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tv   News  Al Jazeera  October 8, 2022 7:00am-7:31am AST

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a multi key dollar industry, but the tune to full could her ambition is challenged by family, attention, and cultural tradition. all you would bring on, i'll just, you know, ah, ah ah ah,
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at play for hell. haiti requests international armed forces to help deal with wakes of violence sponsored by anger over a rise in fuel prices. ah, hello, i'm emily anguish this is al jazeera alive from dough house or coming up. no, do you, lee? you ladies failed to reach an agreement to cap the price of gas as country struggle with rising energy prices. oh, families in thailand, moon, after more than $22.00 children were killed in an attack on a daycare center. the king has met the victims families and visited the injured and a texas school district suspends it's police force criticize as for its response to
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a mass shooting that killed 21. students and teachers. ah welcome to the program. we begin in hazy, where the government is appealing for international armed forces to help intervene as this is. the security situation continues to deteriorate. people have been protesting for weeks after prime minister ariel on re, ended the fuel subsidies which pushed on prices. the caribbean nation has ground to a halt since gangs blockaded the main fuel terminal. they've refused to leave until andre steps down. the prime minister is warning of a humanitarian crisis as the country faces major shortages of both petrol and food . my little community, i am asking the international community and all the countries that are friends of haiti to support us, help us focus minturn crisis. i am also asking for aiden help mom
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a need for you to give us the support. we need to stop people from dang in droves. if we don't do anything, we need to add water and medication to reach the people that are sick, in other colors other to make a return to the country. i. and members of the organization of american states say they're committed to helping haiti lady's meeting improves, say the crisis is putting the islands future at risk. a bizarre does is for despite the if it's made by the international community during the last decade for which brazil and others have substantially contributed to hazy, the situation has not only degraded but now turning concerning. the deterioration of its security conditions imposes an urgent challenge risking the future outlook of the haitian people mover marianna. sanchez has more from that meeting in lamer, former and foreign minister, john victoria. news may done a plea here because he said that the economic situation in haiti is catastrophic.
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as he put it, explained to 2 members of the company up to controlling as a fuel piece. one steel terminal, which is causing great have in, in tv because it's affecting the distribution of drinking water. not only that, the transportation and the well functioning of hospitals. so, so dramatic and important. so to form of the ask for assistance for an international police force, not a military force by the police force. and there have been some reaction the, the question would be, what kind of form discourse will have, who will lead it? will the united nations be part of it? we don't know what it would look like, but if you are a secretary of state, anthony lincoln said that the u. s. is committed to restore security. katie and
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canada. foreign minister melanie, julie said the force must may lead by haitian. this is what we know for now. but for sure, here up to the assembly, there has been some special interest in the situation in haiti to ukraine now, where russian forces say they've captured territory in the don't yet. graham, it's the 1st time the kremlin has claim success. since keith's forces launched a counter offensive in the east and south ukraine's president says, his troops have taken more than 2400 square kilometers. since the latest defensive began to good results were achieved in the south of ukraine. this week, we are liberating or land or people from the through direct from them every day. they're true and you are sure to get to the lands which were occupied by russia earlier. the ukrainian authorities meanwhile, say they found a large burial size. in the eastern town of lame and the region got ranges,
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regions, governor rabbits says it's unclear how many bodies it contains. layman was retaken by ukraine over the weekend after russia withdrew its forces overseas. they would be surrounded. it's now reportedly being used by ukrainian forces as a bank for the counter attacks. a due late as meeting and prank have failed to agree on a price cap for gas. that's despite most members states agreeing. it's the best solution to bring down sky high energy costs and driven up by the war in ukraine vast and has more from the check capital. both past us urging you, lead us to stand firm against moscow. but european unity is once again on the threat, how to tackle sky high gas prices has been fighting the block europeans long dependent on cheap russian gas are struggling to pay their bills. one way of bringing the price down would be for you members not to compete with each other when buying gas
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on the open market. one thing is very clear that brought 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 chase me and sure me and also gas so that we avoid to our bit each other . but that we have a collective bargaining power. and that we put that in place. but countries like poland, greece and italy say, this is not enough to tackle a crisis. and a cap on gas prices must be put in place. a call for unity here in prague at the start, if it would likely be inexpensive winter for europe. the energy crisis has been driving a wedge between your members and with growing resentment about unaffordable prices . your leaders are under pressure to find a solution fast. a couple of hours drive out of the check capital by boat, how badly java is trying to keep warm. now, temperatures are dropping,
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the high gas prices have made alternative sources of energy like locks and whoo, pallets hard to come by. but then, you know, it's not easy. prices are up 350 percent from last year electricity in the pallets were using for here in or out by about 13250 percent and keep growing up. we've completely stopped investing in the business because we can't florida. if we don't have many guesses winter, we might have to move out and sell fi. you lead us hope that in the next few weeks they can agree on a common approach which might see a price being put in place. but that would mean the differences between richer and less well of countries would have to be confronted and resolved, steadfast, and al jazeera brock, thailand, king has visited survivors of those days, massacre at a nursery school. king my have jira long corn traveled to know why lamb 2 province with queen it's to feed them to make survive as it 2 hospitals. 36 people were killed when a former policeman opened fire. at least $22.00 of those victims which children.
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it's one of the worst attacks in thailand he's stream. tiny chang is being known while lamb crew and has his report staring blankly into a future of unfathomable loss. this bery mother still can't believe her 2 year old son patter. 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 hope 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. finance 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
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a soldier now policeman. this is a concern view 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 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 commercial 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 journey coffins from the mortgage arriving at a temple near their homes. his parents waited outside so many caskets
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that names and identities needed to be double checked. and then the final check and the awful confirmation that this is the final goodbye tony chang, l to 0, no one who knows eastern time. and this is nobel peace prize has been awarded to a jail to bell russian rights activists. russia's most famous human rights group and the ukrainian organisation, the documents for crimes. alice feel its key has been campaigning for democracy and human rights in bellows. for more than 30 years, it was in prison without trial in 2020, during protests, against the disputed re election of president alexander lucretia income memorial is one of russia's oldest human rights organizations. it was set up to uncover abuses during soviet era prisons. the supreme court shut down that group last team and ukraine's center for civil liberties was founded in 2007 to promote human rights
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journal. how reports from osler? hello, i am the director of the no beach in noble institute in our slow and unexpected phone call on behalf of the center for civil liberties will be awarded the nobel peace prize for 20 to 22 received in the ukrainian capital q with what activists later described as delightful shock. the 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 us 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. the human rights campaign of for decades in paris, his group, the asner documents, the use of torture under putin ally, alexander lucas shank, against political prisoners, which he has become jailed without trials since 2020. this year's peace prize is awarded to in announcing the award nobel committee chair berry 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 peace. now, issues of war and peace are always political. but that 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 highlight how his authorization regime and the one in neighbouring battle, ruth sought to suppress human rights and those who try to uphold them. john hall al jazeera of lo tenure look. shaner is the associate director at the europe in
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central asia division of human rights watch. she says this prize is about supporting human rights organizations under attack is just absolutely amazing. these are 3 very close paul musicians just seem to know what price the piece to day and just chill ball or even novel community east says foliage. because this is in g to both support seen human voice visions onto the tap. i think the problems ease both humans lies in funded, who are fin sends it keyed in an av conflicts and the key to yellow, to re justice, to those images, exotic body and unsettling bug. me i my holy eggs e. upgrade in bella, luce and eat, rush up,
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still head to on al jazeera forest fire on east to island damages some of the famous moas statues. and pushing the boundaries of storytelling. filmmakers, tone, war and climate collapse into an immersive experience with the london film festival . ah, anticipation is rising and so is the atmosphere a you ready for the with most of my cattle? i always. but the prevailing breeze, such as there is, is an on shore wind, which means this warm water here in the gulf is producing humid weather. the cover bahrain use inside a saturday, possibly even q 8 or the 40 to attend to suggest it's not that hebrew. don't feel very uncomfortable. opposite story in turkey with this on shore breeze. a cold normally bringing rain and dropping temperature eventually to the capital city
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through the phosphorus c mom rather than this breeze will event, she dropped temperatures on in gaza for example, where it's been above 30 for a while there. but between those 2, nothing much is going on occasional showers in the higher grad saudi western side of yemen. the tempt you to come down in a good part of iran. we're still talking 42 in baghdad. it has been a hot year and it continues that hot spell. but some you get to sunday spot, the difference little bit better, i suppose. in the western side of turkey, the wind has changed directions not coming on shore in northern egypt. otherwise, as little difference. that the rains in central africa have gone south of the equator. of course, they're still there a long way north, up in denisia and a long way south got it to angola, serve up pretty warm to with sponsored by categories and talk to al jazeera. we also do live the women of afghanistan,
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or somehow abandoned by the international community. we listen, we are paying a huge price for the war against terrorism. what's going on is money we meet with global news makers. i'm talk about the stories that matter on al jazeera, under cover reporting. worse for exclusive stories. explosive results, al jazeera investigations. ah ah. hello, are you watching al jazeera? i'm emily ang, when he's a reminder of our top stories, this alum i. d. 's government is appealing for international armed forces to help
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deal with a deteriorating security situation. people have been protesting for weeks after prime minister ariel on re ended fuel subsidies, pushing up prices. gang surrounding and major fuel terminal have refused to leave, and to on re steps down. you ladies have failed to agree on a price cap for gas, but member states did agree that it's the best solution to bring down sky high energy costs. and highlands king has met with survivors of those days. at nursery school massacre. 36 people were killed by a former policeman at least 22 of them with children. a school district in the us state of texas has suspended its entire police force. 5 months after gunman killed $900.00 students and to changes the attack at rob elementary in a while day in may spot more appeals for gun control. the police department has been under investigation for
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a slow response to the shooting. how does your castro has more and what this means for the school district and leave them with few good options because now they're turning to the texas state police to fill in that void to keep their students safe . but that police department is also under investigation for the way that it handled the school shooting back in may. this police force that is run by the school district. there were only 4 officers remaining after the chief was fired in august for his role in responding to the shooting and 2 others. employees replaced on administrative leave. and the major question that all of these investigations have been looking into is why did it take more than an hour, in fact, 77 minutes to be exact, for our police officers to breach the classroom door in order to stop the shooting . the shooter within those classrooms killed 19 students and 2 teachers in then
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suing time and the school district police force. they of course now have been suspended for an indefinite period of time and a state police force that has been asked to replace them still under resignation. at all, for its role in responding to that killing still in the us and its amounts to more export controls on chinese tech companies. the 30 tech firms have been added to the so called unverified list. the latest additions include china's top maker of memory chips. why m t c, the new measures prevent paging from accessing advanced us semiconductor technology . the rules also banned us bank companies from selling the machinery to banking without a license by canada has the details from washington. they say, 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. a given the fact that the technology is used for
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everything from super computers to missile launchers. 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 specific companies are listed. and it forbids any us company from selling technology to the chinese, but it goes far further than that. it also places a ban on any company worldwide that uses us technology from placing any sales with china. so it's exceedingly why ranging ban for the commerce department, which actually announced the ban, also added that it was concerned with china's surveillance activities. and this certainly would be something that would harshly limit those activities. surveillance that comment department claims is illegal and has been prying into us affairs, such as private phone calls. but this is going to have
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a massive impact on the development of chinese technology. and iranian current says 22 year old martha maney did not die from abating while in police custody. she was detained by iran, so called morality police in september for breaking strict dress code loads. the current is report thanks. she suffered multiple organ failure to, to underlying illnesses. her mother has rejected those findings and her father says she had bruises on her legs and held the police responsible for her death. footage posted on thursday, shows women marching through the iranian city of cards, chanting freedom. they have been a wave of protest across the country and the world since may be steph, as a de molar. zany is an associate professor of journalism at the university of new york and author of lipstick. g had. she says the protests have brought together different sections of iranian society. i think it really reflects how deeply
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iranian society has changed. iran in society has moved on, including many of the supporters of the system and many religious iranians who are just not willing to see security forces crackdown and harm women hurts. you know, take them into custody and ways that lead to their death over a head job. so i think what we're seeing is, is quite substantively different than anything you ron has experienced before. it's hard to know where that will go demand for dress freedom or an end to kind of policing of, of women. physical bodies is just one of the demand, but it's really spirals way beyond that, you know, week see from the young men out on the street, the diversity of people on the streets that it's gone very much to the heart of, of other failures in the islamic system, you know, the, the failure of society to accept mandatory, her job is just one of a number of failures that the system doesn't really seem to have answers to.
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football is slowly gaining popularity in basketball, obsessed philippines. that's thanks to charitable organizations that have introduced this bought to children in impoverished communities. a girls football team has now qualifying for the straight child world cub hosted by cotton this week . barnaby lo reports from manila. in any other neighbourhood in the philippines, this would have been a basketball court. must massage on board. but for years, no british coach in charity worker roy moore has been teaching you tear how to play football. not only as a sport, but as a way out of poverty made just felt like gradually and really growing things from the grassroots up as well. we could make the most difference, not just with football, but with the education, the social, emotional development, the holistic mentoring that we bring here at that play. and being able to recall that level, the playing field. jasmine claire grew up in an impoverished area and just started
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playing football last year. but she speeded into the play at the football club. it's become one of the more competitive teams in the country. and she plans to use this experience to get the college scholarship. so then if those are weak off, it's one way of showing that i can be good both in sports and in my study sports. now jasmine is part of the national team that reached the final of this 3 child world cup in brazil in 2014. what wallace hardly an elective sport in the philippines. it's really only recently that it's becoming mainstream. it is the women who are leading the way to the national to qualify for the women's world cup next year. the 1st time we're any philippine football team. ah, 2022 has been a breakthrough year for to women's national team. they reached the semi's of the women's asian cup and won the final against regional powerhouse thailand. at the
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southeast asian championships. there's no stigma for the girls to play with, so they have an opportunity to, to buy an affinity join in the scene. if it play that challenge against boys. the challenge again, color stronger people when they have the level of quickly. it's just giving them a chance. a lot of countries don't give them a chance. it's a chance of a lifetime for families like jasmine's for other siblings are also being coached by roy. and if they do well, they will all have a shot at college football scholarships, an opportunity that their parents never thought was possible. born below al jazeera, manila forest fires on easter island in the southeast and pacific heb damage to some of its carved stone statues. it took emergency cruise 8 hours to control the spread around the unesco world heritage site. but some of the figures known as murray are said to be badly charge. the island has nearly a 1000 of them megabytes,
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which were carved by the islands. indigenous people. more than 500 years ago, he won d t gully. the damage is unquantifiable. unmeasurable is also unrecoverable because the fire warmed the stone and the stone cracks. our scientists, along with the park administration, will have to go to the island to make the corresponding analysis and see how big the damage is. and what we'll have to do in the future. i do not know if there's a solution for this climate collapse, war and dance are in focus at the london film festival, which has just started this year. feel mike is pushing the boundaries of new technology to pull cinema. go as deeper into their stories. charlie angela explain me never has a corey 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 landscape. this is the expand strand
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of london b, f. i film festival inside disuse railway, his audiences are experiencing the many ways they're all 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 every year or sometime long. and that captured through the i is not of traditional cameras of laser scanners, most 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 build the utopian future where you can peer inside. what's special about immersive 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 the makers artist creators are drawn
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to this media. and they're trying to push the boundaries of how we tell stories and how we engage with our audiences. and this is so exciting. other works, touch on full conflict, putting the view 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 waiting. on the morning you wake use as 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 have the ballistic and we just got it to. as in apparatus, newton's artificial intelligence harvests your online data to create a rather creepy personal landscape of photograph questions. who owns your digital footprint? this is a.

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