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tv   The Stream  Al Jazeera  November 3, 2022 11:30am-12:01pm AST

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ah, a on i'm a 30, it still had a little will as madly we. i'm a slam. now old on out of ear. she will admit any and it looks human more will m anthony at business less of the and lemma city and then a another the hodge snap ellen cuss. and you have been in there yet, carson allen. there had been an american san rama grove in asia. evelyn ah mon asia, me all was the had been an, an oral allen bear than missing ah, and had been shown in dora instantly and leave an o'mara nor latterly it had an ammon, sean, lanton, and clean house. ah ah,
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he ought, you ought to 0 with me to her robin in doha reminder of our top stories. north korea has launched 3 more missiles. they come to day after the north $523.00 missiles. that one is suspected to have been a long range, intercontinental ballistic missile. it's prompted us in south tray to extend joint military exercises. ukraine, grain shipments are expected to resume despite present laudermill zalinski raising concerns over security. russia has confirmed it'll allow vessels to continue carrying grain from ukraine us. a bag has more from odessa, ukrainian, president volume residents, gaz accused russia today of using that green car door to launch the cruise missiles flying over that green cargo. so using that car that's meant to be for managerial reasons, to launch attacks against ukraine. now,
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the russia suspended its involvement in that deer laughter. they accused ukraine for carrying attacks after a drone attack on one of its warships in the black sea. now ukraine has denied that it's using those 3 ports, or the green card to, to launch attacks. but russia has said that they've had written guaranteed that ukraine will not launch any combat operations from the green card, or those ports. if you guzman to rebel forces from it's to dr. region have agreed to end fighting. the breakthrough comes after a 2 year war. that's killed tens of thousands of people, of both millions from their homes. us president joe biden as urged americans to defend democracy, the address the nation ahead of mid term elections next week, saying the lines of former president, donald trump, a fuel to political violence. the us is accusing iran and violating the rights of women and corporate to be removed from a un talk women's rights great to rom, just started a full year term on the commission that promotes gender equality,
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us vice president cobbler harris said it's not fit to be a member protest, as in the u. k, have rallied outside that immigration facility and inquiry found the center was over crowded and lacking sufficient medical staff to guarantee the safety of migrants. those are the headlines about more news and half now you for all of the stories on our website, alex, is there a dot com. the stream is next to stay with us. across the u. s. millions of americans rely on conservative talk radio shows for the news under detainment. these are all real issues for real people. the listening post tunes in and asks is talk, review divider. in america, there is no room left. learn how democracy work is really just acknowledging differences that are already there. if anything, conservative talk radio created the republican party talked to over to hawk spectrum on a j 0. hi,
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i'm sammy ok on november, the 6th, the world's biggest climate conference kicks off in egypt. it is hosted by an african nation which means that africa's priorities for the you and climate conference where they should be front and center. and that is our discussion. but as a street says, you know, to know, we are suffering, we rely on life stock for our livelihood. but you can see that because of the drought, the cows are dying and some are unable to stay on their feet about what we are now . unable to take care of our children, we do a mile to them, but yeah, what i'll do is center ham. and we used to farm and harvest crops to feed our children before the drought affected us. then after the rain failed, we moved to mogadishu a week ago, and now we are settled at a makeshift camp not far from here. ernest on the hold, i saw him some who, most hon. are lonely people and complexes are fading over land and water. and if
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natural resources were available everywhere, there wouldn't be any conflict with, but when there are scarcity, there is conflict with us. and the reason for said scarcity is climate change, eat po, order the asset. so many challenges for different regions around the african continent . how will they be attacked? how will they be handled when jira osmond had mirror? so good to have you here was we do a curtain raising razor for what is being known as africa. that's a lot of pressure for sean will shake an egypt. let's see if they can live up to that pressure one year. so good to have you here on the stream, please say hello to our viewers around the world. tell them who you are. what e d? i for me, thanks for having me. 10. my managing director for africa and global partnerships at the world uses institute. yet to have you often nice to see here on the screen. welcome. please say hello ty, viewers around the world,
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tell them who you are and what you do. thank you very much for having me today. i'm most money shit, head of education association of sustainable development which is non governmental organization. and also i'm climate adaptation experts in the field of agriculture, especially and about egypt. i mean, lots are area. get to have you have mirror. welcome to the stream. nice to have you . tell us about what you do, who you are, the expertise you're bringing to this conversation. and thank you very much for me . my name is tamara cooke senior and i'm a claim and justice davis from uganda. um i a claim in justice, africa and employment justice africa would deal with sharing skills and add up to showing on how to survive the claimant crises. and also much as the claimant crisis and climate change have their own. come look at it to them. yeah. so many of us, for example, for my country, we actually
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a self taught all the activity a soft tote. so i tried to break down climate change and the claimant crises, and what we are 15 to i daily lives for my people and also for us to be on the continent. and i have done that since january this year, and a year that was an awesome epic into duncan. i hope you can didn't never on one of those promises. all right. it sounds like couple ready can we deliver on what we promise? all right, so if you are joining the conversation your life right now, the comment section is here. i know you have things to say about climate change, climate action across the african continent. what is needed when countries from around the world are getting together to talk? what do they need to talk about at 10, often amyra. there are conversations that happened with in comp and the conversations that happen outside the exciting ones. the ones that have happened outside were going to happen outside conversation. the priority for you,
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one jury for the constituency that you represent. what is the most important job that has to get done in egypt? in egypt, we need to reaffirm our commitment to deliver it's about implementation. several for made up 26 commitments that have been broken one after the other. so this is the cup to re establish trust. this is the cop to demonstrate accountability on finance for climate adaptation on finance for, for loss and damage. and of course on delivering on vicious mitigation targets. last cup, we agreed to come back to this cup with ratcheted with the strong mitigation agenda as to reduce emissions, especially the wealthiest countries of the world. those are the 3 key things we'll
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be looking for. and just wondering what happens at these gatherings where people promise so much, we are going to, we're going to make sure that we don't cut down any more rain for us. we're going to give you so many billions and then it doesn't happen to people just get high on their own company. what happens? yeah. what i might like to say here that i'm talking to, let's say, on behalf for a small the farmer and, and other egypt are sometimes in africa. the old farmers suffering from climate change. i would like to introduce a little bit about the difference between climate adaptation to climate mitigation . we are here in africa. we add that we did not contribute more than a 3 percent off for total emissions and took the comparison of all the global emissions. so when we talk about climate change in africa, we should focus on adaptation knocked mitigation and mitigation is
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costly for forest, more hold of armor or small bored people. and mitigation is very important. and the idea of a climate change is very complicated for all people. and we are in the egyptian association for sustainable development. we try to and to reduce the idea of climate change. and the climate had a depletion in simple way, like a comic theater. a comic theater can introduce that this complicated idea and simply way or so it will be a very important if we create a bridge between a different countries developing countries from side and developed countries from other site. ok, these bridge will transfer to the, the climate adaptation. not it. i often i know that he may, i want to have a chat with you. i mean my diet. oh no. as though i just took
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a lovely thing with mine to avoid an addition and it mixed up my thinks of what he just said and thinking that most of us in the global cells and how i like, how good past adaptation. i know a, lik atlas and damage operations, and we actually need to receive critical by fission from disc, opted vivian, and starting from very a took over with man. but when i had sent you a copy of it and it shouldn't be focusing on 3 kids and that is reduction of emissions helping countries to prepare for and, and dealing with the claimant breakdown. and the breakdown that we are facing right now are ready. for example, they did show my country, but my country has most close to like 4000 people to the claimant in just crisis. and just because of flooding for mean and blend slave. and so we need to as a secure technical support for developing countries. and to address this,
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we need to receive clement finance allison that made reparation and a mic i need them on pay me and help him and he's going to mirror i see. i see you have you on this ready for cop 27 is something that i want to do and that is that i, i, earlier this year i was at the united nations environment program anniversary for a 50 years. they've been in existence for 50 years and they were looking add to what the next 50 years might look like for the earth. in a discussion i was, we have the climb activist, known as vanessa mccarty. and vanessa did something really interesting. she talked to the ministers in the room and there were lots of very high level ministers in the room. and she asked them a question. i feel that vanessa sums up perfectly what you, when gera, often and heavier, happening, talking about. but vanessa put the ministers on the spot, have a look at my laptop. let's see what happened. especially the
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ministers from the globe. not do you think that the people who are least responsible for the common cases and the ones who are suffering some of the worst impacts of this crisis dissolve our help thunder hierarchy. so all of you believe that people was suffering right now is of our help. so asked the 2nd question: will you come chiz commit to putting money and finding ross and damage for those countries at club $27.00? now that's where the problem is. my 1st question is like your statements, your promising us you talking about what you're going to do. and my 2nd question is
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about real auction loss and damage is happening right now. we can adapt to the loss of our couches. the loss of identity is the loss of i histories become adopt to extinction or to starvation. we come back to los and damage. so vanessa put the ministers on the spot, but i'm not sure that in egypt, in a week's time, that the money will be there one jira. how do you get the money for the global south in the developing world that he's suffering right now? there were droughts, there were, floods, people were having trouble getting to work. the climate is intense, or a lot of the different regions around africa. how does the money turn up? will it? well, the money should turn up for me. so that's obviously not the question. when we needed money, especially in the global north, to sure up economies after cool bid money turned up in the trillions,
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not even in the billions in the trillions. so this is about empathy. it's about solidarity. one of my really the colleagues i knew rob gosh, just recently said something that hit it right on the spot. he said, we are living in an empathetic times. this is what it's about because the commitment we've, everybody knows what needs to be done, and that's why as exercise was too powerful, that activity demonstrating that we know exactly what we need to do. but we are living in an empathetic times and have created essentially parallel sets of facts and in a funny way the co exist. we saw it in that room full of ministers who know very well what to do. so this lack of empathy is something i hope we can crack a through. i expect climate activists civil society. and that's why what you said
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for me about the outside is so important. it's about making sure that the energy and the sense of urgency, mix it to the, in the sanctum of those that go sheeting rooms because in those negotiating rooms, then negotiating commas and post office, they do not have the hot and the empathy. and that is required at that moment to make those decisions. it's not about the money not being there. of course the money is there. uh huh. what will you be out to do? what will you be out of chief for the small hold of farmers that you represent? what i would like to hear, it's not only a matter of money. i mean here it can be also knowledge trying to transfer no transfer from develop did come seat to develop megan country concept board to, to face the negative effect of climate change. especially for those of small hold
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our farmers and africa. i know that technology and knowledge transfer as also meaning money, but i think a developed country can sub bored by technology and it will be more, i mean, well come from the developed country rather than the money out of the cash, especially in the situation that we're facing or the world. so transfer technology and knowledge. i mean here, improved seeds and broader technologies of every culture. machinery is a radiation technology to reduce the negative effect off of what that is get as deep, especially in easton about of africa. there are a lot of technology that can sub board to and can help, but still hold their farmers and develop the country a can help through litzy academia through private sector ryan,
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public. and so maybe it's not just about money, it's, it's about bring us your expert, she'll engineers, so that you may have this in the developing world and you've got tack. and maybe because you are impacting the global south, then you can give us knowledge amira the head. yes. and so, but i also think that as, as they bring up the experts and whatever they are giving is they shouldn't be explaining that because what the global not is being right now is putting everything, being everything that is going to benefit them the most. when it comes to, for example, example here, when you come, for example, you come to the conclusion up cor, well then comes close enough oil will. they are doing their best and they're trying to show they are working. for example, the adult, a few weeks bug blood assumption on an equal plane. although of course, i'm not supporting my goodness,
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but the global not find it very easy to put pressure on the global cells and shift all had time and the production materials to us. and they benefit from the finished goods and of which the profit they take, the profit, they take the finished product, particularly and with offering. so like one very say they've a lot of money that banks have spent. the spent 4.6 trillion. okay. dollars, right. science 1.2 as well here. a thank you. thank you for for adding that. all right, so you chose if is on youtube, often hold tight for one moment. i'm going to share the conversation with our viewers right now. joseph basic, joseph is on youtube, over $200.00 elephants, thousands of domestic animals like cows and goats have died within a few months in kenya because of the drought. more testimony from our viewers, anita says, i mean nigeria, the floods are affecting the low lying states. and this is interesting from peter
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mitigation and adapt patient a 2 sides of the coin. people in africa doing great work with water harvesting projects. when dearer, thoughts about positive projects that are working in different parts, the contract absolutely this several bright spots that need to be amplified, that need to be expanded and grow new. you you mention what to harvesting. we need to work on irrigation and technology that allows for us to continue to produce food at times when the rains have feel like now we need to be able to have as water in places where we now see not only human suffering, but wildlife and livestock, so people are losing their livelihood and of course while life losing their lives. this is a huge challenge and that's why building adaptive capacity is so important. this is why we have to invest in all the technologies,
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including solar. one of the things that we are seeing for me is that young people on the african continent, like never before solar technologies are on the rise financial technologies with how to transfer small amounts of money to, to the farthest reaches. we are ready for investment. what's missing is the resources to invest in these entrepreneurs. how so we don't have an issue at the moment of finance. all right, so let me bring in mo, abraham e as they had of the mote abraham foundation. and he addressed that issue about find that, where is the money going to come from? if he's what he told us a couple of hours ago, unfortunately, there's very little movement from side of the uterus. do you think of, of the contribution or the digital mix as a challenge? and that's the only way for the really is still in the market, blay,
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it's all he has and we must have a bunch of kind of pricing. one of many ideas i'm sure will be discussed at cop 27 in the next couple of days. there is something that i really have to talk about and that is the activism that surrounds the you and climate conference always. and there has been problems with activist trying to get to egypt to be part of cot. 27. we spoke to a number who had very similar issues with trying to at he just physically getting to the country. this is what he told us in has been a hassle trying to get a cop this year. and one of the biggest challenges has been getting badges as a request for a bad has a method responses like the ending of the badges are variable. and the process has been really tedious. i personally had to go through some processes to get my bags
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with jeremy, not to his our deal to have his privilege. and i hope doug prince, i will be rode the cruising stitching the aunt digital to her to she directly. so the, so some of the basic new tools loose, because you did this, i think new course should be given a teacher and most of the stuff to do this ticket. so these are the headlines that we're seeing in the last few days, addiction security rest, dozens ahead of cot, 27, climate summit rights group. i can't say enough how much protests activism is part of the essence of cough. what happens outside influence is what happens inside i was inside. if this is what happens outside, hey mirror. are you going to call 27? yes, i will just like you. i left me needs funding and of course it's still how find it is not yet fully funded. so i'll have still have issued in court in egypt,
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but lake there actually early. i said we have been having problems. i personally, we have been working on the badge and the budget allocation group and the working group with activities and on the continent. and we have had issues, of course the us very few by just allocated and then these very limited funding. and we have had so many major pollutants, for example, we saw that you k who actually major pollutants. and also that was holding the claim and hosting for co op to exhibit for last year, actually not showing up. so we are having issues like that. and when we have made up what it has been, i've not sure enough to cope, we have fund as not actually i don't think i'm all the time being the prime minister, the u. k. then joan galle. but i, i suspect that they will be sending a delegation. they, they have to send a delegation. let me just ask you this. often. we had a number of egyptian guess who we were delighted to have,
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and part as part of this conversation. and they all felt very uncomfortable about talking about egypt as the host. and the challenge is they have regarding human rights regarding being very comfortable with activists. what can you tell us about that? or i'm talking go from a side to farmers. i am a, as our farmer, i would like to encourage a african dibner markets and age of gender representative 27 to focus on climate adaptation and do to find a way to as a board climate adaptation solution. and maybe by eve, hunt or not is chance to for, from developed countries for of. and i was a very diplomatic. i'll say you came with a mission and you stuck to your mission. this is so uncomfortable when jerry isn't
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it for when you put your hopes and your hosting as a content, and he's not as egypt hosting as the continent hosting. and you get uncomfortable difficult headlines that you have to wrestle with similar headlines for glasgow for last case cop as well. about security not being asked to get a, any long lines, the u. k. government doing one thing and then saying another thing, it's not unusual, but i think when the continent need so much in terms of collaboration, it's disappointing. is it not? well, it is. i mean, there are several issues that could be, could see the problematic one is the location itself. i have to say that everybody's having a problem getting badges it and of course it's extremely expensive to go to shop most shake. so i think the location, if they had asked me and they and they didn't, i would have picked a cairo even because i think that it needed to be in a place that's more sensible. that's not exclusive. and that is part of the,
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of the challenge is the location itself. of course it's a beautiful place and egypt is going to be a wonderful host. but i think that that is, that is problematic. the other thing is i don't think it serves egypt well to have all these but headlines. so i'm sure in the spirit of what cope has always been climate activists will be there. i know the one guy my foundation for example, has, has worked together through their hub to get 37 something like 35 activists there. so they will be there and they will definitely make themselves heard. i don't think he will be trying to get them the headlines in that way. i think i believe could happen. civil society will be present and they will be a strong contingent of youth. climate and environment for me are also human rights issues. so we must lump them all together. we must remember that we cannot exclude egypt and talk about human rights and climate and environment elsewhere. we have to
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take the problem where it is including to egypt. all right, one tear and osmond era. and when you had the last word him era for now, but we know we will be following you and osmond when you and, and your experiences of cult 27 that we can learn from your experiences. and hopefully ask because priorities at 27 will be address. thank you. on youtube for your comments and questions. always appreciate them. i me. ok. finding of this episode of the stream a abortion has been turned from a health care issue into policing issue. there are now 2 americas and one of them
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women of lost the right to control their own bodies. if a woman kept that she's never gone to proceed ultimate equality. full blinds follows a group of women forced to travel across state lines for an abortion we heard. it was in riots by the day and examines what it means to live through the end of row. growing up in england country with a rich football history. the welcome always meant a great deal to me and so many memories of watching the torment that i've gone from being a child watching games on my side actually presenting at a wildcard. it really is a dream country. this is going to be really unique. walcott we haven't seen anything like this before, so i can't even imagine what is going to be like being immersed in it as a fan out of the john left, the drama thousands of fans packing out the stadium. gonna be really, really exciting. november on al jazeera data,
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welcome to footballing world is the world cup, kicks off in what promises to be a tournament like no other generation change, returns. showcasing young activists fighting injustice and challenging the status quo. leaders of g 20 nations gather with ukraine's president the lensky invited. will he meet vladimir putin for the 1st time in thrushes invasion. the trials and tribulations of players from 6 countries, striving to realize their dreams playing the world cup. americans vote in defining mid term elections. the results could see biden and the democrats lose that congress majority november up on al jazeera. ah, they pushed a long lasting piece ethiopians, government, and to grind rebels agree.

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