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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  October 7, 2022 9:00pm-10:01pm AST

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all on counting the cost a major, you turn on tax cuts in the u. k. is it enough to limit the financial damage and other wake up call on the cost of climate change from oregon? here, plus boeing reveals our aircraft plans to go green by 2015, counting the cost on our dcea. this november, the welcome is coming to cut off of the clock is ticking as the main event gets closer with every step of the way. so i'm going to get you off that with a new show each month i think can expect some strong support hearing test bringing the latest news from the teams and fans in different regions across the globe as they look to make their mark on pat our 2020 to the world cup. come back with everyone else. oh no, julia. ah,
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this is al jazeera ah. hello, i'm rob matheson, this is the news ally from doha coming up in the next 60 minutes. nobel peace prize is awarded to a jailed bell, russian activist and 2 human rights organizations. one is russian. the other is ukranian. this. yes, laurie. heather revitalized, i'm all in it. alfred nobel, vision of peace, an fraternity. a town's entire police force suspended over all the taxes, takes dramatic action 5 months after a mass shooting. trying to put a cap on gas e. u. leaders struggle to find a way to keep down fuel costs. as winter gets closer,
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thailand's king meets people injured and am mass stopping and shooting at a children's daycare center on thursday. and on pete estimate with your sport, li, they'll miss he makes a decision on his future saying next months woke up in cutter will be, he's lost. ah, this years nobel peace prize has been awarded to a jail, the bellows and rights activist, the russian rights group, memorial and the ukranian center for civil liberties. for nearly 30 years alice benya, latchkey has been campaigning for democracy and human rights in belarus. 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 down the group last year. and ukraine's, the center for civil liberties was established in 20
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o 7 to promote human rights jona hall reports for maslow, hello, i am loving to install the director alden of each and noble institute in our slow 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 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
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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 bed a, 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, 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
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or the organization who in the past year has contributed most to piece. now, issues of war and peace are always political. thus 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, mrs. rice, anderson was asked whether this year's award was intended as appointed 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 highlights how his authorization regime and the one in neighbouring better. ruth sought to suppress human rights and those who try to uphold them. john hall al jazeera, also, while the leader of the opposition about
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a roof spoke to natasha butler in paris. she's hoping that skis prize will help all the political prisoners in her country. i'm really oriented there to be just to keep our hero. the person who chose started human, read, defend, and movement in, in 1009 to 6, was given this award. i didn't ask now in prison, his political prison, that actually he's 2nd time both go prisoner. and i hope that this price will attract more attention to the problem of tortures in prison and barrows for moral physical relation to all the prisoners. and the fact that the problem is still exist, that despite the will, doesn't hear about because there are more awful event going on in those because of this war there. but we live with the spain every day. the and said that
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our political prison, as the number of reaches in prison every day of suffering in jails when constant basis, and hope, those demonstrations who, whose duty east to release to negotiate about religion political prisoners, will fulfill the, the, the job where they board came as a surprise for ukraine, the center for civil liberties, what are the means in nipple and has some background on the group? it is an organization that was created back in 2007 and at the beginning, 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 compliant in compliance with human rights, now that changed back in 2014, during the year, my dad protests that led to the conflict we are in
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a de moment. they started investigating crimes committed more than a 100 people had died when the former president of the then president victoria nicole, which was ousted and fled to russia. and since they have been also, oh sure, i'm investigating a political persecution for example, in crimea next peninsula. that was the next back in 2014. there also have been investigated, war crimes ended on boss. and that actually they stepped up all of that, since this conflict started back in february, the 1st people in just after the soldiers, all these war crime investigators are these and you knows who are helping in decay in building the case. well, also talking and interviewing people are 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 to what's bringing versus life leadership. he's an expert council member at the center for civil liberties, one of the recipients of the nobel peace prize. he's joining us from keep very good to happy with us. what does this award mean to you? of course. good evening. of course away. glad to receive this war and it is a kind of recognition of our work. but actually we regard this novel is bryce as a recognition, not the walk of all organizational but because the recognition of the world golf follow voluntary people who have bar and all the ukrainian civil society and moral old dan ukrainians was fighting for freedom for democracy
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for human rights and for peace. now we hadn't heard the of the hamid report there that very often people from organizations like yours are amongst the 1st into areas of concern to establish whether or not war crimes have been committed. how difficult is it to carry out your kind of work in ukraine? it is not easy and it is not retest work, but we understand how important it is. it will understand how important is to tell the international community about large scale. loyal nations will be international humanitarian law by the russian occupation army dan,
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large scale of all war crimes. and every crime should, to be honest, every crime suit to be documented and of care with the national and international law enforcement bodies. we understand the big governmental efforts are not enough and capacity to government know in our circumstances or no to the best. so civil society try to do we'd like to do our best to, oh, don't command to monitor our situation to collect information about all the work grimes, which the russian army don, hunter, ukrainian territory,
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the whole this war will be held full for the further investigation and for the punishment for the war criminals who i want to ask you about your hopes for the future because obviously you are dealing in a situation which is in the middle of a conflict. how confident are you and your colleagues that despite having had this rest of this recognition of the work that you do? how confident are you that for you do will actually lead to convictions for what are perceived to be war? crimes well all hope for the best will hope that it will be in life that their piece will be reached soon. but we have a clear understanding that the only way to reach the piece is they bring out to the 3. and then jericho pace and only 5 territory. we
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have full understanding that this way will not be easy and there will be more victims on this way. so there, oh, our hope is that can be international support or called the international community. it will be more stronger than it is now, the course only with common efforts, we can still walk criminals and we can still war, which is our common dream and establish peace on our land. it is our hope and we hope that our efforts will be in meaning before to make this goal closer for us.
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so we appreciate you being with us and i was in a so thank you very much indeed for your time. thank you. the overall, the school district has suspended its entire police force 5 months after the mass shooting and texas. the shoes are killed, 900 students, and 2 teachers. the police department has been under investigation in response to the attack in may. investigators have been probing the time it took officers to reach the gunman. why it was hold up in a classroom. let's go live now to hydrogen, castro who's in washington. d. c. for us, heidi, how our local people in the time going to react to this or rob, the parents who lost their children to this massacre had been holding vigil outside of the school district. and they told reporters that this was just another step toward accountability. though this does not begin to address the grief of course, that they continue to feel. so now they will be asking the school district will be
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asking for the state police to step in and fill that security role within the vault a school district. but even the state police are tainted in a sense, in the response to this massacre that happened last may. the state police itself is also under investigation. the big question which you alluded to is why it took more than an hour for armed police officers to breach the door in which this gunman was killing children and 2 teachers during the time it took while police stood by without reaching the door. 19 children lost their lives as well as to teachers and the criticism and i that's followed that has already led to the firing of the school districts police. a chief that happened back in august. it led to 2 others being placed on administrative leave. and now those remaining officers who are on this put the school district police force,
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they have been suspended for an undetermined period of time. it's gonna be tricky, isn't it from people in the school district to be able to trust the police given of the investigations that you're, that you're talking about going on in the moment. absolutely, this has been a huge wound to this community. and in fact, even steps to address the security failings have only led to more recriminations. for example, one of the police officers are who was hired by the school district after this shooting while she came from the state police. she, in fact, had been the 1st person in the hallway when the shooting occurred, and she forgot her gun in her vehicle. astounding details like that which each one once revealed, only inflamed the pain greater as the families in this community seek more accountability and again, applauding. at least this step in suspending the remaining members of this police
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force does. how did your cast we're talking to us from washington d. c. heidi, thank you very much. live for them are head on the news are including the u. s. puts more levers and high tech chinese companies. we're going to tell you more about the chip bottles of a little a little later. we report from the creams eastern. so i know voc moves where cubes forces are struggling to hold back. a rushing push and, and sports nfl veteran tom brady plays down the seriousness of a shoulder injury. ah, european union leaders in prague are struggling to agree and how to stop rocketing gas prices as winter gets closer. european commission president ursula von berlin says one solution could be for members to bid for gas supplies together, but that won't start until spring of next year. costs have been rising since the start of the war and ukraine. us lavonda lands also said russian gas made up 41
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percent of you supplies at the start of the war. it's now down to just under 80 percent. one thing is very clear. there's 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 for she is a chastened procurement of gas so that we avoid 2 out of it each other. but that we have a collective bargaining power, and that we put that in place instead of our sins, following the summit and prague. part of the 27 member states we're asking for it is sir joined 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 whole and italy, greece. they were really asking for a price cap because they're dealing with
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a very difficult situation. right now. the energy prices have gone up 4 times as so people can't pay for their bails. companies go bankrupt and they really feel 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 very sensitive issue in the, during this day. and they are hoping as, as 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 gap in what are, what are perform. it will take a bit. she also was talking about the fight, 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 upon a lay and says now the gas or reserves are full up to 90 percent, they were quite depleted, quite empty. just
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a few months ago when their gas from the russian. a gas company as stops are delivering in the netherlands is one of the main most crucial gas reserves in europe was only full for 25 percent, which normally would be 80 percent at that time of the year. so there's been a lot of gas buying, a lot of her, ellen, she has been bought from all kinds of her suppliers. gas has been coming to europe . of course, there was a high price to be and this gas will also in these reserves will be empty again by spring. as ursula found the lanes as and that's when it becomes really crucial because people are not so worried about the supply 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. ukrainian for to say at least 11 people have been killed in wash and strikes and residential buildings in the southern city of zap alicia,
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ukraine's foreign minister and me through caliber has accused russia or trying to so fear, by deliberately striking civilians. moscow claims to run next to that region, even though its forces don't control all of it. ukraine's armies retaken thousands of square kilometers encountered offensives in recent weeks. but despite sophisticated weapons provided by western allies is struggling to hold back a russian portion. the eastern town of buck mote urge as it is, charles stratford is there. ah, it's a deadly game of hide and seek. gloomy cranes. houston from line soldiers with the 26 artillery brigade, were new with his 155 caliber german howitzer to its firing position. russian forces are in the eastern outskirts of a mood. the cannon is targeting russian supply and artillery positions beyond the town. it takes around 40 seconds for the shell to reach
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its target. the trajectory is adjusted of the information from drones and spotters, monitoring the target zone. this german mobile, 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 prepared to fire again. my impression of i am not in 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. they are, we walk out through feels crisscross with monk churned by ukrainian artillery tanks pauses. the road to town smoke rises seconds off to
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what we are told was a ukrainian anti missile system intercepting a russian rocket lines of ukrainian foot soldiers, head to positions nearby normal, normal in buck moved explosions echoed through the near empty streets. oh, 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 to lead and it's their elite units and mercenaries. if there are no regular russian troops left here, few people remain here. bookshelves and beds hang me their private lives. in summit
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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 selling never stops long. i stay here to look after my mother. she is old and frail. things have gone a lot. once. wisdom weaponry has helped the ukrainian elemy wind back more territory in a month than russian forces took 5 for the defense of bach. mood remains one of ukraine's biggest challenges on the east in the front line of it shall strafford al jazeera, but not least in ukraine. the u. s. as an ons, more export controls on chinese tech companies. the 30 tech firms 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 us semiconductor
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technology. the rules also ban you asked base companies from selling the machinery to beijing without a license. mike hannah's lie, 1st of the white house, what details do we know about this by might well, it's certainly the widest ban that has been imposed in at least a decade, and it will have a major impact on china. given the fact that the actor chip technology is used for everything from super computers to missile launches. so this is a critical issue. it is very wide ranging as well in terms of the number of companies that are targeted. more than 30 specific companies are listed. and it, it forbids any u. s. company from selling a cellular technology to the chinese, but it goes far further than that. it also places a ban on any company world wide that uses us technology from placing any sales with china. so it's exceedingly wide ranging ban the commerce department,
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which actually announced the ban also added that it was concerned with china's surveillance activities. and this certainly would be something that would partially limit those activities. surveillance that commerce department claims is illegal and has been prying into us as such as private phone calls. but this is going to have a massive impact on the development of chinese technology. you might, we heard a lot about bonds on china and chinese business during the trump administration. why is this by being imposed at this time? well, under the trump administration, there were plans they were targeted at specific companies. for example, experts describe that is the kind of get to attend. but in this ban announced by commerce department, it's exceeding the wide ranging. and apparently you seeking to find every corner of
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chinese technological developmental companies that are developing a computer chip technology that we're not being talked to before because it is so wide ranging. it's just covering, most of the chinese companies that have the ability or indeed the desire to develop this particular technology. so it's not only going to slap a ban on the sale of technology to china. it's all going to going to have a major impact on china being able to develop its own technology. so these are all crucial issues. and a last point in terms of perhaps potential timing of this at the moment is the fact that the chinese leadership is holding its annual conference in mid october. g ping . we'll be looking to add another term as leader of china. but this conference coming out in the hands of this drastic action by the u. s. is certainly going to be offensive piece of that leadership conference. mike, thank you very much. my kind of talking to us from the white house still ahead on
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al jazeera, with a community in the us spaces at heaven threatening water. they can't see it and they can't taste it. but it could be extremely dangerous. of all, as far as damage sacred statues on easter island. we're going to have the latest and what's happened to the famous wife and the son of a formula. one legend struggles to maneuver through the slippery conditions in japan that's coming up in the school with the some spots fil, hanging onto the fourties in the middle east. type one here is the details on saturdays. so back to q, weights, we've got you in for a high of 42. and for us around the golf,
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those winds are shifting around. so you know, the name of the game, right? that's going to bump into humidity when you get that went right off the golf. so a humid weekend for us here in the hall with a high of 30 degrees. now for karachi, the seabreeze sits disappeared. it's for now. so that's going to allow those temperatures decline to 38 potentially some spots in the city could get up to 40 degrees over the course of the weekend. is a cool breeze off the black sea for turkey as for the capital anchorage, 16 degrees. and then we've got these bursts of rain along the black seacoast that could certainly cause some flooding. we have seen flooding in the central african republic and still rain falling around bungie, but pretty much from northern angola, right up to cameroon. and nigeria. heavy falls of rain in the forecast. it's been about a week now for that heat wave. in the northeast of south africa, we're talking about the northwest states, the free states, limpopo puma longer, these temperatures in the mid to upper thirties and in nearby botswana. also heat alerts in play here. temperatures have come down a bit and habit roni to
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a height of 33 degrees on saturday. ah, it's time for a memorable holiday with pegasus. it's time for turkey. set sail for new discoveries. enjoy. have new experience. it hits the sharp, make wonderful memories, travel to turkey with pegasus, and with direct likes to assemble and try to book your ticket now for a memorable holiday. c, y p g s, for our best prices. in these turbulent times, up front returns for new seasons. join me markham, on hill as we take on the big issues. they are literally being turned back. how is this not a contravention of international law? this is exactly the place for us to interrogate people about issue that matter from the state of democracy around the world. to the struggles faced by the under
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represented, those voices have to be brought to the table. they have the matter. we have to start to talk about the see here. we will challenge the conventional wisdom. up front. on al jazeera lou ah georgia 0 reminder which helps stories this out. the of all his school district suspend, entire police force. 5 mon software, my shooting and texas. the shoes are killed. 19 students and 2 teachers. the districts police force has been under investigation the way it responded to the attack and made this use nobel peace prizes awarded to a jail, bella, russian activist and 2 human rights organizations. one is russian, one is ukranian,
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belarus and the artist viet skis rushes memorial group on ukraine's center for civil liberties. for held by the nobel committee, their commitment to human workers. e leaders are struggling to agree in a single way to manage soaring energy prices for european commission president are sort of on the land says one option is for members to work together. they buy gas. she said there's brought a grievance on a proposal for collective bits, which would start next spring. thailand's king is visiting survivors after thursday's nursery massacre by a former policeman. king maha russia, a long con, travel to the northeast on non voy lampoon province. with queen suited to meet survivors as to hospitals. 36 people were killed at least 24 of them were children . it's one of the worst attacks in thailand's history. tony chang's at the school and non boylen pooh. the center support. staring blankly into
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a future of unfathomable loss. this bereaved mother still can't believe her 2 year old son, peter. a 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 were 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 a soldier. now policeman. visit a concern to you that these people in positions of or 30 and power. it is big concern, suddenly only cancer, but me will surely have to do something that will be hard in
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a country where the military wheeled so much power. the prime minister, a general himself visited the families on friday afternoon, handing out checks for compensation to the victims, families. with all the noise and commerce and, and 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 gen 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 toni chang, l t 0, no one pu northeast in time and they are in secretary general
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a has said that floods and pakistan of the price of man made climate change. and targets harris has been speaking during a session discussing the impact of the flooding. the people of pakistan are the victims of a grim calculus of climates, injustice, pakistan is responsible for less than one percent of global greenhouse gas emissions. yet it is spacing, a super sized price for manmade climate change. when months ago, i traveled there and saw a level of climate carnage beyond imagination. flood waters covering the land, the mass, 3 times the total lady of my own country. portugal many have lost every seeing that homes that livestock, their crops, their futures lives were washed the way. well, i guess i'm still recovering from that record flooding that killed $1700.00 people
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in cost me $40000000000.00 disease and damage to farming communities that prompted warnings of another disaster and the weeks and months to come. some a bunch of reports from jam, shorter, a 3rd of buck, his son and daughter, the you and calls it a monsoon unsteadily. this is floods draught, an unprecedented disaster being blamed on climate change. the economy was already 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 log is fine, whether it's model, whether it's in the country that i'm the right, some known to focus on take, you know, take the risk, you know, and then, you know, getting charged bangs to give us loans, give us preference,
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or great vanity has been sent a memo by nature and that mental as come back a sun that we waited a war against nature, with burning up with that addiction to fossil fuels, and no nature is regional water. these waters my 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 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 will take 1600 tons. 1000 tons, 2500 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,
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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 on portugal would be under water. whole equity would be under water. the corners stuart of the us will be under water. the yuki would be under water and pad yuki. no city, no town, without water. everybody would be drowning in his water with 60 feet of water standing. so this is the kind of scale that we have agriculture, education, health, roads, bridges, real cracks. 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 my job, it other 0 job. sure. pakistan. and you can watch pakistan the great deluge on saturday it all 330 g m t. here on al jazeera,
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these 19 people have been killed in an avalanche in the indian, hama, less climbers would almost at the top of the mountain when they were struck by a massive slide of snow. bodies have been taken to near by hospitals, and 10 people are missing. rescue teams are still searching for survivors. and heavy rains and flash floods in sudan have destroyed tens of thousands of homes across the country. agencies that say at least 80000 families are now in need of humanitarian assistance. all zeros hippo morgan reports. this is the road to em. zayed village, south of south dar forest capital niana. it's one of the latest villages to be affected by heavy rains and flash floods into dam. many are now living out in the open lay. what little olga i tell them will life sca sir, we have seriously been affected? my house was damaged, all the furniture was damaged and carried away by the water. this room is now completely destroyed. well that all my beds are broken,
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all my jerry chance have been carried away by the stream. i didn't manage to recover anything and now we settle to washington out of medicine. others lived in makeshift shelters after losing their homes, reigns and floods have destroyed hundreds of for the needs villages over the past 3 months. at least 140 people have died and tens of thousands of families have been displaced. here in dar for 17 years of war that ended in 2020 has made the effects of the floods even worse long. but on the moon you. so now we're here in this very basic shelter, even plastic sheets were received or not enough, and this is all what people can get now. and we don't know what to do with no dar forest conflict has been called the 1st climate war. and now there are fears the devastating rains and floods are the consequences of climate change. almost human harley mill on this isn't, is different from the past seasons. our oldest people say that nothing like this happened since the eighty's this year. that is much more rain in southern dar for
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rain rates. this autumn are above the normal rates. many here have already been displaced by the years of conflict and we're hoping to rebuild their lives. but now that may take longer. he bought morgan al jazeera, giving reports that at least 5 people have been killed in a drone attack in ethiopia. northern to good, i had region, the doctor, the hospital that treated victims, as quoted as saying, the airstrike happened about 30 kilometers in the northern capital mechanic. injury more than 37 people. conflict between the if you up in government and rebels into guy has been going on for almost 2 years. the us military who says it's killed a senior. i saw member in the 1st american operation against the on group and an area controlled by the cillian government. u. s. troops carried out a helicopter rate near the village of conversely, on the northeast and bordered zekia. 2 other i saw members were also killed in a separate air strike in northern syria. and there are reports that israel may
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start over it in the kurdish gas field in the eastern mediterranean next sunday. israel says it will start extracting gas as soon as it complete technical and logistical processes, lebanon disputes, israel's right to the gas, the u. s. has been tried to mediate a dispute over where they're shared maritime border lies. israeli governments rejected lebanon's request for revisions to us proposals. an iranian coroner says 22 year old masa armand. he did not die from a beating while in police custody. she was detained by errands, so called morality police in september for breaking strict dress code laws. the coroner's report states she suffered multiple organ failure due to underlying illnesses. her mother has rejected those findings. a security chief, an argentine has been fired after one person was killed and dozens were injured on violence, broke out between fans and police at a football match card. i know,
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i don't know, i have yet yet, but he's fired roberts and tear gas when fired funds tried to enter remain ready food stayed in the city, la plata official stopped the game between home side jalencia and book of juniors. after 9 minutes, the government official says one final died of a heart attack. only with little. a community in the u. s. state of california says it can't trust its own water supply. it said to have high levels of arsenic in it. arsic is a toxic substance which occurs naturally, but large amounts are often used as insecticide rob reynolds visits residents who are desperate for help. when former dentist hudson pumps water from his well, in allen's worth, california, he knows there's danger lurking, even though the water looks clean, it's contaminated with high amounts of arsenic. the way we feel about the water is it can't be trusted there carcinogens in the water. arsenic is
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a carcinogen, it will cause cancer. it 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 realize 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 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
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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 insight 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 1000000. similar filtration systems have succeeded in countries with high arsenic concentrations like india and bangladesh. this promise is to me, one of the noise, if not, go lowest cost ways, who reliably remove arsenic from gun water at a place that local communities can afford. the researchers hope the equipment chan
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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. rob reynolds al jazeera allen's worth california. far as far as in chillies, easter island damage, centuries, old sacred statues. they took emergency cruise 8 hours to control the spot around the unesco world heritage site. but some of the starches known as moy is said to be totally chart. experts say they were carved by the islands original inhabitants. hundreds of years ago, stella had an al jazeera lights camera and some high tech action. we're going to take you to the london film festival producers, to pull audiences deeper into the stories. and 2 of the biggest stars in tennis
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will go head to head in kazakhstan, details coming up in sport. ah, ah. with
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ah, ah. ah. turned out for the sport. here's peter. well, thank you very much for leave l macy has confirmed that next month we'll couple be lost. the 35 year old made the announcement on the same day. the country's national a line unveiled a plane. it'll take fans to the tournament in kata. macy will play in his 5th will cap when argentina opens day campaign on november, the 22nd against saudi arabia. macy's only major international trophy was the capa
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america. that was last year. many were already speculating that little messy was going to not be with argentina after the 2022 world cup. he had also speculated a couple of interviews, both exclusive interviews as. busy as post match interviews that he had given during world qualified life. 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 a team that is coming in with a 35 match and streak 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,
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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 roles. the n b a has expanded its global footprint by playing a game in the united arab emirates for the 1st time, a sun out crowd of around 18000 fans. in abu dhabi watched the atlanta hawks defeat the move walking bucks in a preseason encounter. superstar yana center to compo top school for the bucks with 19. while the john say murray stone for the hawks with $25.00 points, the in be a push to increase. they will live prominence. also include games in japan last week, atlanta and the walking me to get another w on saturday. an unbelievable environment to play and be a preseason game on. our team has had an amazing time here and abu dhabi so far at i think between arbel darby fans and the m b. a put together such a great event. i'm giving us an opportunity to experience of the love of basketball
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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 of fit for max for stopping to clinch this years for me to one will charge up in japan on sunday. the dutchman leads the standings by 104 points from for our is sharla clare and could make it back about titles. if he wins the race at zucker and sits the fastest lap, but he found the wet conditions tough during friday practice with his rebel leaving the track at one point before he said the food, quickest time. it's always nice to be or luckily, you know, it wasn't a disaster with the weather. like at least we could get round and, and do a little bit of stuff. but yeah, at terms of like knowing where you are and what base am in the went those entricken a bit tricky to for ha, strive a mic schumacher who ended up in the wall. her
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i just had a huge circle. funny. well, are you ok? yeah. okay. the fighting george russell and louis hamilton ended up setting the pace on friday and went with it didn't dampen enthusiasm from the fans with a to see the 1st grown pre held in japan for 3 years. because the career of ours pandemic know that chunk of it says he will need to innovate his game for semi final cache against the new med for they've been covered on. it'll be the 1st time in almost a year that the 2 of played against each other talk of which reached the last 4 of the astonish, opened by beating curren, cut off in straight fit. 47. when in a row, serbian disdainful back to back titles of the victory in tennessee as well made would be put in a dominant performance to get posts or both, both he's
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a good in the quarter finals reference book just to gain the saw the spaniel 6161, it was made video 40th went on to be curious, waved goodbye defends of the japan, open of the withdrew from the tournament just minutes before he called a final against the fritz. he pulled out with a knee injury before explaining why he thinks the all the plays on to have a tougher. there's no advantage in australia and i have to be on the road for like 6 months during the year when not all the player from europe or america has to do that. they can go home every couple of weeks. so astrology and asian players definitely have it hotter than every on the planet. that's visual early to mockery. i was blank, 7 months in a row, and i don't think a european play or an american player knows what it's like to be on the road for that loan. in the nfl, tom brady is confirmed. he's fit to play on sunday against the atlanta falcons. the tampa bay quarterback suffered a shoulder injury last week,
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but the 45 year old has played down the seriousness. the balcony is have $12.00 games so far from for the season. and i still chasing nicholas home when i think you got to try to stay bounced over the course of season and a few games we've done better job. and we're just getting behind quite a bit. and it's been frustrating now we haven't performed very well early in order to keep us more 2 dimensional. but when you're one dimensional stuff, you know we're, we're going to try to work it all those thanks to makes it better for plotting, for sure. in thursday night football, the indianapolis colts, aged out that in the broncos. 129 with field goals. the only school in place called losing with only seconds to play before forcing the game. and so over time, new denver quarterback russell wilson again booed by broncos and following another lackluster performance and of golf live events in bangkok, little known spaniard. you any lopez chicata chaise, one shortly with englishmen,
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richard bland, and some african brandon grace. after the opening round this event in thailand is the 1st of 2 being played in asia with jetta in saudi arabia, hosting a tournament next week, west indies, all rounder rocking cornwall. is making quite the impact that a t 20 tournament being held in the united states. here is attorney for the atlanta fire in the atlanta open. the square dr. pend. foods were on the wrong side of a bludgeoning call. we have had 17 falls and 22 sixes from just 77 balls and finished 205. not else you heard that right? a double turn in a t 20 match that i'll be around later with more sports things, but that's all for now. now climate clubs, war and done surveys focus of the london film festival,
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which is just started. this year's film makers are pushing the boundaries of new technology to pull cinema goes deeper into their stories. charlie angela has more. mm never has 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 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 before so the glimpse real world sites in this room, you see them change over time period. i'm a year long and that captured through the i is not of traditional cameras of laser
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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 as a recurrent theme planet city build the 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 my 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 our 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 does, is usually not in the media and also not in the imagination of people of war, namely, the endless waiting morning on the morning you wake uses a documentary stuff to put you inside the panicked minds of hawaiians in 2018 when
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they all received a text alertly to an imminent nuclear attack. my name a, we just got a tool in apparatus. newton's artificial intelligence, harvest your online data to create a raw, the creepy personal landscape. the photographs, questions who owns your 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. marty, i'm no monsters up next public. ah mm.
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with which site is willing keyless or control? what does a new forever prompt more 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 so much raw? the quizzical look us politics, the bottom line. the latest news as it breaks, it's not just personal property, but also infrastructure that now lead fixing from power lines to water main. detailed coverage is off of all pricing. listen, i know a very good probably buy from around the world hobbies season. this process is once a day from
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breaking down the headlines to exposing the powers attempting to silence reporting . the listening post doesn't just cover the news. it covers the way the news is covered on al jazeera. ah, [000:00:00;00] ah, ah, ah,

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