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tv   News  Al Jazeera  October 8, 2022 11:00am-11:31am AST

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as our culture became illegal to name our children, music names removed our culture from history books, but the preserved culture in secret view played in an order role in the revolution that top a long time leader wal mart. he outlaw their language. now, after more than a decade, they are able to open celebrate their heritage and culture. although libya has been engulfed in violence and political division since 2011, the amazon say they're happy with their new found freedom. talk to al jazeera, we got a limit of a gun, it was sent at banding by the international community. we listen, we have a huge price for the war against terrorism going on for money. we meet with global news makers and talk about the stories that you see. i
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the main road and rail bridge connecting crimea to the russian mainland is damaged moscow says a truck bomb is to blame. ah, they're walking out or is there a light from a headquarters in delphi, navigator also heads, at least one person has been killed and the occupied westbank after is really forces rated a palestinian refugee camp the turkish parliament debates a media bill. the government will fight this information other say, will be used to crack down on critical reporting class. we follow how this year is drought on heat wave and southern spain have effective have affected all of harvest . ah,
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hello. we begin with breaking news, the main bridge. lincoln crimea with mainland russia has been damaged after an explosion. russia's national anti terrorism committee says it was caused by a truck bomb. part of the road section of the curt, straight crossing appears to have collapsed and several train carriages have been burning on the rail overpass. take a look at the area and read because it's under the control of russian forces and there are separatist allies. so the kurtz road and rail bridge links, mainland russia and crimea, and is a key land roots supplying russia's military and southern ukraine. ukraine and forces have been pushing a counter offensive in the east and in the southern harrison region. damage to the bridge could deliver a major blow to russia's logistics. there we have 2 correspondence standing by for us on this worry challenge isn't key, but 1st let's talk to him home about who is joining us from moscow. so how is this being seen by the kremlin? can be seen as a potential set back. how much while
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it is 1st, it's seen as an actor war that, that those are the words of the, of the speaker of the state. duma, he said this terrorist talk is an act of war or russia president, florida me to put in all the a an investigative committee to be set up to see into the causes and responsibilities behind this attack. so here i show they that there is no doubt that it is a terrorist act, and that it is an act of war the the made, the bridge, of course, was built in 2000 complete in 2019. and it is very dear to the half of the, of the russian leadership, because it was, it was the completion for them. it was the completion on the ground of the integration of crimea into the russian federation after the next it in 2014. russia has
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a large military base in crimea and also it has its administrative structure as their own. an ongoing supply lying down about the bridge on the road have now being damaged to the talk about the c ferrying transportation line not being affected, but they will have now to rely heavily on that option. and probably other options to continue to bring supplies to their military base and their infrastructure they're in and their communities as they consider them in kind. mia? so here, russia, there is a steady stream of comments from the highest levels in the country, talking about terrorism, talking about acts of war and saying that russia will not be violent on this. and this comes only a few days after the those explosions in the russian pipelines in the baltic sea. so, i mean, it is, it accumulates and adds,
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it adds to the anger here, russia, against what it perceives as a consolidated and sustained effort to isolated economically. ok, thank you so much for home and val reporting from moscow for us. let's find out the reaction from keven. bring in roy challenge. he's joining us from there. so any official reaction from authorities where you are about an hour ago, there was an extraordinary tweets coming from mc harlow padaya. who is president landscape chief advisor? i'll read it to you in full. the words, a remarkable crimea, the bridge, the beginning. everything illegal must be destroyed, everything stolen must be returned to ukraine. everything occupied by russia must be expelled. that's me. caught up a dollar like that. is that confirmation that this was cry? well, no, not explicitly. but it certainly goes beyond the kind of weight, wink nudge, nudge warnings to the russians,
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not to smoke around critical infrastructure that came from the ukrainians when there were strikes on the saki air base in crimea. in august. this is a different type of language from the crania and leadership. there is widespread jubilation in ukraine this morning. it was random a person's birthday yesterday on friday, so the common tweets or, or mean being put around today's well happy birthday, mister president's. but i think beyond the provided behind the bravado, there might be a bit of nervousness about was exactly vladimir putin. the response to this might be, it's a huge hit to his prestige if this was the ukrainians. it is them demonstrating facts. russia's control over its newly annex territories. sons, appreciate and ask ligans is weak and with a rig under the, the weight of,
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of offensive by the crate in military, but also its control over crimea. the 1st territory that russia annex back in 2014. but that is weak and perhaps withering as well. the big question of course, is, what is the response from russia going to be on the 30th of september for me and said what he antics those new territories. that he would defend them using all the beans at russia disposal. now we have to see whether he is actually going to follow through with that. or i thank you so much for re challenge reporting from keith. at least 2 palestinians have been killed and 11 others injured in. janine and the occupied westbank after is really forces rated a refugee camp. their local sources say one of the palestinians detained is the brother of a member of the atlantic jihad group was wanted by the is really army. an earlier on friday is really forces shot and killed 2 palestinian teenagers and separate incidents in the occupied west bank. this footage appears to show is really
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soldiers beating palestinians who try to rescue an injured 17 year old boy during one of the incident in a village near at. i'm a law, a 14 year old was shot in the head. you know, the separation was south of it happened after is really the soldiers stormed the village. turkey as parliament is debating a controversial media bill proposed by the governing aka party and it's nationalist allies. the proposed law is intended to combat what it's supporters call this information. but other say we use to crack down on journalists, phenom, customer who has more from a stumble. you news in the economist and you took research. it is a vocal critique of turkey, as it cannot mach policies, which have resulted in storing inflation and collapsing currency. the capital markets forward suit him for his predictions. on the rapid slide of the turkish near the new media bill, i guess there's some formation which some called censorship law concerned tenant,
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says total gallery, i know that we are, the goal is not to inside public outrage, but to warn about the risks of wrong policy even if the government changes, i'll keep criticise on the one that we think they're trying to suppress voices by pushing for this not before the election. the naval table was made by president bridget fire dawns on warranty, and his nationalist l. eyes calls for one to 3 years in prison for citizens who intentionally spread what the government considers misleading information. it also requires social media platforms to remote content that's deemed false and share account details with authorities. but it will allow news websites to receive public advertising revenue and issue pret skarts. i sincerely who runs the multilingual digital platform of a pro government news outlets. lease some regulation is necessary because it is that that is journalist. we have to keep up with all the developments and social
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media journalism is a fast pace environment. so if you're not part of that environment before behind opposition parties have tried to block the bill, but are unlikely to succeed. the governing up party holds the majority in parliament. journalists have protested against a bill saying it's a government attempt to sense or freedom of expression and restrict independent media. says the definition of falseness is laid caribbean is it is up to the prosecutor to define what false news is. in this case. the system will have an act of complaint mechanism. his basis to verify is the authority itself, which mine use is already about. if the authority denies the in your story becomes false news. the proposed law, which has been on the waste, where more than a year, comes ahead of a presidential election scheduled for next year. this neighbourhood and stumbles oldtown was once known as baba ali, the birthplace of early turkish journalism. a lot of seeds is then digital and
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social media now play a big role in how we get our news. but may turkish media south now fear if the bill is passed, it could be used the sensor, they work as journal it said alco solo, l to 0. a sample still had on al jazeera, why charities are behind a drive that seen football kick off and basketball obsessed philippines, muscular and bangladesh, where fishermen say the rising cost of living along with climate change is threatening their future. ah, anticipation is rising. and so is the atmosphere a, you read away, sponsored my cattle aways. here's your weather update in a minute. 15 things are starting to dry off across the islands of ireland and
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britain. good to see by the way, but that's all gonna change over the next little bit. push of some atlantic rein, moving west to east over the next little bit. so some disturbed weather will be back in the forecast. rain is still stuck in this eastern side of spain, the south of france around the ballier axes wallen. at times we'll get some pretty good bursts of rain here in of course this area has been prone to flooding around the valencia area. as of late a weak band of showers is moving in to switzerland and austria. so it's going to put a bit of a cap on temperature 16 degrees in zurich. but we do have some warmth to be found in the balkans, suns out. sophia bulgaria up to 21 degrees, disturbed weather for turkey as black sea coast. and we're also going to draw down some cooler air for the capitol on could or are just a high of 15 degrees on saturday. after africa we go, there's been some flooding in northern gonna around to buddha, and the rain is still falling there on saturday. meantime, it's all about the heaters. we look toward the south southern botswana,
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the northeast of south africa, southerly wind from our po, twenties, have degrees, but watch what happens on sunday. we get a northerly, went that bumps up your temperature to 37. see you soon. the with sponsored by kat, are there ways which site is willing, chaos or control? what does the new forever war mean for america and nato, as long as americans keep consuming prices are going to keep going up. why didn't joe biden see inflation coming? how did we get so much raw, the quizzical look, us politics, the bottom line. we understand the differences and similarities of cultures across the world to handle take. it will be the news and current affairs that mattel to years. ah,
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the me going to be top floor is on 0 this our main bridge, lincoln crimea with mainland russia has been damaged after an explosion. russia is national anti terrorism committee. it says it was caused by a truck bomb. at least 2 palestinians have been killed and 11 others injured in jimmy and in the occupied west bank after it's really forces rated a refugee camp. their local sources say one of those, the changes the brother of a member of the islamic jihad group church. he is, parliament has been debating and media law proposed by the governing act party, the government, the bill will tackle this information, but rights group say it will crack down on critical reporting. so haiti has appealed for international how to deal with it's deteriorating security situation. people have been protesting for weeks since prime minister r e o on re and did fuel subsidies which pushed up prices. gangs have blockaded the
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main fuel terminal. they've refused to leave until the prime minister steps down. the government is warning of a humanitarian catastrophe with major shortages of petrol and food. or the members of the organization of american states have gathered in lima for this year as general assembly. and they discussed economic and political concerns across the region with the unrest in haiti topping their agenda. marianna sanchez report. members of the 52nd assembly conversation of american states agreed haiti's economic and security crisis is one of the regions biggest challenges. katie sweet quest for an international police force to confront gangs didn't go unanswered to manage your expect, united nations system that has both capacities to be present in high tea to whoever i put response. and that the security council can advance with urgency,
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with the universal multilateral system must provide a solution. but there were differences on some of the other issues. members the nels to human rights violations, him, he got our but a motion to remove opposition leader, one way door. as dennis willis representative failed to pass. as part of the li, medical ration members pledged to work for gender equality and fight against discrimination and poverty. one of the most pressing issues in the america is the migration of thousands of people. the united nation says 86000000 latin america now live in extreme poverty. members here at the assembly, se be, are committed to help. hannah must sit thousands of migrants were risking their lives. crossing the darian gap, one of the most treacherous roots in the americans. and say that armor a little right now, there is a migration crisis that we must attend to and we must respond with the fat and joint responsibility to the cries of hundreds of thousands of latin american
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brothers that are going through a very difficult situation. possibly you a secretary of state antony blinkin pledged $240000000.00 for migrants and refugees . the pulse pandemic slow down and the rice in food and fuel costs because of the war in ukraine, remain a great challenge in these countries. and one of the most unequal regions in the world when he and a sanchez and just see that lee might be to the u. s. has announced more export controls on chinese tech companies. china's top maker of memory trips, why mtc is among the companies affected. the new measures prevent beijing from accessing advanced us semiconductor technology. they also ban us based companies from selling the hardware to china without a license. mike, hannah is in washington with more on the impact these restrictions might have. well, as certainly the why does band that has been imposed in at least a decade. and it will have a major impact on china. given the fact that the technology is used where
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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 that specific companies are listed. and if for 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 ben, 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 commerce department claims is illegal and has been prying into us
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affairs, such as private phone calls. but this is going to have a massive impact on the development of chinese technology. the world health organization is working with the gambia and government to investigate the deaths of 66 children linked to 4 costs their ups made in india. gambia has lawrence and urgent door to door campaigns to retrieve the medicine that are believed to have caused acute kidney damage. it's investigating the indian pharmaceutical company which made the costs. the reps and spain is facing a crisis and its annual all of harvest. the nation experience that's worst drought in 500 years this summer. and it's all of all production could be down by as much as 40 percent. harry faucet reports in the province of high end in southern spain. autumn in southern spain. the time when the olives turn green and plump ahead of the harvest, the province of high end is become a virtual monoculture. more than 60000000 olive trees producing more than a 5th of the world's olive oil. this year's harvest is projected to be down
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massively. chica has spent his life working these groves. he says this summer's drought, which scientists have called the worst for 500 years as that some trees baron, some with a much reduced number of usable olives at inter, being directly into this is the main source of income, especially for people from the high in the area without olives, than construction, what goes down and a bit of everything else over the last. if people don't have incomes, they don't spend all of trees. a famously hardy able to survive extremes of heat and cold and keep producing their fruit. the fact that these trees so stressed out of this year's drought and heat wave is a worrying sign for this region that rely so heavily on them. the fear is that climate change could greatly disrupt spain's olive oil production line. the country provides nearly half of the entire global supply. agriculture already places,
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huge demands on limited water resources. industry leaders here this summer's shock could point towards a future. not too far away tolling because you're looking at it unless you're quoting, everything indicates that what used to happen occasionally is becoming something structural. this unfortunately means average temperatures will volume with higher peaks as well and very little rain. and when it does rain, it's going to be $21.00 already along with other vegetable oils prices going up. although producers say not by enough to compensate for this year is collapsed, harvest a little bit. they, they bring gold oil vegetables. everything has gone up because of the inflation and also now with the small production of all the vote, it all has an impact. when it comes to rising prices. in the fields, the work goes on, the aim to salvage as much as possible. if this is harvest, the forecast is for more dry weather in the coming weeks. and while that's a worry,
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the real fear is what will happen to this area, farmland, in the coming years, are you force it? i'll just euro southern spain football is slowly gaining popularity in the philippines where basketball has long dominated. and that's because charitable organizations have introduced the sport to children in impoverished communities. the girls football team has qualified for the st. charles world cup, which kicks off in cuts are on saturday, or below reports from manila. in any other neighbourhood in the philippines. this would have been the basketball court. thought by what for years now? british coach in charity worker roy moore has been teaching you here. how to play football, not only as a sport, but as a way out of poverty. it just fell like gradually and really growing things from the grassy stuff as well. we could make the most difference, not just with football, but with the education, the social, emotional development,
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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 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. said any of those are week all it's one way of showing that i can be good both in sports and in my studies. now jasmine is part of the national team that reached the final of this 3 child world cup in brazil in 2014. what ball is oddly an elitist sport in the philippines? it's really only recently that it's becoming mainstream. it's the women who are leading the way that the national team qualify for the women's world cup next year . the 1st time for any philippine football team. 7
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2022 has been a breakthrough year for to women's national team. they reached the semi's of the women's asian cup and one to final against regional powerhouse thailand. at the southeast asian championships, there's no stigma for the girls to play there so they have an opportunity to to play. and as soon as they join an authentic play that challenge against boys that challenge, they go caller and stronger people and they have to level up quickly. it's just giving them a chance. a lot of countries don't give them a chance. is a chance of a lifetime for families like judgments 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. or below al jazeera manila fishermen and bangladesh say they are struggling to make ends need to and they blame. soaring fuel costs a 50 percent rise and diesel prices as having an effect on other essentials and
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extreme weather patterns for making the situation worse. one fisherman told al jazeera about the hardships he's facing. i'm on put his realty. i'm on mom pollard, maddie, my name is kevin mcgee. i was born in rangoon yang chuck to graham. i miss how go to my little. i'm a c fisherman and 58 years old and i have been in this straight for a long time on apple. they live with them. we typically had for the ocean after bank provision for our trips needed it, but now the prices of essentials have doubled. because of high diesel costs. evelyn fell on them, but it used to cost us are on $1600.00 if you know, for all expenses for a fishing expedition, really not. that's double that. making it very difficult for us to look what i was probably gonna say. we now have to journey more than 24 hours to reach the fishing grounds in the sea. years ago we could find, catches within 2 hours of starting out, but things have changed. and i've, sometimes we are even scared to head to the deep sea because of the nature of the
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weather, which is now unpredictable. what is i? i'm on that we don't have any compass or navigational tools and, but i can predict the mood of the sea and how it will be, including it's that just by traveling few kilometers, i know is from experience labels. i can predict the weather just by looking at the formation of the clouds and the color of the sea water i think we connects isn't use and other information, as there is no mobile communication network. when we are in the deep sea, i thought i got cameras. now there is no rain during the munson season before. we can don't even fish during the stormy season. but nowadays we can wake up. the weather pattern is completely changed. follow together. if we could get a sooner in the gps navigation tools than it would be so much easier for us to catch fish in the deep sea. but how can we purchase such type of equipments when we're eldest, struggling to make ends meet little more thought. i'm out of, i'm out of emily, the american battles, and i have to support 12 family members,
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including my children and grandchildren. i'm the only breadwinner in the family, and sometimes we go to a rough time, especially when the fishing trawler breaks down article profanities, have i say one was in austria. here the government is making this choose of the ukraine on the russian conflict and using it as a pretext to increase the full price by 50 percent. in other words, texting us on fairly well by cutting into our earnings. it is like the big fish shipping, the small fries, not down the way around. do you understand me? what do though, i'm thinking about towards developing story on jeanine. that's an occupied westbank where at least 2 palestinians have been killed after is really forces rated a refugee camp there. let's bring in the day, but i am. she's following developments from near to it. i'm a lot not in jenny in itself. not just tell us about these ongoing raids by the israeli army and, and, and the palestinians who have been killed. the results of these
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rates are usually density when it comes to palestinians. we're hearing the funeral procession for one, palestinian with killed on friday by is with fire. he's the 4th palestinian to be killed by the fire in less than 24 hour hours. this morning we woke up to the news of the israeli. read out that you need a few g cap to palestinians, but announced killed by israeli forces fired in jeannine itself. we know that jeanine has been the abbey center of tension. we're talking about more than $114.00 palestinians who had killed by israel since the beginning of the year in the west bank a no. and a 3rd of those have been killed engineering but also seeing idiot enforcement when it comes to these really res engine in itself. this is something we haven't seen since the 2nd palestinian is it called like years and years that go. but it's
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a lot of tension. is that that clear here in the occupied less bag for more than 7 years. as you can see, tension is still rising. so ended up what sort of resistance do the palestinians put up when, when these raids take place? with boy 17 year old matthew la dad with whose funeral procession with it right now has jumped to the defense of his village here. when that is, when you set there came to attract people. after that, the israeli forces came back. and of course as usually is the case, there were defending these really settlers leading to got frontier sions between you and the israeli forces. the youth here had only armed with one thing, which is rocks. they throw them, have many armed soldiers who are in location. now in the case of janine, it's
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a bit different. there are on people, i estimated a bike. it doesn't usually clash with these ready forces. they don't have a lot of access to a lot of app. hi. 9 and developed weapons, but they still try to defend the refugee camp in g. now we've seen also militants in arm. 3 why it was inactive, that being mobilized, being a. 5 exchanging fire with the israeli forces. but generally speaking, we're talking about rocks. we're talking about palestinian, who are on tomorrow. okay, now. thank you so much. no, deborah, him is reporting for us from a model that to me occupied westbank. ah . hello again. the headlines on.

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