tv News Al Jazeera November 17, 2022 3:00am-3:31am AST
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[000:00:00;00] a exclusive stories explosive results, al jazeera investigations, passionate about this sport and determined to succeed against the arts. you want to try to keep on training despite obstacles. algae, as they were world tells the inspiring story of a group of somali women being pursued, took the dream of playing football for that country. despite its culture and traditions. we are in the somali society and it's difficult for people to accept somali footballs. golden goes on al jazeera ah,
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the u. s. as russia is ultimately to blame for a missile, killing to people in poland, even if it was fired by ukraine. this tragedy would never happen, but for russia's needless invasion of ukraine. ah, hello there, i'm the stealthy attain. this is out there a lot from doug. also coming up, forced to start over tens of thousands of people in democratic republic of congo for the violence wait, and one of the cabinets for the displaced. and where are they taking you away? bob al jazeera follows the plies of haitian migrants being deported from dominican republic and from teachers to security guards. we meet some of the volunteers helping to make how tall is one cup
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a now the u. s. representative to the united nations as russia is ultimately responsible for a missile strike that killed 2 people in poland, nato and poland. say the missile was most likely 5 as part of ukrainian air defenses. the issue overtook a meeting of the security council that was supposed to focus on the humanitarian situation and ukraine. while we still don't know all the facts, we do know, one thing. this tragedy would never have happened, but for russia's needless invasion of ukraine and its recent missile assaults, against ukraine's civilian infrastructure. the un charter is clear. ukraine has every right to defend itself against this barrage defend its sovereignty, defend his territorial integrity. what a mockery of peace efforts that terrorists
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a steel add the table on an equal footing with 14 members. while the security council. one day after the grievance attack, when ukraine's critical infrastructure. while temperatures in ukraine start dropping below freezing the stairs aim to deprive cranes of electricity, water, and hitting more than 90 me styles, targeted energy facilities and all the civilian infrastructure in at least 11 region. so ukraine has been telling me has worn out from you and headquarters in new york, while top of every one's mind was the missile that landed in poland. and many members of the security council use the opportunity to express their condolences to pull and for the deaths of 2 people there. ah, they, i express concern about the escalation of the conflict and the escalation of the
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humanitarian situation as a result. and they got a briefing from the under secretary general of the united nations. rosemary decarlo, who pointed out that now 40 percent of ukraine's electric capacity had been damaged . she said that keith was only experiencing about 12 hours of electricity a day and made the point that targeting civilian infrastructure in a conflict is illegal under international law. a point that was brought up by many of the speakers there. but western countries and nato align countries in particular use the opportunity to call out russia and blame russia for specifically the death of the 2 people in poland. they said that regardless of who fired the missile, it wouldn't have been fired if russia had not invaded ukraine. in the 1st place, and we heard russia pushed back against that notion in their remarks to in the council was
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a bigger league unless we have long ago stop being surprised by your attempts in any circumstance, in spite of fact, or common sense to blame russia for everything and so to day, in spite of the clear evidence of the cranium polish provocation, many representatives of rest and countries of state to the fact that even of the messiah for launched by a crane, it is still russia, who's to blame for destroying critical infrastructure. on the military and democratic republic of congo continues to lose ground to m. 23. the on group is why the understood to be backed by one the although could only denies the allegations. east african leaders are due to meet on monday and i re beat for the next stage of peace talks. civilians though, continue to be course in the violence. now can web reports the rigor curry says she ran for her life when her village was bombed. the rest of her family didn't make it. now she cooked in this churchyard and sleeps in the church at night
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. a neighbor found her here and told her what happened to her son mackey vandy, his wife and her 6 grandchildren. well, good to be gotten a call with other people so they could leave quickly. then the car was hit by a bomb, his legs were blown off and he died. all the children were killed and the mother died as while at the same time. this is mike of andy, before it happened. the pictures taken of him after a too upsetting for us to show where each one of tens of thousands of people who fled recent advances by the m $23.00 rebel group, widely understood to be backed by neighboring rwanda. well, everyone that denies it. most of our living in camps on the outskirts have goma in democratic republic of congo. this football stadium is now home for 100 the people . some of the older people here have run away from london back rebellion 2 or 3, or even 4 times before. so this time,
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some people here are asking why is getting so much less attention and why they're not getting much help. don. john chloe quiet tells people, it's tough, but don't be discouraged. these things will end one day. he's a community leader for this area. he blames the u. s. u k, and france for supporting rwanda and uganda over the decades that their forces of waged was here. let good, good. the war in ukraine just started in february this year that international community mobilize for ukrainians because they don't want to see them suffering. but we have been suffering for more than 30 years. and the international community is behaving as if it's just animals that are suffering. if we are just caused to be slower at every day, corners armies been struggling to fight them. 23 people here been wondering why the government says the u. n is stopping it from buying the arms. it needs to defend
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itself. from rwanda, there were no un restrictions on heavy weapons like tanks. only a notification requirement for small arms. 9 years ago, un troops from southern africa helped congress to c t. m. 23. this time relations with the peacekeepers, there was an all time low. this como is escorted by congress. the soldiers after an angry crowd talk to you n vehicles 2 weeks ago. meanwhile, the conflicts getting worse. peace talks between east african leaders haven't helped. the g to continue next week. to marie is too late anyway. 8 people from 2 generations of our family. i've gone for malcolm web, al jazeera coma, democratic republic of congo. now socrates in dominican republic are sending detained haitian refugees back to their country. gang warfare and political turmoil
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have fueled an exodus from neighboring haiti in recent months. and many refugees say they felt new lives across the border and they're now facing deportation to raise the boat reports. oh, it's become an all too common seen haitian refugees detained in mid american republic. we met them in this military base in the house right at the border. they're being sent back to haiti, even those who say they've built a new lives here at the minute. my husband works in a construction site and i was craig, went home when the police arrived. they wouldn't let me get my babies, clothes, i left all my money at home and i have nothing here. through the courses you are telling a good most of his people were trying to enter the country. they get some of this women for telling me that they have homes here. i'm that their children were born american republic middle in the piet, he's with her 8 year old son. she shows us his birth certificate that proves he was born in the dominican republic. i. my son has a birth certificate. he was born here. they cannot send him back to haiti,
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the u. n. has called on the dominican republic to hold the quotations. haiti is in the midst of a political crisis that has gangs controlling large parts of the country. thousands are fleeing, lack of available health care services in haiti have forced pregnant women to cross the border to deliver their children. but many are not allowed inside dominican hospitals and some have had their children on the street. human rights activists say they're alarmed about what they call a precedent lease. or we know others persecution of haitians in his country was our program. we're here to push. there are massive deportations and the cases are not individual. there's no due process. there's children with papers, others with just visas. it's just massive and a scandal or even pregnant women being sent back to haiti and the law says that shouldn't be done. the dominican republic is building a wall to protect its borders from smugglers, but also illegal migrants. it's all numbers on what gwen's hillier says,
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his country's poor and cannot allow every one in lowly. the only mechanism, the dominican republic cause is to show that it will not tolerate migrant irregularity of the deportations. and this is what we are doing. this has nothing to do with ethical reasons or racism, but under the problem, if the state stops all the potations, we do not know what could happen here. haiti's facing it's worse crisis. in years human rights crusades, people are being discriminated against across the region. and they're asking the dominican republic, among other governments for empathy, for those while twain to escape hunger violence and have no place to go. do you know, i think there is, i will, i'll jessia the have on, on the haitian border. well, brian can cannon junior as the director of the institute for justice and democracy in haiti. he says, calls from the u. n. to stop the deportations are unlikely to make any difference. but it's important to see that there's an acute crisis of, of the crisis in haiti that's,
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that's generating migration pressure. but that in the context of a much longer chronic problem of dominican haitian relationships in which effort, internal dominican political purposes. the governments have wanted to be perceived of as being hard on haitians. and haitians are defined as people who were born in haiti and came across the border. but sometimes it's people whose parents came across the border or even grandparents who came across the border. so one of the things that appears to be happening is people are, are, are set, set for deportation because they're dark skinned. not because they necessarily do or do not have papers. and in the past, the way the dynamic has worked when the international community has applied some pressure on the dominican republic, that has strengthen the nationalists hands. who like to blame all the problems on the asians. and it forces the governments to, to either reject the international communities, entities,
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and sometimes to even be harder against the haitians. and that's exactly what president abby. neither did when i commissioner for human rights volcker turk requested he stop deportation. he said, not only is he not going to stop the deportations, he's going to increase them. i'm still ahead here on out as aaron gun fire and casualty isn't a part of iran. that's been ross. my ongoing for a tech. and donald trump is running for the white house again, why he could face a big challenge this time around. ah, anticipation is rising. and so is the atmosphere. you're ready with most of my cattle ways. it is quite picture right across india, hyper one. here's the details on thursday, plenty of sun, but this sticks out here, this band of brain to bring some flooding to cat and is now over the admin. indic
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bar islands in the bay had been gall and we will continue to watch its track. it could potentially make its way into india's panel. now. do state in the coming days . still some charis though for the mall div smalley has a high of 30 degrees. ok, so we did talk about that flooding input. cut the rain. it's still coming out. you on thursday and for that, philippines, moderate flooding advisories in play. for manila, your temperature will be 30 degrees as while on thursday. this cyclone, just a round into these is main island of javits tasks in a lot of rain into what java and also southern sumatra certainly could be some land slides there. now to china, we go the bulk of the action south of the game, the river valley, some rain and wailing, 18 degrees, and the thing, some showers also in store for you shanghai. with the high of 17 on thursday, we did have our 1st know what the season for hookup was. capital support, still it's shelly 7 degrees for you. and off the pakistan we go, it's a quiet pitcher, but this activity in iran could give us some. so in northern pakistan,
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in the coming days that sharp they bye for now to with sponsored by catalog i always, ah, passionate about their sport and determined to succeed against the arts. you want to fight to keep on training despite obstacles, outages, they were well tells the inspiring story of a group of somali women interest you took the dream of playing football for that country. despite its culture and traditions. we are in the somali society and it's difficult for people to accept somali footballs, golden girls on al jazeera. ah, the
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hello there, i'm this darcy. okay, and durham, let's remind you of our top stories here. the solid. russia has been criticized as a un security council meeting. often michelle attack in poland, nato and poland say it's likely that the massage the kill 2 people will find as part of ukrainian defenses. the military and democratic republic of congo is continuing to lose ground to m $23.00 devices, why they understood to be backed by one to charge. connie denies peace talks from monday. he's in dominican republic are sending thousands of haitian refugees back to their country, gang warfare and political time want to fuel them. exodus from haiti and recent at least 5 people have been killed in iran by unknown. gunman has a bizarre in the southwestern city of isa 6 others were wounded and attack and state buildings, as you can see, have also been set on fire and comes amid ongoing and widespread protests in the
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crystal province without shooting took place. but earlier iran sentenced the 3 anti government protested to death. they faced several charges including killing a policeman and waging war against the establishment. these 20 people say the death penalty for taking part in protest against the death of 22 year olds. my meaning in police custody. well, we can now speak to neg want as r v. she is in washington dc. she didn't iranian american journalist and also host of the iran podcast. now got, we're seeing these death sentences being handed down. and we also know in terms of arrest, for instance, professional sectors have been talking to john les lawyers, doctors, how systematic is the crackdown it is very systematic and part of the playbook of the government, the state, as we've seen in the past in mass government for testing 2019 before that 2009, and also include tests and intervals before that. it's part of a bigger structure of the said, the targeting of journalists. and that is where essentially chronically leading
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some of these photos, the destruction of internet access to social media, which helps to protesters coordinate and gather and mobilize. and then also the tally does vary while i'm retiring. that security forces on the street over 300 protesters have been documented. it's killed by rights organizations. the real numbers like the higher than about 15000 arrested, which is expected. many of them are going to be handed very hard sentences ago. you say this is part of the playbook, and as you alluded to, we saw dozens of deaths in 2019 people now bracing themselves well, it's hard to say because we're also see we're into the 3rd month, 2 months of constant resistance, essentially bio testers in every province in the country, over $100.00 city, with many women, young girls of meeting these for just essentially
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a feminist uprising, a feminist revolution of the corner of the spark of it, the death of the 22 year old cornish human. so it's been sustain beyond what many expect us from the beginning of this protest. and also considering that we tell me that the state is using. but the state is also shown in the past that they have the capacity and the will to crack down with an iron fist if they want to request and protests. and it's still unclear how long the contests are going to be. so greatly be able to sustain or in the got the word unprecedented has been used a lot with these protests, we've seen turn out across demographics, ethnicity cost and, and also across the country. can you give us a sense of just how extraordinary, what we're seeing now, it's really unprecedented. is that in that, as i said in the core of it is a feminist uprising. this is, this was the death of a young man at the core of this is wendy young girls essentially demanding their
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rights and end to years of discrimination. systemic oppression by the state, essentially in many ways feeling like they're being treated as 2nd class citizens, but also an interest sectional community. protesters joining and we have university studios. we have new years, we have teachers, even oil workers. and now this is the lazar doing some of the strikes some of the quarter. so it is unprecedented. and also the duration in new york. but the brutality in the wireless, this is using in the face of the sports, as has also been unprecedented. so it's is sort of cool and push from the population from these for testers versus the state and this, this, and was she all violence and oppression that they can use so, so far, really unprecedented a revolutionary revolutionary, it's as you may, but it's so hard to speculate where exactly this is going to be in the near future will still continue following very closely here on out there and neg, what does avi there has been to us from washington
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d. c. thanks so much for sharing your thoughts with us. michael. thanks for having me. i'm moving on and only 4 percent of people who sort asylum in the u. k. last year, have been given a decision on the application. meanwhile, the several private companies are making big profits from providing migrants with poor quality housing. new bucher reports more. oh fatima not her real names been in limbo in britain's asylum system for more than a year. she, her husband of 4 children, arrived to the u. k. fleeing death threats and northern iraq paying their entire savings to a trafficker to help them escape. now in the 3rd property, they've spent months in dire accommodation documenting their experiences. as a mother, it was a horrendous experience for 5 months. we literally so big rats coming into the kitchen and eating our food. they film the rodents themselves. the hospital said
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poor housing was making my son l. those 5 months have taken 15 years of my life. all 6 of them were then moved to a one bedroom flat in a hostile in liverpool, where problems persisted the now safe elsewhere, but still awaiting the result. they were silent, claim me while the british government continues to pay millions to private contracts is to provide accommodation. the big 3 serco mears and clear spring ready homes have seen their total profits double from $60000000.00 to $130000000.00 in the past year. it profits are blooming, and their outsourcing providers say they're involved in so many other services. but it seems like a silent commendation and detention are some of their big. it provides some of the biggest profits they. each, the companies, all berserker, refused to talk to us, admitting several issues at fatima accommodation, but said the problems have been resolved within the contractual time scale of
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$21.00 days. the british government has lung the 1st to admit that the asylum system is broken according to the home office of the people that arrived here last year. 96 percent of them, mister waiting to have their cases processed. even though eventually, the vast majority will be granted refugee status. while they're waiting, they can't work. they get about $47.00 a week, and the backlog is getting longer longer. the more the national debate around migrations become toxic. inflamed by the home secretaries description of people arriving in the u. k by small boats as an invasion, emboldening old, true right group such as britain. first here's where you started in this hotel. we've launched a harassment campaign of asylum seekers on social media as well. why do you need to expose the whereabouts of would be asylum seekers? oh, interesting. our politicians are treacherous shelf serving careers. so think they, they are ultimate goal is to make this country completely multicultural. and the
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indigenous population is country reduced to a minority. britain's cost of living crisis is compounding racist attitudes, perpetuating a myth that most migrants are enjoying high quality housing. soaring inflation affects everyone, especially those who arrive with nothing and have everything to lose. neil brock al jazeera in northwest england. hundreds of people in paris have paid their respects to a 12 year old girl who is mad at last month. though his family held a silent march. the tribute was delayed for weeks after her death became political . the man's aspect as algerian and that's led to anti immigrant sentiments and his family reported their daughter missing. after she failed to return from school, had bought, he was later found mutilation and stuffed into a plastic box. while republicans has naturally won the majority in the us house of representatives, they got the 218 seats needed to control the chamber. 8 days now, after the midterm elections,
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the democrats county have $208.00. president biden congratulated the republicans and promised to walk with them. the wind returns a party to power and could give the conservatives leverage to block biden's agenda, though. meanwhile, the u. s. justice department will proceed with criminal primes against donald trump . despite has been to run again for president in 2024. trump is being investigated for his efforts to overtime the 2020 election results and keeping pacifying government documents at his estate. now if donald trump is going to win the republican nomination for president and 2024, and if he has, he'll have to do it without a powerful ally. media tycoon, rupert murdoch has reportedly withdrawn his support for the former u. s. president. and as gabriel, arizona reports from new york, several metal kind publications are starting to reflect that. i'm outside the headquarters of fox news here in new york city. it's also home to news corporation
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. the parent company owned by billionaire media mogul, rupert murdoch wood, donald trump, announcing his intention to run for the presidency again in 2024. you might think that murdock own conservative media would once again be backing trumps bid. but this time, unlike 2016, they're not just take a look at today's new york post, a newspaper also owned by murdock. the front page almost completely ignores trump. a very clear snub at the bottom of the page saying florida man makes an announcement, not even referring to him by name. last week, another post front cover was even more scathing calling. the former president trump de dumpty and blaming him for the republican party's disappointing results in the mid term elections. the murdock own wall street journal has been equally critical. this editorial last week, calling trump the republican party's biggest loser. during tuesday nights,
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announcement fox news even cut out of the speech. when trump appear to be rambling . jesse james now, eric trump got more subpoena. now we're going to go back to former, present tramps when news warrants are from. it all comes after trump back to candidates had a terrible night in the mid terms, losing to their democratic rivals in many key states. this is all a far cry from the days of trump presidency when he could rely on strong support from fox news and the murdock papers. it seems that for news corp donald trump is yesterday's man. and that rupert murdoch has moved on on ellen mosque has told remaining twitter staff that if they aren't ready to go hard core, they should leave the company. the new to as a c o is making employees sign a pledge to quote, walk along hours at high intensity and build a breakthrough twist at 2 point. oh,
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they have until thursday to make that commitment or take 3 months severance pay. ah, well, a cat as well. camp has attracted an unprecedented number of volunteers. the campaigns are wide interest across the middle east and brought in people from unlikely places from kenyan met some of them. the early morning school ride and i shoes in a new day for shahan, twilio you afternoon. how are you hover over mark? he worked as a security guard at one of the local schools in katara. she han came from kenya 5 years ago with the hopes of supporting his family. he recently got a call telling him he's been selected as a fifo world cup volunteer. after his shift, he makes it to the volunteer training center. much like his day job. he greets and
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welcomes visitors at one of the world cup venues. there is once in less time experience that is happening here. so i, i volunteer myself to explore, to get knowledge, to socialize with people who are coming from all over. there was in another part of town, a mother picks up her children from school. fema gloria came to catch up with her family 5 years ago looking for a full time job. i wanted to enjoy. she's a busy mother of 2 who work hard time as a supply teacher. yet she still finds time to volunteer at a uniform distribution center. i think the one carrying is the outlet for me to release my stress. come out and service to the community where i have been living here for few years. the fee for world cup cut our 2022 volunteer program was
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launched in march of this year. and to say that the main pillar of any success, any mega events will be delivered and today they come and they want to like for projects, for events, in addition to their own other responsibilities. just for the sake of the passion and the love of the game. cuts are, has received a record number of volunteer applications of any people world cup over 400000. in fact, and 20000 of those have been selected in this region. mostly coming from right here . one of the most cosmo politan host countries in the world as the flags of the team that have qualified decorate every 3 corner across the country. the volunteers who have been selected will be working hard to make sure the fans coming here will have a positive and memorable experience from the new
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