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tv   News  Al Jazeera  October 10, 2022 12:00pm-12:31pm AST

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are also helping with the environment problems in the amazon, because they are consumers. i teach kids about the oceans are facing today. i've been working in earnest, trying to find ways to get to sleep with what we do as the ocean. why and what are you going to do to keep out of the sort of language that keeps the red blood women, right? they have one bathroom fight for equality and got them. eric, i was told the thing that was texting women. we made a challenge in the region. i will not being pro life. i want freedom. we don't have read them in this country. these evacuation now 3 days journey to a shelter on the west. right? so and destroys our country. someone needs to rebuild. ah, who?
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russian missile strikes reported in several ukrainian cities, including the capital kiva. president zalinski says civilians have been killed and wounded. the blasts come hours after president vladimir putin blinked. cheese for saturday's explosion on the current bridge connecting crimea to mainland russia. ah, you're watching l 0. like from a headquarters in south? i'm danny and abigail are also coming up. north korea says it's recent missile tests are designed to simulate striking south korea with tactical nuclear weapons. floods devastate parts of venezuela, leaving home schools on businesses destroyed. ah,
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hello, we have breaking news coming out of ukraine where a series of reported russian missile strikes have rock the capital cave and several other cities. a bridge leading into the capital has been damaged. residential areas were also targeted. the state emergency services says 5 people have been killed and many more injured, or blah serve also been heard in cities in ukraine's west, including the v that's close to the border with poland and turn opal than a pro and central ukraine and close the front lines has also been heads ukraine's president fella jamal salons, case of the strikes were aimed at causing the most casualties possible. trains him going around the globe, ukrainian level. the morning is difficult said we are dealing with tourists, dozens of missiles iranian drones. you know, they have to targets the energy facilities throughout the country. and the 2nd target is the people in such a time. such goals were specifically chosen to cause us as much damage as possible,
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but we are ukrainians. we help each other, we believe in ourselves. we restore everything that is destroyed. there may be temporary power outages now, but there will never be an interruption in our confidence all confidence in victory more. so that was the later statement put out by the president. let's bring in very challenge his following developments from keith. so rory multiple strikes across the campus. all just bring us up to speed with what's happened so far. multiple wave. so missiles launched on the capitol, multiple waves of missiles launched across the whole of ukraine. the, the latest from the deputy minister defenses that 83 rockets have been launched on the, against the country. 43 of them says the ministry of defense were taken out of by defense systems. but 5050 ratio for that still means that 40 missiles got through. remember, this is monday morning. the streets are busy with rush hour. this wave of
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air attack seemed designed to cause maximum cottage on the streets of ukraine on a busy monday morning. in cave, there are injured and their dad is not. not exactly how many at the moment the latest speaker that we have is 5 people killed 24 injured. but that is very preliminary. and those figures could well go up. we know that there were 3 strikes in downtown ship jenko, district, a destination mit the streets with a huge crates. we're also next to a children's playground in a central park cars on fire. this is, this is people work. basically. there are also many strikes that have taken place on civilian and critical infrastructure. in other parts of the capital city. the mayor has appealed to residence to stay in shelters, come into the city. it's all if you don't need to. many central streets have been blocked up by police or the magic substance can,
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can do what they need to do. the metro system is down those stations. and now for the people using them as, as bomb shelters, i want to stress that, you know, even, even in the early days of the war, the capital city hasn't experienced and a thing like this. this is spanish, unprecedented. in recent months, people had stopped paying attention to the right friends in k, because there just weren't any, any error rates, you know that the missiles were coming in, it was different bit to another part of the country. but the key is perceived. people have gone back to life is normal reading. this is absolutely gonna change that calculus as a signal that by friday, whole school is going to be switching to distance learning. so that suggests that this is a new reality for you. ok, thank you so much, rory, reporting for us from the capital keys. let's take it to her. that have me now. she's joining us from the ukrainian city of denise that's in central. you're kane and who. the denny for has been relatively close to the front line,
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so to speak. but how worrying is this development of strikes on the any prone and tell us where you are? where actually we are in the shelter now, and there's quite a few people who have been here for a few hours now and i think we should have in vacation that today is very different from the class they then we apply it regularly and tries the last one was just last week where the family died in the air strike is also very close to the reject. only about an hour drive that we had some on the regular begley strike. 9 days more than 60 people have died in the upper region all me and i think what you see today in the shower isn't
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that very different day. this is a day where people don't know what happened because we haven't been traveling around this part of the country. we've been to that region. we've been too hard when we been here for back and forth. we basically, all of these have been coming on the attack quite regularly and i would always be amazed with the fact that people just continued with their lives and whether they were sitting in a restaurant having a me or they were walking on the street. they should have rushed off the air siren or what happened, not today you have them sitting in shelters, we understand that other shelter. they're also quite busy read aloud and ongoing this morning all over the country. and this is a scene really that i have not seen in the countries very early and days of the war when the weather completely and t tc no one was around that change. business is
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an open restaurant and open while today. and then the advisors for everybody to stay indoors. the same sharp is not to venture on this tree because no use our warning. there are things where they can be strive and at the moment from what we see the pattern is either so little being that i'm being hit or what's called a critical infrastructure power plant earlier this morning. and part of this, if you now have electricity outages of the same could happen here and if they happen elsewhere and then to be and also in the middle. and i ok, thank you so much, had audible. how need is reporting for us from guinea pro. well, earlier the russian president were concerned called the blast on the crutch bridge, connecting crimea to mainline russia, a terrorist act, the russian president,
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blaine, ukraine special services. and he said to hold a meeting for a security council. later on monday, the bridge supplies moscow, troops and southern ukraine isn't as seen as a symbol of russian power in the region. ukraine has not claimed responsibility. some union use it. there is no doubt. this is an act of terrorism. i am to destroying russia's critical civilian infrastructure, its authors, perpetrators, and beneficiaries other security services of ukraine. let's bring him home and he's asked for moscow so soon a president will be chairing about security council meeting. do we expect to hear from him at all? and on the developments in ukraine. yes, yesterday that was talk about the president put in there giving a speech after the meeting about john just mentioned. and there are lots of reports in the media also about the possibility of now focusing on and even using the term
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terrorism or anti terrorism to describe the special military operation in ukraine. this is not sure, of course, but it has been reported several times in the media during the last few days. and we have seen every single russian official during the last couple of days. and since the last bridge, talking about terrorism, this is an act of terrorism committed against it as interests and some of them asking the russian leadership to deal a severe punishment to ukraine, and particularly strike to the vital interests of ukraine and the facilities. the infrastructure facilities, and we have seen some of that happening today. so president vladimir putin has been, i mean the people have been waiting for him for a long time now to say something decisive about what's going on. consider the defeat the russian army, received or under one to the front line nations were impatient to hear something
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new mentioned by president lot to be put in. we have seen him changing the command of the, of the armies fight of russian armies fighting in ukraine. that was a major change. a dash is also way expecting, but they have been since that change, they have been talking about, the new man commanding those troops and his history and in syria and elsewhere in russia was elsewhere beyond the borders and expecting him to do something drastic in terms of how he deals with or runs the operations in the front line. thank you so much for how much all without update from moscow. alexander walter versus security and defense policy analyst and the editor in chief of the swiss military review. and he says the attacks and crimea and key if will escalate the war when ukraine most probably struck. busy bridge, they have in fact,
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expended the battlefields to the rear alarms to the supply infrastructure of the russian forces that are fighting right now in ukraine. so the response by the russian military forces is to also extend the battlefield and the waging of strikes to the ukrainian capital. and the message is quite clear. fighting will resume in the areas are not only directed directly connected to the fighting, but also into the rear areas where the population lives, where perhaps training is being undertaken with conscripts for the ukrainian military. this is a direct correlation and linked because the ukranian have been target a number of bridges on the upper river. and they have essentially managed to make it extremely difficult for the 15000 russian forces that are fighting in the
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car some area to receive all of the replenishment the munition, the fuel coming from the rear. there are 3 train access that allow for the logistical supply of these courses, and one of them is the one that was struck yesterday. phil has an al jazeera, a message from the pope on what he calls the sinful exclusion of migrants from to fight. ah, it is a wet time of the year, but there is in here a proper retreating band of rain hot spots. i know because full cost wise it looks wet virtually everywhere may be less. so in northern sumatra. little less. so in northern talent viet nam, that is because this is the line that persists. this is the, effectively,
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the monsoon trough coming slowly south. so heavy rain seems like the sudden via them for, for example, cambodia and bits of sun thailand. and beyond that, it's just a scattering of showers and thunderstorms. it has been very wet. recently in new south wales is part of australia. now the rain has gone off shore effectively apart from light showers, with the still some high river levels that ex systems a long way subs in the byte. so it's currently increasing the wind. it will bring rain in with it during wednesday, and there it is. developing in south australia dance was victoria and parts of new south wales, miserable day in melbourne at 21. fine day in pers at 21 bath for new zealand. the temperature has been from record low to rather warm, 21 or so just couple days ago with that back down to about 18 in christ church rain only light indoor violent but time to get to wednesday. we're back down to the low teens. that is one huge fluctuation in temperatures.
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ah, ah, a ah, no. ah,
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how low again the top store is on al jazeera, this, our russian missile strikes have been reported across several cities in ukraine, including the capital key. the state emergency services says at least 5 people have been killed. many more have been injured. blossom also been heard in cities in ukraine's west, including the v that's close to the polish border. internal poll, denise pro and central ukraine and close to the front lines has also been heads. vladimir putin has called the blast on saturday, on the current bridge connecting crimea to russia, a terrorist act. the russian president blamed ukraine special services. the bridge supplies moscow's troops in southern ukraine. north korea's leader says its latest missile launchers were way to test the ability of fits nuclear weapons to wipe out american and south korean targets. kendra roon also acknowledged plans to conduct war tests. kim said the launches were in response to joint naval drills between the u. s. and south korea. rob mcbride has more from sol. the north koreans
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have said very little about this flurry of miss ballistic missile activity that's gone on pretty much on, unchecked for 2 weeks. continually launching of these missiles the last week of september, the 1st week of october. and then today, monday, the official north korean use agency comes out with almost a pronouncement along declaration of exactly what it's been doing. the dates of the tests, the types of missiles being launched, her and tested with photographs showing kim jung on the low north korean leader overseeing all of these tests. and basically the headline to come away from this is that the north korean say the goal that they have been doing is carrying out what they called tactical nuclear drills. this is the supposed development of a smaller tactical nuclear devices. now, these are the, the kind of miniaturized nuclear warheads that you would put onto a rocket or
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a short range ballistic missile. it does require an awful lot of a technical advancement of technology and technological know how in order to do this, and it's unclear just how advanced the north koreans are in developing tactical nuclear warheads. but certainly they are working on the delivery systems for these types of warheads, and they've also, as well as carrying out to assure to range ballistic missiles. probably the most serious development of the past couple of weeks was last last week on october. the 4th, they launched an intermediate range ballistic missile right over the top of japan that landed in the pacific ocean. that caused obvious alarm from all of the north korea as neighbors. it's the 1st time they've carried out such loans like that in 5 years. and the north korean say that that is a new type of missile. they also say that they have been practicing and developing the technology to have to have explosions in the air above the ground. now that's
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the kind of delivery that you would use if you were launching a nuclear device. leon and petro visit north korea specialist. he says south korea remains the primary target appealing young's potential strikes. the problem with sparks when you pull up on is that it's going to affect the launch country as much as the also the destination land or the enemy. because it depends on the direction of the wind. also how the test, the technology is not going to hasn't tested it's nuclear, defy this for the last 5 years. and the most recent staff was a hydrogen bomb. ah, the start menu player weapon, which was much more powerful and certainly it would be a suicidal attempt to use that pipe of weapons. so that's why kim jong and is much more focused now on something over more precision strike with a low yield delivery with potential threat to be delivered. not only to the
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enemies from far away, but from nearby and south korea is still a place which is where 38000 us troops are stationed. and also the u. s. allied countries have their assets around the korean peninsula as well which may be destroyed or defeated just once, the un high commissioner for refugees as warning, armed conflict, human rights abuses and global warming have forced an unprecedented number of people to flee their homes. let's take a closer look at what's driving up the numbers. so the number of forcibly displaced people reached a record of more than 100000000 in may. that's up from nearly 90000006 months before. and the increase has been largely caused by the war and ukraine. more than 7000000 people have been displaced. well since the military, coups and men mar last year, the number of internally displaced,
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people also known as id. peas, has increased to more than 1000000. and then there's burkina, faso, a deteriorating security, has led to more than 2000000 id peas up from 50 thousands in 2018. so the high commissioner philippa grande's opened the annual conference of the u. s. refugee agency, a just a short time ago. he started by criticizing the international community for being unable to work as one the impact of this inaction on the world's most vulnerable is grave cove. it climate conflict, and now the cost of living crises are causing ever more hardship. and indeed, and in various ways, compelling people to flee. cox's bizarre and bangladesh is the world's biggest refugee camp, about a 1000000 people have been there for 5 years. and these are the words of some of the ro hang, are living in that. coun. though the last i was i had strong hope to go back to
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burma. yeah. but the situation is very bad there. right now. i like. i think it will take a long time because there is war going on between the both miss military and the rocky hon forces or i can what i kind of been living in the count for the past 5 years and i don't see any future for me i hope things will get the better in future matter either what i found 5, will you get enough rations in every month? but sometimes it's just not enough for a family thought it would be good if we are provided a little more than what we get. ah, one decor, my mother's alumni children are not getting proper education and the camp. i think they're losing hope for the future, which is a big concern for us. oh, face many problems. we're not able to move freely. there's no opportunity for livelihoods on don. allah's have decent meals and it is also difficult to cope with one soon, reins and storms on a blonde rama that we want to go back to me on my right. now, if we could y'all at this conflict going on, there is no p. snell. if we go there,
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now we might lose our lives, which is why we're afraid to resettle to me and mom now without over a $100000.00 roving or refugees fleeing persecution and men more have ended up in malaysia. the government's treatment of those refugees has been criticized recently . florence, lori has more from column for there are more than a 180000 refugees and asylum seekers registered with the you and hcr in malaysia were hang us comprise the largest group, but it's thought the number of unregistered refugees is much higher. now many of them live in cities in low cost housing areas like this. malaysia is not a signatory to the u. n. refugee convention, which means refugees here have minimal legal protection. they don't have the right to work, which leaves them vulnerable to exploitation. they often employ in the informal sectors doing jobs that are dangerous, dirty, and difficult refugee children don't have the right to attend government schools, which means that dependent on en jose and volunteers, it's estimated 70 percent of refugee children and malaysia on not educated. and the
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you and hcr in malaysia gives some level of protection and socially to those who are registered with the agency. but refugee group say that tens of thousands more awaiting registration. and that process can take years. the government's proposal to shut the you and hcr office and take over its function of registering refugees has been met with criticism. in the past malaysian enforcement authorities had turned back boats carrying ringo refugees. the government's recent cracked down on undocumented migrants raised concerns that refugees were also caught up in those rates. that's led to questioned whether refugees can depend on the government to treat them with dignity and give them the help they need. the head of the roman catholic church has described the treatment of migrants as criminal and sinful, as in baba reports. one by one. all the people are just a precarious rescue in the mediterranean,
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as volunteers help refugees and migrants often over crowded boats. but others haven't been so fortunate. according to human rights watch, at least 1200 people died, trying to reach europe between january and september. this year, she was a lawyer schuman. i got a bottle of the hospital. and on sunday, the head of the roman catholic church, unexpectedly referred to the ongoing tragedy. his candle, soleski luciana damien. the exclusion of migrants is scandalous, indeed its criminal anti. it makes them die in front of her. and so today the mediterranean is the world's largest cemetery. the exclusion of migrants is disgusting. it is sinful, honey. some will see his comments as a warning to georgia, maloney, who's expected to become italy's prime minister. late of his month. her brothers of italy party came 1st in september's election, part of a right wing coalition that wants to speed up repatriation and introduce tougher asylum rules. is warned will not change. and the league and misgivings that people
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had me nation but certainly will help, you know, does good support migration to have some kind of a standing in, you know, easy cushion and landscape before the election, ga maloney called for a naval blockade of north africa. let me share again later on, it's not clear why europe cannot help italy defend the use external borders overlooking the mediterranean by negotiating with the libyan government that only one of her coalition partners, the lego party, is headed by mateo sal vini. italy's hard line, former interior minister, last year he went on trial for abduction and dereliction of duty over his refusal to let a charity boat bring rescued migrants to the island of lampa. do, sir, while he'd like his old job back political soci say maloney's resisting, hoping to get you backing for her plans to stop people leaving north africa. nadine barbara al jazeera, the malaysian prime minister, a smile sabri alcove, has dissolved parliament paving the way for
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a national elections to be held in the coming weeks. the election commission will announced the dates and this was announced, my ismael and a televised interest. 76 people died when a boat capsized in nigeria. it was swamp by flood waters and a number of states foreign lands on crops have also been washed away by flooding, sparkling fears of food shortages hulu. since her lanka had been accused of miss treating peaceful protest, hers, at least 6 people were arrested in the latest demonstrations. michelle fernandez reports from colombo, protested here on this very public promenade called the gold face in colombo. have been told that they can't demonstrate are due to us number of bureaucratic measures as a result in a, in a sort of a sound of an argument with a police officers. we've seen that some of the policemen have been told to kit up. they've got, they got gas masks on,
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they've obviously got their batons at the ready. this is the crowd of protest. ers essentially who have got together. they've come together basically to mock a number of months of protest and also demanding an end to the government, a repression, as they call it. they say that the government is on a major which hand to crack down on protesters who are behind the anti government protests that lead to the change of government and leadership. and they said that this is a purely public place that they have the right to do so. now, one of the things that they have talked about and expressed concern about is a bill of creating a bureau of rehabilitation. and what this means, because it essentially allows for the use of what it is called minimum force against those that are brought in for rehabilitation anyway. and everyone can be taken under custody of the government can be sub, legally subjected, darcia can be legally for sped,
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be drugs are prevented from if they tried. do i leave the same bad that it's termed at this camp? and then it can be forcibly brought backing to the center. and obedience is, is forced under the bed to any means including yourself. mm hm. and course the anger, the frustration at the mismanagement of the government that has brought an otherwise a prosperous and an essentially a country with so much potential to its knees hasn't died down. and people are speaking out. a landslide in central venezuela has killed at least 25 people and more than 50 others are missing. hurricane julia and days of torrential rain triggered flooding. sarah, hi, rach reports. home schools and businesses destroyed from the air. the extensive damage in last to hattie asked is clear on the ground, it's a race against time to search for the missing. many people are trapped on the layers of rubble and mud. torrential rain caused the el paso river to burst its
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banks to green landslide. the river overflowed and there are people we still haven't found that are trapped when he help. my brother is missing is not only my pain. i think we're all feeling it. you pull out my bill up . i haven't slept. i haven't eaten. i don't know if my niece is in a while the water dragged her luis when tess is standing, where his shop went to the home. but they also got so many families lost their homes. i've just lost my pity that open though the 10 years ago. i'm a new on tropicana now. look, i have nothing around to 1000 emergency personnel taking part in the rescue and search operation most the head. yes, the 67 kilometers southwest, the venezuela's, capital caracas. since he's been hit the hardest by this year's learning, the weather pattern that brings west to conditions to asia, africa, and latin america.

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