been waiting, in some cases for the last 24 hours initially, to find out the worst news. and since then, just to find out what's been going on. a lot of the raw emotion that we saw initially the, to the horror that's faded away. now there are like says her and some of you, we've spoken to just wondering why this happened around them has built up something of an enormous logistical operation. civil servants, government offices going through, taking names, trying to work out words, borders are attached to words found lose the horrible paperwork that has to be gone through with sitting alone here at the families asking themselves again and again
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the question, why did this happen? now the u. s. military says it's killed a senior eiffel member in syria, in the fast known american operation against the armed greek and a government controlled area. he was troops carried out a helicopter read near the village of commissioner on the northeastern border with trickier to other iso members. were also killed in a separate air strike in northern syria. and pakistan is still recovering from record flooding that killed $1700.00 people and cost nearly $40000000000.00. disease and damage to farming communities are prompted warnings of another disaster and the weeks and months to come. some of the debate reports now from jump sharyl food of buck, his son and daughter, the you and called it a monsoon unsteadily. this is floods draught, an unprecedented disaster being blamed on climate change. the economy was already
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in crisis and now the government is appealing for debt relief and urging more help from the global community. i don't think driven to make the 3040000000000 that i've lost but i think that, you know, there should be some measure of help whether it's the actual agency to give greater launch vargas on whether it's multiple, whether it's the country that i'm the right. some notion of august on take, you know, take the risk, you know, and then, you know, getting charged bangs to give us loans, give us preference. and vanity has been sent a memo by nature. and that mental is come via buck a son. and we waited a war against nature with burning up with our addiction to fossil fuels and no nature is regional water. now, these waters might proceed in a few weeks or months. but climate change is here to stay and millions of focused on ease at the risk of floods and router afraid that the world will once again
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forget about them and tell another one soon on steroids. the asian development bank has promised $2500000000.00 to help with rebuilding. the united nations has revised its humanitarian appeal for $81000000.00. but many in pakistan are questioning how aid is being distributed. if you send 100 plans under plans were big $1600.00 tons total them tons total them $500.00 pounds at the max. but our requirement is such just to give you an idea, almost 33000000 population is affected. we are grateful for that aid, but we did quite much more just to keep these people are fed. the size of the water is so huge that if this water was over there in portugal horn, portugal would be under water. horn ecuador would be under water. the color the stuart of the u. s. will be under water. the yuki would be under water and bad yuki nostrils, no town without water. everybody would be drowning in his water at 60 feet of water
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standing. so this is the kind of scale that with agriculture, education, health, roads, bridges, real, correct. everything has been effected, even if the government had the estimated $40000000000.00 to rebuild it could take years. and another monsoon season is just a few months away from the job down to 0 job short lancaster. and you can watch pakistan the great deluge on friday at 1630 gmc, and again, also at 330 gmc on saturday, here on out as air and meeting on and banks and lebanon. have once again closed their doors this time indefinitely, and follows a series of hold ups by customers trying to withdraw their own money. banks will continue urgent operations for businesses, but customer facing services will now be suspended. banks closed for about a week last month that we opened at the beginning of october to allow people to
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withdraw their salaries. an oil rich iraq, more than 30 percent of the population lives below the poverty line. unemployment is wide spread. many children don't go to school. some people are so desperate for income that they risk their lives in dangerous working environments. as mach whenever, why had found out when he went to visit a brick factory and output and eastern iraq smoke billowing from break factories adds a more pollution to iraq's already hazy skies. this is dangerous work using primitive methods. but it's the only way many here can make ends meet abdul leaf used to be a far more inhaler south of baghdad, but water shortages forcing him to move his family to old coot. yeah, i do believe i got the letter ahead. is that a gosh?
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well, work from 1 am until 11 am and again have one in the afternoon until 6 pm, 3 of my children working with me. we each make about $5.00 a day, but food is so expensive and he said has done nothing for us. we're so frustrated, you're hecky and i had to have an an hour every day whether it's the scorching heat of summer or the icy cold of winter men, women and even children spend long hours molding loading and pulling piles of bricks. then stocking them in neat rows, hundreds of people from underprivileged communities come here, turn a living. they do not have legal rights or employee benefits, such as hazards, pay. they do not get protective gear. and there are no health or safety regulations . some develop chronic diseases including asthma as a result of prolonged exposure,
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the smoke dusts. the riskiest the step is the firing. temperatures in these incinerators can reach out to a 1000 degrees celsius. workers have to stand close by to make sure the bricks are the same color. at best, jabber has a degree in economics, but after graduating he couldn't find a job. now he spent 3 weeks a month operating incinerators for up to 8 hours a day. about one killing of tires in the bottom or diesel on them and set them alive. i have to move around these blazing holes over the incinerator to make sure they are all working. we have no choice. we either do this job or stay at home and earn nothing again. i don't want you to have lena. it's a break time. in the factory compound, this is the only shelter,
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but at least it's quite please for his sick wife to rest. abu says, the workers say they're forced to accept these conditions if they want a living. every day, they work hard to make bricks for other people's houses, hoping that one day, they have homes of their own modem through a heat, al jazeera, and coot, eastern iraq. now people in the southern african country of le suitor are voting in a general election after years there of political instability, the outgoing deputy prime minister from the ruling party. the alba, sir, to convention, is running against rivals from the centre left democratic congress and the newly formed revolution for past prosperity. all candidates are hoping to tackle higher unemployment and crime while across the borders and bar. when migrants who live and work in south africa are taking the government there to course for plans to
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terminate their stay, said africa intends to end most special payments for foreigners as it re, bam, sits immigration policies having natasha has more now from johannesburg, beverly quite ada. moved to south africa from zimbabwe more than a decade of her visa allows us to live and work here that special permit expires in june. next year. she peers being deported to zimbabwe, a country with few jobs and record high inflation. she's also worried about a 14 year old son in terms of his education is going to be disturbed. d. because the curriculum isn't i this him? the language wise? she king speak cheyenna veggie conrad to sentence is going to be very difficult for him to add jests. south africa's government is trying to manage an influx of economic migrants for decades. africa, most industrialized economy has been a magnet for people seeking better economic opportunities from across the continent
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and other parts of the world. we know that people are flocking sl africa for health care in particular because it may not be the best in the world, but it's certainly better than than what they're getting now. so we are just saying that we are not anti anyone. it is, it is not an antique african agenda, it's not a, it's not an antique asian agenda. it's an agenda of saying, let's prioritize our people. oh, a round, a 3rd up south africans argument is causing resentment among some locals who see foreigners as competition. vasquez jobs and public services, but not everyone agrees with that view. i think the blame there's is formal, reasonably laid at the foot of the, of the government itself, for not maintaining for not investing in that infrastructure. i think it is a quite a worrying development, not politics that foreign nationals are so easily scapegoats now for the forgot fulfill government failures. thousands of people from zimbabwe,
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endless city are legally working or studying in the country, but with special permits being terminated. foreign is not have to prove they have critical skills needed in south africa as the kinds of repairs where the 2024 general elections, the presence of undocumented foreign nationals is a divisive issue. the man is he has a politicians are using this to gain support from frustrate as of africans. angry at the high cost of living and rising unemployment. it's putting more pressure on the in c, live government as cause to show jobs and business opportunities go to south africans 1st, seemingly growing louder, harder matessa algeria, janet. while the london film festival is underway and the fear, it's an immersive experience. filmmakers are experimenting with new technologies to create a different form of storytelling. the works that he had touched on climate collapse, war and dance. charlie angela found out never has
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a quarry been so captivating, nor a recycling center. 2 locations featured in frame rate, a film created from thousands of 3 d time laps scanned of british landscapes. this is the expand strand of london via fi film festival. inside disuse, railway arches, audiences are experiencing the many ways there are to 10 to tell visually using cutting edge technology is about giving people an insight into the way that the world is changing in a way that they've never been able to see before. so the glimpse real world sites in this room, you see them change over time period every year or sometime long. and that capture through the i is not traditional cameras, laser scanners, nice pieces use virtual reality headsets, others are augmented reality, where through the phone, visitors see images overlaid onto the real world. climate collapse is a recurrent theme planet. city builds
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a utopian future where you can peer inside. what's special about ecology is that you're in the central experience. you're not in front of the screen anymore in front of the stage. you really are part of the experience. and i think this is why filmmakers artist creators are drawn to this media. and they're trying to push the boundaries of how we tell stories and how we engage with audiences. and this is so exciting. other works, touch on full conflict, putting the viewer literally in the trenches. i want to make a word that explores an aspect of warfare that is usually not in the media, and also not in the imagination of people of war, namely the endless way. on the morning you wake uses a documentary stuff to put you inside the panicked minds of hawaiians in 2018 when they all received a text alert or into an imminent nuclear attack. my name a we just got a tool in apparatus. newton's artificial intelligence harvests your online
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data to create a raw, the creepy personal landscape of photographs, questions who owns a digital footprint? this is a space where filmmakers can really push the boundaries of storytelling. and some of these meetings can move you in a way that traditional film conde. but while these technologies revolving its speed, the distribution has some catching up today. charlie angela out of their london ha . sports is coming up after the break as argentina prepared for their well come to punch it. messy makes it plain and simple. the tournament and cast off. will be his last details with joe next. ah.
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a was back, it is now times of history. miss sophia, thank you very much. at least one person is dead. a more than a 100. ever portly, injured off to violence between football fans and police and a matching argentina. authorities and witnesses say that funds try to enter an already full stadium in the city of la platter. please fire rubber bullets and take ass and the game between homes. let him mass here in boca genius. stop 9 minutes plays and fans listening. struggling with the effects of the take f, one found died of a heart attack according to a government official incident comes less than a week after $100.00. 31 people died in a crush at a stadium in indonesia will staying with argentina. and lena massey is confirmed, she is woke up will be his last, the $35.00 for made the announcement on the same day,
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the country's national airline unveiled a plane that will take funds to the tournament. and katha messy will play in his fist well cup when argentina opens that campaign on november, the 22nd against saudi arabia messy. the only major international trophy was the corporate america last year. many were already speculating that little messy was going to not be with argentina after the 2022 world cup. he also speculated a couple of interviews, both exclusive interviews as. busy as post match interviews that he had given during world a qualifying place. so there was a possibility maybe that he was going to have a chance at 39 to end up in the work up a north american 2026. but of course he started question that he mentioned the fact that he does feel older. he does feel that this era, at least for him, is coming to a close. but at least for a positive standpoint, he feels that the pre season and the work he's been able to put in during this recent off season has helped them to be sharp going into guitar. you do have
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a team that is coming in with a 35 match and st. into the workup, you have not only 35 matches, but matches in which they've been able to dominate the competitive level. going back to work of qualifying play, the final look up america. they haven't lost in 3 years. and more importantly, you start looking at a team that has a philosophy, any way of playing that each and every one of the players that will be called up, understand and know the respective rules to time. well, when a megan repaint, it says players in the united states and angry and exhausted, it follows report that found there was systematic use in the us. women's game repeated is with her national team in london to play a friendly against england. an independent investigation concluded that emotional abuse and sexual misconduct were impacting multiple teams, coaches and players. the report had been commissioned off the allegations by former players were made last year for the future of the lead for players going forward. for players playing right now,
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it's essential that we know that we're being taken care of and supported and all of the right ways. and everybody that's working in and around the league has the same goal and the same understandings, understanding of what the level is and what the responsibilities are. i think without accountability and without you know, people, you know, specifically who did the wrong thing being gone. that just says to us, like nobody is really hearing us, and those players have said they'll support the united states counterparts in any way they can. for beth me to go back into the u. s. team. how to friday sold out much wembley stadium. it's a worldwide problem book. women need to be taken seriously. a lot more and very proud of the victims actually. that stood open set said, and yes, people need to start doing, but the u. s. governing body needs to be doing worldwide. we need to be doing well, the usa is experiencing a huge growth in the popularity of the women's game,
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kansas city current to play the domestic league for the ground on the world's 1st purpose built stadium for the women's team. the 11000 seats of news expects to be ready for the 2024 season. most of the teams share stadiums with men's teams or other sport, but also have followed up their impressive victory over our tribal them. by winning in the rope league, the leaders of england helped divisions thrust photo claims of norway. 3 know at the stadium. the pick of the go thing the last 5 years yet a finishing off a great move. crawford, bike embryo, j 6. the result means the gun. all right, munch the united a found from that 3 bathroom. they got from month to see marcus rush from school twice. they came from behind the team, ammonia plates. united 2nd m b a is expanded their global footprint by playing
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a game in the united arab emirates for the very 1st time, a sell out crowd of around 80000 fans. and what's the atlanta hawks defeat to know walkie box? and a pre season encounter saw us us to come back to school for the bucks with 90. while the john t murray solid for the hawks with 25 points, m b a push to increase. the global prominence also included games in japan last week. atlanta and walking me again in average abbey on saturday. an unbelievable environment to play. india preseason game on our team has had an amazing time here at abu dhabi so far at i think between arbel darby fans and the m . b. a. put together such a great event, harm giving us an opportunity to experience her the love of basketball here, and i think i just continue to grow the game globally. is really cool. be a part of so i know the box organization. our team is really happy. the stage is set for max the stipends and clenched this he is formerly on well championship in
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japan on sunday. the dutchman leads the standings by a 104 points from ferrari's charles the clerk and could make it back to back titles if he wins. the race ensued. cat and fetch the fastest lap, but he found the wet conditions tough during friday practice. it was red bull leaving the track at one point the fall he set the 3rd fastest time it's always nice to be or luckily, you know, it wasn't a complete disaster with the weather. like at least we could get round and do a little bit of stuff. but yeah, at terms of like knowing where you are and would base in the wed zoe's entricken, a bit tricky to for huff driver. mc. schumacher who ended up in the way i just had a huge circle for a well yeah. okay. yeah. okay. let's say these george russell and louis hamilton ended up setting the pace on friday and the
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wet weather didn't dampen enthusiasm from the fans who were there to see the 1st from pre held in japan for 3 years. because the current of virus pandemic in the nfl, tom brady is confirmed. he's fit to play on sunday against the atlanta falcons at tampa bay quarterback suffered a shoulder injury last week. but the 45 year old has played down the seriousness. the buccaneers have to winds from for games this season and still chasing their 1st home victory. well, i think you are going to try to stay bounced over the course of season and a few games we've done better job with just getting behind quite a bit. and it's been frustrating. now we have perform very well early in order to keep us more 2 dimensional when you're one dimensional you know, we're, we're going to try to work at all those things to makes a better football team for sure. in thursday night football, the indianapolis colts said shed out the denver broncos 12 to 9 with field goals. the only scoring place the coats were losing with only seconds to play before
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forcing. the game is over time, you denver course back, ruffle wilson was again booed by bronco son pulling another lat cluster, performing and in tennis, novak joke, which is making the most of his wild card at the astonished open in kazakhstan, the serbian is through the quarter finals by he'll play russian cotton catching off later on friday. joker, which has only played 8 tournaments this year because he's not vaccinated against cope in 19. all right, those are useful for now. i'll have more free lice anastasio. thanks very much joe . well, that is it for me is darcy at a for this news. i don't go away. doreen will be here in a couple minutes with more of the day's news. ah.
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october on al jazeera campaigning for nigerian elections begins as candidates vive for votes, and what is set to be a decisive and close race. emmy award winning folk lines were tons with an exclusive investigation into alleged cover ups by the us border patrol. china holds its national congress of communist party members with president g, likely to be re elected as its head. what does this mean for china and the world? only with dreams takes you beyond the glitz and glamour, revealing the stories of those seeking fame and fortune in the world's largest film industry. 60 years on from the cuban missile crisis, we asked what can be learned from events that lead the world to the brink of nuclear war. october on al jazeera,
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informed opinions. i believe that armenia and other regional should have bilateral negotiations. we've been calling that so many time. critical debate is the commonwealth still something that king charles will inside story on al jazeera, a diverse range of stories from across the globe. from the perspective of our networks, journalists on al jazeera, ah, in a newly ah ah.
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