Skip to main content

tv   News  Al Jazeera  October 7, 2022 7:00pm-7:31pm AST

7:00 pm
cover ups by the us border patrol. china holds its national congress of communist party members with president t likely to be re elected as its head. what does this mean for china and the world? fully with dreams takes you beyond the glitz and glamour, revealing the stories of those seeking famous 14 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, which site is winning chaos or control? what does the new forever proxy war mean for america and nato? as long as americans keep consuming? prices are gonna keep going up. why didn't joe biden see inflation comic? how did we get to so much raw? the quizzical look at us politics. the bottom line. ah,
7:01 pm
european union leaders say they should bid for gas together as the continent faces an energy crisis. next winter, we're going to be alive from prob, ah, no more about this, and this is out as you alive from durham, also coming up. this year's nobel peace prize is awarded to a jailed bella, ocean activist, and 2 human rights organizations, one russian and one ukranian. o morning in thailand, the prime minister meets the families of those killed in an attack on thursday. and his lights camera and some high tech action, we're going to take you to the london film festival. where produces experimenting with new technologies. ah,
7:02 pm
you leaders of decided they're gonna bid together for gas next spring in order to try to bring sewing prices down. the blocks me meeting in prague to discuss the energy crisis that has be brought on by the war in ukraine. european commission president o'sullivan. glen says that the beginning of the war, russian gas made up 41 percent of the u. supplies today is down to 7.4 percent. she says gas storage is at 90 percent heading into winter. one thing is very clear as a broad support that next spring at the end of the winter when our storage is, will be depleted. it is of paramount importance that we have a joint, but she is what chase men to procurement of gas so that we avoid 2 out to beat each other. but that we have a collective bargaining power. and that we put that in place instead of austin's joining us lives not far from prague. so the e u is saying that next spring,
7:03 pm
they're going to have this agreement to work together and, and, and pull together a joint purchasing practice. but it doesn't solve the problem of whether or not they should put gas cap, price caps in place, know, and bringing people together is going to be difficult, isn't it? yes, absolutely. those are basically the 2 different proposals that were on the table here at the e summit in proc part of the 27 members states were asking for. it is sir, join procurement, a proposal plan to buy to gather soda is not any competition among the countries which also has been driving the price up. but the other countries are the more poor countries like poland, italy, greece, they were really asking for a price cap because they're dealing with a very difficult situation right now at the energy prices have gone up $4.00 times as so people can't pay for their bails. companies go bankrupt and they really feel
7:04 pm
they need to be some kind of max maximum price in place. but countries like germany really felt that that could endanger supply. so they haven't managed to reach any agreement on this. a very sensitive issue in there during this day, and they are hoping as a left on a lay and says that maybe in the next few weeks there might be some kind of consensus on this or a price cap in what are whatever form it will take and she also was talking about the fact, but gusted in the storage of gas supplies is significant, but it still needs to be increased. how important is that heading into a winter? of course. yeah, that's very important. and as, as it up on a lay and says now the gas reserves are full up to 90 percent, they were quite depleted, quite empty. just a few months ago when their gas from the russian gas company, as stops are delivering in the netherlands,
7:05 pm
is one of the main most crucial gas reserves. in europe. it was only full for 25 percent, which normally would be 80 percent at that time of the year. so it has been a lot of gas buying. a lot of for alan, she has been bought from all kinds of suppliers. gas has been coming to europe, of course, there was a high price to pay. and this gas also in these reserves will be anti again a by spring, as, as low fat in the lay and says, and that's when it becomes really crucial because people are not so worried about this applied for this winter. although the prices of course are very high, but the main concern is for the next winter and the winter after that. so that's why the 27 member states are really struggling and hope to find a solution really quickly to get out of this crisis step. thank you very much. indeed sir barson talking to us from prague. this is nobel peace prize has been awarded to a jailed bell russian rights activist, the russian rights group, memorial and the ukranian center for civil liberties. for nearly 30 years,
7:06 pm
alice bernacki has been campaigning for democracy in human rights in bella, luce, but he's been in prison on charges of tax evasion. since last year. memorial is one of russia's oldest human rights organizations. it was set up to uncover abuses that were carried out in soviet era prisons. russia shut the group down last year. and ukraine center for civil liberties was established in 20 or 7 to promote human rights. john hall reports from oslo. hello, i am lovigno and saw the director of the know beach and noble institute in oslo. an unexpected phone call on behalf of the center for civil liberties will be awarded the nobel peace prize for 2022 received in the ukrainian capital q, with what activists later described as delightful shock is good. thank you. the center for civil liberties was founded in 2007 to advance
7:07 pm
human rights and democracy in ukraine. never imagining they would one day promote accountability for russian war crimes in their country. much less become joint recipients of the nobel peace prize. and in moscow, the prize would have come as a welcome boost to the now band human rights group. memorial founded to commemorate soviet era abuses and more recently in vladimir putin, russia. this is a sign that our work, whether it is recognized by alice, by russia, which is not. it is important. it is important for the world. it is important for people in russia. the 3rd recipient is alice b ski, a human rights campaign for decades in bella roost, his group, the asner documents, the use of torture, under putin ally, alexander lucas shanker, against political prisoners which he has become jailed without trials since 2020.
7:08 pm
this year's peace pri is awarded to in announcing the awards nobel committee chair, barry thrice anderson acknowledged that this was a peace prize set against the worst war on the european continent in 7 decades organ speaking, afterwards, she told al jazeera that the prize was bound from time to time to take on a political dimension on mandate is to identify the individual or the organization who in the past year has contributed most to piece. now, issues of war and peace are always political. sacks is the political context of the price. she said the recipients in 3 neighboring countries involved in the war demonstrated the significance of civil society for peace and democracy in the press conference that followed the announcement,
7:09 pm
mrs. rice. anderson was asked whether this use award was intended as a pointed message to russian president vladimir putin. on the occasion of his 70th birthday, she denied that to the extent that it concerned him at all. she said the award would highlight how his or for a terrier regime and the one in neighboring belarus, sought to suppress human rights and those who try to uphold them. jonah al jazeera oslo propeller was opposition leader welcomed the nobel committee's recognition of acts of his alice billiard sky. she says it puts pollution human rights issues firmly in the spotlight. there are thousands of other people who are up who i tend to detained because of the political use. and i hope that it will raise awareness about our country and practical steps you had been dom, you know, to release. oh, for those people who sacrificed the freedom for our independence see for
7:10 pm
a human rights, it critically lives in dealers, ukrainian thought and say at least 11 people have been killed in russian strikes and residential buildings in the southern situ self. alicia, the grains foreign minister, dimitra collaborate, has accused russia of trying to so fear, by deliberately striking civilians. moscow claim savannah in the region even though it's forces don't control all of it. cranes, armies, we taken thousands of square kilometers encountered offensives in recent weeks. but despite sophisticated weapons provided by western allies, it struggling to hold back a russian push on the eastern ton of backward. and is it as charles trafford is? there is a deadly game of hide and seek gloomy cranes. easton from line soldiers with the 26 artillery brigade, were new. with this 155 caliber german howitzer to its firing position. russian forces are in the eastern outskirts of
7:11 pm
a 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 trajectory is adjusted of the information from drones and spotters monitoring the target. so this german mo, ball, how it's a has a range of around 30 kilometers and it's weapons like this from the west that have 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
7:12 pm
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 normal, normal in bust, moved, explosions echoed through the near, empty streets. here suddenly, the screen of a jet fighter overhead with 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. if there are no regular russian troops left here,
7:13 pm
few people remain here. bookshelves and beds hang me, their private lives, intimate, personal places ripped apart. we are told to people remain buried under the rubble of this apartment block. don't chest along the cheshire cheshire. the selling never stops long. i stay here to look after my mother. she is old and frail. things have gone a lot. was wisdom weaponry, his healthy ukrainian army win back more territory in a month than russian forces took in 5 for the defense of bach. mood remains one of ukraine's biggest challenges on the east in the front line. shall strafford al jazeera boat used to be grand. still had an al jazeera
7:14 pm
community in the u. s. faces that hidden thread in it's water because see it can't taste it. but it could prove extremely dangerous. and the l. a massey has been flying high throughout his career, but now he's taking it to the next level. we're going to tell you why messy will literally be on cloud 9 at this year's world cup. ah, the anticipation is rising and so is the atmosphere. you read the width of my cattle anyways. thanks for joining in. good to see. here's your weather report for asia. so we've lost the sea breeze in karachi. what that means is, temperatures are on the way up. so 38 on saturday, and i think some spots in the city may hit 40 degrees over the course of the weekend. have a falls of rain across northern india, impacting the states of con, pradesh and delhi. there are weather alerts in play here. could see
7:15 pm
a couple 100 millimeters of rain so that much rain, that fast will certainly cause some problems and this is out of season rain. we would not expect to see this at this time of the year. also, heavy falls, the crash long as well on saturday. now, authorities in thailand have warned of serious floods in bangkok, part of the problem here is river levels. they're high and they're draining. and then we've got rain falling on top of that. me while cascading rain, southern vietnam and cambodia on saturday. and another spot that i think it's going to be a wash out on saturday will be for eastern and central areas of taiwan. not too far away from ty pay off to japan. we go that rain and wind combo we had while that energy is out over the pacific. but just clipping that eastern side of the car to island. and in the northeast of china, the little cool rain and harbin with the high of 11 degrees. and now you're in the know the west sponsored by catch all massage of the country is under water. more than 33000000 are suffering from hunger
7:16 pm
disease and displacement. the word stories about children who were drinking from the same water with their dead cattle. we'll float al jazeera questions. did climate change play a role in the deadly downfall? climate change is here to state the full report pakistan. the great deluge on al jazeera. oh a. he watching, i'll just hear a reminder of our top stories this. our new leaders have decided to shoot that together for gas next spring to try to bring the sewing prices down. the blocks be
7:17 pm
meeting in prague to discuss the energy crisis brought on for the war in ukraine. this year's nobel peace prize is awarded to a jail bella, russian activist, and to human rights organizations. one russian, one ukrainian, or russian artist, be on the ascii russians memorial, human rights group, and ukraine's a center for civil liberties were held by the nobel committee with their commitment to human rights. the crania authorities say at least 11 people have been killed in russians, strike some residential buildings in the southern city of zeal. felicia, thailand's king is expected to meet grieving relatives after a former policeman killed 36 people and a gun and knife attack on thursday. at least 24 children are among the dead. it's one of the worst attacks in thailand's history. tony chang's at the school and long boil on poo, he's got this report. staring blankly into a future of unfathomable loss. this buried mother still can't believe her 2 year
7:18 pm
old son pat her one will never return. i thought it was just an ordinary day. i thought he'd go to school as usual. i had no idea he wouldn't come home. help was on hand. government officials filling forms and assisting families with the bureaucratic burdens of death. but for many, it was just too much grieving parents in inconsolable pain. thailand's health minister focused on one tiny ray of hope, 3 critically injured survivors who are now stable and safe. but he's aware, changes must be made. so this never happens again in the last 2 years. we've seen 2 mass killings by the soldier. now, policeman. is it a concern for you that these people in position is both dorothy and pow? it is big concern. suddenly only cancer, but we will surely have to do something that will be hard in
7:19 pm
a country where the military wheeled so much power. the prime minister, the general himself visited the families on friday afternoon, handing out checks for compensation to the victims, families. with all the noise and commerce and the media attention. it's easy to forget that at the center of this disaster is this building, the day care center or 22 children were murdered. and the families that they leave behind. and the children made one last jenny coffins from the morgue, arriving at a temple near their homes. as parents waited outside, so many caskets that names and ident says needed to be double checked. and then the final check and the awful confirmation that this is the final good bye tony checking out 0, no one pu northeast in time. i figured if in argentine has been fired
7:20 pm
after one person was killed and dozens were injured, when violence broke out between fans and police at a football match that happened. when fans tried to enter an already full stadium city of la platter. please fire rubber bullets and tear gas in the game between home said jim neisha and balk juniors was stopped after 9 minutes. some players and fans struggled with the facts of tear gas. a government official says one supporter died of a heart attack. at least 19 people have been killed in an avalanche in the indian hammer. layers. climbers were almost at the top of a mountain, monday was struck by a massive slide of snow. bodies had been taken to nearby hospitals and 10 people. a missing rescue teams are still searching for survivors. and iranian coroner's is 22 year old. martha omni did not die from a beating one of police custody. she was detained by around so called morality police in september for breaking strict dress code laws. the corners report states she suffered multiple organ failure due to underlying illnesses and mothers,
7:21 pm
rejected those findings. haiti is seeking fallen military assistance as it faces a growing humanitarian crisis. armed gangs of blocked access to the main fuel ports as the protest, the economic crisis and political turmoil there are donations is also proposing a humanitarian corridor. haiti to willow fuel and aid supplies through the u. s. as announced. more export controls and chinese tech companies. the 30 tax forms have been added to a so called unverified list. the latest additions include china's top makers of memory, chips, y m t c. the new measures prevent beijing from accessing advanced u. s. semiconductor technology. the rules also ban us based companies from selling the machinery to beijing without a license. sim, bobby, and migrants who live and work in south africa are taking the government to court. south africa intends to end most special permits for foreigners. as it re vamps is
7:22 pm
immigration policies, alma tasa has more from johannesburg, beverly quite out and moved to south africa from zimbabwe more than a decade. her visa allows to live and work here, that special permit expires in june mixture. sheep is being deported to zimbabwe, a country with few jobs and record high inflation. she's also worried about a 14 year old son. intel itself is education, is going to be disturbed. d because they can let me know this, them. they long as you age. he king speech una 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 and other parts of the world. we know that people are flocking sl africa for health
7:23 pm
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 any one. 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 ah, a round, a 3rd up south africans, arguably it's 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 m forgot fulfill government failures, thousands of people from zimbabwe, endless city are legally working or studying in the country. but with special
7:24 pm
permits being terminated. foreign is not have to prove they have critical skills needed in south africa as the kinds of prepares for the 2024 general elections. the presence of undocumented foreign nationals is a divisive issue. the man, as 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 a in c live government as cause to show jobs and business opportunities go to south africans 1st, seemingly growing louder, harder, matessa, algeria, janet community in the state of california says it can't trust its own water supply . it's set to have high levels of arsenic in it. it's a toxic substance which occurs naturally, but large amounts are often used as an insecticide rub rentals visited residents who are desperate for help. when former dentist hutson pumps water from his well in allens worth california, he knows there's danger lurking. even though the water looks clean,
7:25 pm
it's contaminated with high amounts of arsenic. the way we feel about the water is it can't be trusted. there carcinogens and water. arsenic is a carcinogen, it will cause cancer. it in effect, it fixes itself to the fatty tissues in the by the toxic substance leaches into the water supply from underground rock formations. the u. s. government says the safe level of arsenic is 10 parts per 1000000000. hudson's. well, water has more than $300.00 parts per 1000000000, and many other wells in the community are similar. arsenic is colorless and his odorless. you can't see you can't taste it. and in fact, people before we really realized the extent of the arsenic in our wire, there are people who would visit allen's worth and say, wow, this water really taste good. allen's worth is an impoverished town of about 600
7:26 pm
people founded by black settlers over 100 years ago. because people don't trust the safety of their water. many travel to other towns to buy filtered water for cooking and drinking. it's a problem that extends far beyond this small california farming town across the united states. it's estimated that 2100000 people draw their water from wells contaminated with high levels of arsenic. scientists from the university of california have set up an experimental filtering project on dennis hudson's farm. so the implant groundwater has about $200.00 parts per 1000000000, arsenic. and by the time it reaches the end of achievement training, we treated this water. it's coming out consistently below 10 parts per 1000000000. similar filtration systems have succeeded in countries with high arsenic concentrations like india and bangladesh. this promise is to me, one of the lowest,
7:27 pm
if not go lowest cost ways, who reliably remove arsenic from gun water at a price that local communities can afford. the researchers hope the equipment chan solve arsenic problems in other communities, and dennis hudson is praying. it will, what would it mean if you could live with clean water? it would mean the world to this community and to california, it would just mean life and life abundantly clean water in a time of climate change and droughts more precious than ever. robert olds al jazeera allen's worth california, and the northern film festivals underway this year. it's an immersive experience. filmmakers are experimenting with new technologists to create a different form of storytelling. works touch on climate collapse. war and dance is charlie engine to find out. never has a corey been so captivating nor
7:28 pm
a recycling center. 2 locations featured in frame rate. a film created from thousands of 3 d time laps scanned of british landscape. this is the expand strand of london b, f. i film festival inside disuse, railway arches, audiences are experiencing the many ways there are to try 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 all the glimpse real world sites in this room, you see them change over time period every year long and that captured through the i know of traditional cameras of laser scanners, most pieces use virtual reality headsets, others are augmented reality, where through the phone, visitors c images overlaid onto the real world. climate collapse is a recurrent theme plan at city build the utopian future where you can peer inside.
7:29 pm
what's special about the american technology 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 makers, artist creators are drawn to this media. and they're trying to push the boundaries of how we tell stories of how we engage with the 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 and aspects of warfare does, is usually not in the media and also not in the imagination of people of war, namely, the endless waiting. 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 to an imminent nuclear. at a time. i only here in the militia. now, we just got it to as an apparatus. artificial intelligence harvests
7:30 pm
your online data to create a rather creepy personal landscape of photograph, questions who own to digital footprints? this is a space where the filmmakers can really push the boundaries of storytelling. and some of these meetings can move you in a way that traditional film cons. but while these technologies are evolving speed, the distribution has some catching up today. charlie angel out there, london films to football. no message, confirm that next month's world cup is going to be his last. the 35 year olds made the announcement on the same day. the country's national airline unveiled a plane that's going to take funds for the tournament, and cutoff machine is going to play in his 5th world cup when argentina open that campaign, november the 22nd, against saudi arabia, who's one only one major international trophy. i was a corporate america last year i .

40 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on