tv News Al Jazeera October 10, 2022 8:00pm-8:31pm AST
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ah, ah what's most important to me is talking to people understanding what they're going through here it al jazeera. we believe everyone has a story worth hearing. the latest news as it breaks, it's not just personal property, but also infrastructure that now needs fixing from power lines to water. main detailed coverage is up, i think a little change. i don't have to think back from around the world at the peak of the hobby season for 51000 records on today. ah,
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russian missile strike several ukrainian cities. president putin says it's payback for what he's calling terrorist attacks. ah monro, bothersome, this is all the 0 live from doha. also coming up the nobel prize for economics is awarded to 3 americans for their research into financial crises. the u. n. warns the number of displaced people around the world has reached record levels. we're going to take you to a refugee camp in lebanon county, if they can't live here any longer. more than 90 percent of syria is 11 on our poor . ah, we're going to be with the latest developments in ukraine where russian missiles
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have hit several major ukrainian cities, including the capital cave. 11 people have been killed. president vladimir putin says the strikes are in response to what he described as terrorist attacks by ukraine. and he warned the could be more to come be at the utopia still gleaning, bundled nevada was. it is impossible not to respond this morning. a mess of strikes took place on air, sea, and land against energy and military targets against ukraine. lose him. if such attempts by ukraine continue, they will be harsh responses was little, abridge, leading into cave has been damaged, as well as parks and tourist sites in the center of the capitol. it's the 1st attack on the city in months, un secretary general, antonio gutierrez, says the strikes are another unacceptable escalation of the war. rory challenge reports from cave a quiet monday morning in the capital key if and then this not an isolated strike.
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this was one of multiple missiles salvos, launched to the city, others hit the chef jenko district, which includes the historic old town as well as government offices. a busy intersection in front of the main building, a key of university. it was rush hour and the people driving to work were caught in the inferno. this was the park nearby. key if wasn't the only city targeted from live, even the west, to hockey, in the north, to the pro, in the center and several more. besides rushes, president vladimir putin was exacting. his revenge for an explosion that damage the coach bridge. lincoln, crimea, and the russian mainland and other so called terror attacks. he cranes, presidents urged people to be resilient, even on a gleaming shame. they have to targets enough energy facilities throughout the country. and the 2nd is people in such a times of such cause were chosen to cause as much damage as possible, get
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a lot rush, but we are ukrainians. when we help each other we believe in ourselves nationally, we restore everything that is destroyed through him. he st. hilda mccraney certainly quick to do that. as soon as the all clear was given, the clean up started, he is mer came to see the damage. what russians did is genocide of your grand population. they need you brain was all the great him do. we have a lot of numbers. people who died to day dividend and didn't use a structure, get great feasible, considering the places hit, it's remarkable. the death toll wasn't much higher, ran his huge crater, all the twisted metal remnants of what presumably was the missile. now vladimir putin says of this was a response to a terrorist attack. well, look away. this myself struck as a playgrounds just over there. you credit have no doubt who the real terrorist it had been months since the last air strikes on key if people stopped responding to
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the sirens thinking the danger had passed. but this is the biggest mythos onslaught since the was early days. defiance is mixed with fear. again, talk, we must be more patients and care about ourselves in our clothes. people will do me for prefer would it save us? would it save us when he drops a nuclear bomb on us? i think we have to win. that's what i think, sort of as if on cue. another hair, a warning ah. and this time people ran where we talents, how to 0, give what has been reaction from the us of the tax. let's go to my canada in washington dc. mikes what is being said or you can probably hear in the background, the maintenance going on. that means that the president is not here at the white house, the spend the holiday weekend at his home in delaware, but his office has released the statement within the last dollar describing the
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brutal war that'd be at 210, and condemning the latest round of action by due to the soldiers, it also says that it just served to intensify the u. s. the board for ukraine. it will continue to give you crane support. it says, and will continue to take whatever action deemed necessary to retaliate against russia in economic way. there's also be some voices speaking from inside congress. this is a completely by part of that issue in the united states. democrats and republicans is allied in terms of the opposition to boot invention. the latest statement has come from republican senator lindsey graham, who says he's going to work within congress to get russia declared at the state sponsor of terrorism, saying he will work with a bided administration to achieve this. and also within congress to work on another alms package to be delivered to ukraine in december. once again,
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signifying congress as total support for the bite and administration in terms of its actions against russia and in terms of support or ukraine macanna in washington, d. c. mike, thanks very much. well, what are the, how many has more for me pro one of the cities that came under attack listed them in vacation, that today is very different from the class. they then weeks apply regularly on the right. the last one was just last week where family died in the air strike is also very close to that. we just only about an hour drive that has come on the regular naturally strike those in the past 9 days more than 60 people have died in the upper region, all the media. and i think what you see today in the shower isn't in the nation, that this is a very different neighbor. people don't know what happened because we have been
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traveling around this part of the country. we have been to the region, we've been to harkey, we've been here for back and forth. we've been to previously. all of these have been coming on the attack my irregularly, and i would always be amazed at 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 brushed off the air siren or what could happen, not today, you have them sitting in shelters, we understand that other shelter. they're also quite busy. they're ready. a lot of ongoing this morning all over the country. and this is a teen reading that i have not the witness in this country is a very early and days of the war when he was a company and no one was around natasha butler's in paris or more on europe's
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reaction. yes, condemnation from all parts of the you war crimes ball bearing a sign of desperation. why moscow? there is some of the ways that some of the leaders describing these russian missile strikes and ukraine on civilian infrastructure and in civilian areas, the head of the use, they use foreign policy. chief burrell said that he was deeply shocked by these mis all strikes. he said that there is no place for such acts in the 21st century. his office also issuing a warning to better worth not to send battle russian troops to fight alongside russian soldiers in ukraine. that's also, that's announcement by minsk that he could deploy its forces just over the border into the country. we've also heard from the head of nato, yet stoughton book, he called these miss all strikes her renders. he said that they were absolutely unacceptable, and that nato would continue to support ukraine would continue to support ukraine
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fighting russia till the very end. he said, and of course ukraine will be top of the agenda when nato defense ministers meet in brussels. this week, the situation also talk to the agenda for an emergency meeting of g 7 leaders that have been called for tuesday will be a video conference d 7 lead is also joined by the ukrainian president for law demit lensky lensky, who spoke to francis presence about micro a little bit earlier today to discuss that situation, to talk about the urgency, the need for more military, a more military equipment. if ukraine is to continue this fight and try and beat russia, that was the message from lensky in my home. i call saying that he was of course, extremely worried by the situation. and these latest events, the un high commissioner for refugees is warning armed conflict. human rights abuses and global warming have forced more people than ever before to flee their
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homes. it's reached a record of more than a 100000000 in the may. that's up from nearly 90000006 months before it's larger because of the war in ukraine. more than 7000000 people of our to move to find safety says the military coup in miramar. last year, the number of internally displaced people. they are also known as id. peas has risen to more than 1000000. that's people who do move, but they stay within their own country. and in bucklin of fossil worsening security has led to more than 2000000 id piece up from 50000 in 2018 high commissioner philip ground. they opened the annual conference of the u. n. refugee agency. and he's criticized the international community, saying it's 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,
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and in various ways, compelling people to flee zenato has more on the situation in lebanon. the largest concentration of syrian refugees living in lebanon are here in the car valley. and you just need to look around to see what conditions are like people have been here for over a decade. these children were born in lebanon, their families escaped the war years ago. so dire conditions. these children are out of school because you need money in order to register in, in lebanon's public schools. i don't know if you heard that child who just said, please, we want to go back to school. the united nations high commissioner for refugees and lebanon, says that it is 60 percent under funded. and if it doesn't get that money, then this will impact refugees. at least a $150000.00 families, but will be vulnerable. at least 9000 people will not receive medical assistance.
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so these people require the assistance of the international community to survive. more and more, they're, they're asking to go to school. and more and more syrians are getting on those both trying to make their way to europe because they can't believe they can provide here any longer. more than 90 percent of 311 on our poor me while 6900000 syrians are still inside their country, but they've had to leave their towns and villages. al jazeera spoke to some living, an account for the outskirts of the northwestern invalid province. henry helena and no, not a dear. i love you, tina. my dream is that we go back to our homes with better conditions and cheat and teach our children in situations better than this one. i am need necka can as a hand man, man. our wish as displaced civilians from our cities and houses is to return back toward towns and places that it's a basic human right now left over there. so i left there are no proper schools
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anywhere dying of heat under this tense. they said they would provide better tens of houses, but its allies, but mostly phenomenal. the children in the camp are deprived of every thing. the simplest things in life, such as garden, has the playground and even schools back up of them has been wilcox is bizarre and bangladesh as the world's biggest refugee camp about a 1000000 people have lived there for 5 years. these are the perspectives of some of the rocking. you're living in the camp there. the last i was i had strong hope to go back to 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 iraq, young rebel forces, or i can what i kind of been living in the count for the past 4 years and i don't see any future for me i hope things will get better in future matter either what i found by 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
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a little more than what we get. ah, one there, campbell mothers, element, children are not getting proper education and the camp. i think they're losing hug for the future, which is a big concern for us. oh, face many problems. we're not able to move freely. there is no opportunity for livelihoods on don. allah's have decent meals, and it is also difficult to cope with monsoon rains and storms on of the on bottom of that. we want to go back to me on my right now. if we could, that is conflict going on. there is no peace. now if we go there, now we might lose our lives, which is why we're afraid to resettle the miasma. now, still had an al jazeera and a desperate situation in venezuela floods, of destroyed homes, schemes and businesses. and for the 1st time, children from palestine will participate in the street and child, whole world cub, ah,
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now the feeling outside and cutter is that the humidity has dropped this no particular change in the wind just yet. but again, with barely a cloud in the sky, that wind direction is critical. humanity comes and goes fairly rapidly. but you just see a hint maybe of a breeze doesn't come out of iraq. we're attempt listed on the high side it 40 morning, q 839 in baghdad itself. those temperatures are slowly coming down in the wind sort of picking up that will be a dry breed dancer back rein. katanen took cutting into eastern sadie. nothing else much to talk about to be honest. wanted to light is showers in the mountains and yemen. southware sadie, and even in northern turkey, the weather's cleared up now and the shout few as they are going to after by john. and that's about it. now africa's bit of a different story. the rains are still a long way north, and you'll notice them watch that lake victoria. we go through into wednesday. it starts off the sunstorm that opens up and spreads westwards and brings rain with it
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by lunch time in places like galley than in butcher burrows. well, this is where the heaviest rains on i further west and there in nigeria, there in the ga, the quite a long way north. i have to say a stretch into anger limit south that we're looking at rapidly. rising temperature is still quite warm, but not so. it was in botswana, ah, a plane and a multi $1000000000.00 industry with ambition. challenge back funding, attention, and cultural tradition. hollywood thing on here. lou.
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ah, georgia, i just need a reminder of i told stories this, our russian missiles stripes have been reported across several cities in ukraine, including the capital key. the state emergency services says at least 11 people have been killed. many more been injured. the white house, as a condemned is russia's missiles, starts on ukrainian cities. president joe, by the says, the u. s. will continue to impose costs on moscow and un high commissioner for refugees. he says, armed conflict, human rights abuses and global warming, a forced a record number of people to flee their homes. 100000000, no displaced or migrant crossings,
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that the us mexico border are soaring. john holman, has more from a migrant shelter in mexico city. the u. s board with border patrol, say that between october 2021 and september 2022. there were at tooth more than 2000000 at detentions by them on the us border. such a record number and increase, obviously on the ones from 2021. now who all the people that are being detained, that are being seen on the us mexico border that's changed as well before the profile would have been a lot of people from met her itself and from central america. countries like from dude us in guatemala. now that's opened up and 40 percent of people are actually from countries fervor field we're talking about that is whaler cuba and nicaragua. especially those 3 countries going through difficult economic situations, but also with very authoritarian regimes and people are fleeing that obviously at the full country that a lot of people are leaving is haiti. that's
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a country that's been one of the ports in the western hemisphere for quite some time. but it's also in a situation in which there's extreme political instability and gangs roaming the straightening control of a large parts of the capitol as of range of issues. the people are fleeing from trying to get up through mexico and to the united states having trouble getting into the united states because they're, they still a public health woulda, which basically the trump administration put him forth to say that during coven, any one ask him for asylum could be denied it because of a public health emergency that still kept in place. people are still being sent back to mexico. and here they're having trouble getting asylum from overworked, authorities, workers at a major oil refinery in iran of state to strike in support of the ongoing anti government protests. hundreds of oil workers walked out of the refinery in as a lawyer around has been rocked by unrest since last month when a young woman died in police custody. the nobel prize for economics has been
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awarded to 3 people for research on banks and financial crises. been been nan came, douglas diamond and philip dime, vague one this years award. banking was the head of u. s. federal reserve during the 20. 08 global financial crisis always has more from stockholm economist spoken to hero please. the a prize has gone to a trio of laureates whose work has practical applications. there were searches has its roots in the depression of the 900 thirties, and it's focused on the role of banks in the economy and why it's so important to avoid banking collapses. it's also focused in on a inherent contradiction in the capitalist system of the one hand. banks are important for funnelling money from savings to investments, but also creates an inherent weakness. people who save money,
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one inside instant access to their savings. people who are investing don't want to suddenly have to pay back the loans. normally this works pretty well. there's enough flavors. the know about committees cited these laureate work as enabling government to know how they can proper banks during crises. not always something that is universally popular, but to ensure banks to collapse and to ensure that these crises don't get deeper. and they've said that the work of these war it says ensure that crises such as 2008 the crone of ours. and perhaps even the crises were living through the day, don't lead to a great depression like in the 1900 thirty's. when i spoke to douglas diamond, who is one of the recipients of the nobel prize in economics, and i began by asking him, put warnings he had for banks today. so the point of the paper was very close to the quote about theory of fear itself. the f d r, the franklin delano roosevelt had the point is the banks are structured in
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a way that if everybody thinks the bank might fail, that can cause them to fail, it becomes a self fulfilling prophecy. and that, that's not the only reason that financial crises occur, but that's the reason you can get the last element. but crisis where things are getting worse and worse and worse. so the lesson for today is that when you have these huge, unexpected event, like you know, the war and ukraine and the surprise increase in inflation and interest rates by the central banks. basically, the policymakers need to make sure that every thing is adapted and can thought to be stable so that people don't get fear that the system is going to clamp. we saw the clamps that almost occurred after lehman brothers failed in 2008. we're in a situation that inflation is high, but growth is. ready low in job growth, john,
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that's unusual to some extent. what do you think would be the solution for that? well, base to get rid of inflation, we definitely need to, you know, take a little less stimulus, both and monetary policy raising interest rates and hopefully physical policy through either raving tax, the better covering, cutting spending. but essentially we need to go in measured form. so the contract that people write in financial markets don't collapse. we saw a little bit of a collapse of part of the liability driven part of the u. k. insurance market. just a couple weeks ago. and the bank of england stepped in to try to move that over. what was it thinking that you need to think about financial stability is just one of the many things that the policies can can influence. and if you look financial stability, the whole system can collab landslide in central venezuela has killed at least 25
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people and more than 50 are missing. the region was hit by how to can julia and torrential rains so high that reports. 100 schools in businesses destroyed from the the extensive damage in last the 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 calls the el paso river to burst its banks to green landslide. the river overflowed and there are people and we still haven't found that are trapped when he help my brother, it's missing, is not only my pain. i think we're all feeling it. pull up my bill up, i haven't slept. i haven't eaten. i don't know if my niece is in there. well, 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 opened only 2 years ago. i'm
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a new entrepreneur now. look, i have nothing around a 1000 emergency personnel taking part in the rescue and search operation most the head. yes, the 67 kilometers. southwest venezuela's, capital caracas. since he's been hit the hardest by this year's learning, the weather pattern that brings west the conditions to asia, africa, and latin america, and jail pass, i have a little record last night. hurricane produced a low pressure system that quickly caused flooding. that's a 100 liters of water per square meter, which is a record of rainfall in this area. in one month, i shelters are being set up emergency crew working to restore electricity and water supplies. president class madura has described the situation as difficult and painful. so to hide al jazeera doctor more than 2 years, japan is to reopen its borders to foreign tourists on tuesday,
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japan and post some of the world's strictest border controls to slow the spread of covered 19. robert bryan has more from tokyo, of all the well developed nations. japan has been by far, the slowest reopening from the pandemic. it began a few months ago with the once more of organized to groups. and it's only now that individual tories are being allowed back in full countries that had grandson bishop, of becoming a global tourism destination all centered around the ill fated summer olympics of 2020. the drop in tourism numbers has been dramatic in 2019 more than 30000000 people came to japan. but from 2020 the number of visitors dropped to a small percentage of that with virtually no torres at all. in the meantime, the drop in the value with the yen has been just as dramatic. it has not been at this level for more than 20 years. that has never been
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a better time to visit japan. so we're expecting to see in the coming month, they search and visit numbers as people come back to places like this. the famous ship crossing in downtown tokyo or some of the cultural treasures across japan. but they're off mixed emotions about that. yes, for the tourism industry for companies that rely upon taurus done for the government which wants to see a boost for the economy. it is good news, but in the slightly reserved conservative society, there is also a strange sadness that this self imposed isolation from the outside world is coming to an end right now. teams from 24 countries taking part in the st. child world cup here in katara, the tournaments being how the head of each fi for world cups in 2010, when it aims to help the vulnerable young people around the globe. this is the 1st time that a team from palestine is taking part. the captain tells us how sports has helped her and her teammates, and i had by him. my name is i had i had, i'm 18 years old,
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mental gordon until caromed west bank labs. i mean, honestly, deborah alba since my early childhood. i've loved that boards look for life minette . i've been part of sports for life as a player for 6 years. i had the foot of our team started in 2017 and i joined the following year. an alumni that we haven't to regular weekly training sessions at this school feel young one. hm. honda. but even at that m a can the team that is taking part in cottage is made up of 10 girls effort given the regions cultures and traditions. a girl footballer is looked at different modality, particularly in our society. that's why girls from refugee camps were selected because there are marginalized, and this gives us a voice that's a bit him stamina, leon a for i don't only shattuck at all, 9 update folks. but for life taking part in the sport for life foundation was a you turn on our lives. the girls came from a totally closed environment. now they are given the opportunity to show their
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capabilities and also to unleash their talents, put them habersham, and ca legless essay every other business vietnamese sports is the key to the whole world. through sports i can have a voice. well sarah salvia and i have an outlet from a negative energies as well. and assaulted. i'll am in lahaina, i'll fall philosophy and that my message to the world is that we are the children of palestine deprived of our full rights. for example, the right to play, we do not have enough playing fields. even the one we train on is asphalt ground, and it is very dangerous. however, we never give up. if it's, when we travel to play against teams and other towns, we have to go some road blocks and search measures. we face many, many harsh difficulties. these really opposition forces are turning our lives into a nightmare. mcclallen high lair. i will not at all, this is the 1st time for me to travel abroad and to be on the plane. so i have mixed feelings of excitement thrill and fear. but it is also the 1st time.
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