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tv   News  Al Jazeera  November 30, 2022 6:00am-6:31am AST

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[000:00:00;00] ah, here, when ever you ah, all the to in co cater culture of knowledge, openness and pluralism worldwide, and to reward merit and excellence and encourage creativity. the shake him out award for translation and international understanding was founded to promote translation and honor translators, and acknowledge their role and strengthening the bonds of friendship and cooperation between arab islamic and world cultures.
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ah, a jury in the us finds the leader a far right militia group. the us keep us guilty of seditious conspiracy to keep donald trump in power. ah, i'm having secret, this is how does it alive from the how also coming up? person to tune is trying to weaponized winter to force ukraine is to freeze or flee nato allies promised to help you crane survive a harsh winter as russia continues to attack energy infrastructure. the un cause for international helped to contain haiti's cholera outbreak made worse by gang violence and political instability. and in school woke up rivals clash the usa beat
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iran to qualify for the knockout stages at quarter 2022 ah. in the u. s. to leaders of the right wing housekeepers group had been convicted of seditious conspiracy. group found a stuart roads at. busy florida chap they had kelly megs were accused of instigating an attack to block congress from certifying jo biden's election victory . she albert antsy reports now from washington. since january the 6th 2021. when trump supported storm the u. s. congress and successfully interrupted the certification of jo biden's victory. a debate is ranged whether shocking scenes simply the result of a demonstration by enraged trumps of orders that grew out of control. or was it a concern to attempt to stop the peaceful transition of presidential power through violence? after now,
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many of the hundreds who been prosecutors have faith charges ranging from low level offenses relating to trespassing and disorderly conduct to felonies relating to violence and interrupting congressional proceedings. but with this successful prosecution of right wing earth keepers militia leader stewart rhodes and his deputy on seditious conspiracy, prosecutors convinced a jury that at least some involve, that they did have a plan to oppose the transfer of presidential power by force. evidence was provided shown rhodes railing at the election result. i'm calling for a revolution and the chaos of january. the 6th presented an opportunity. prosecutors argued even if raised was simply being opportunistic amid the chaos. it's a very substantial victory for the justice department. and it bodes well for future cases. another seditious conspiracy case against other oath keepers is scheduled to start on monday. it is a very rare charge. the last time we had
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a successful prosecution for seditious conspiracy was in 1995 over attempted bombing in new york city by islamic militants. all 5 defendants were found guilty of obstructing an official proceeding. the 3 were found not guilty of seditious conspiracy, and defense. lawyers pointed out that rhodes himself did log into the capital, nor have prosecutors alleged in the plot. to do so, mister rose did not commit the crime of seditious conspiracy. there was no evidence introduced. the indicate that there was a plan to attack the capital roads faces up to 20 years in prison. his lawyers say he will appeal the verdicts she ever tennessee al jazeera washington. ah, the united states and nato allies have promised more military atm crane and to help keep repair its energy infrastructure. millions of people in the country are struggling with rolling blackouts during winter, after russia attack ukraine's power grids. andrew simmons reports now from bucharest,
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when nato foreign ministers met to renew their support. pledges of unwavering support for ukraine came from nato secretary general d. n. stolt a burg. along with a warning that russia is weapon, ising winter by attacking energy infrastructure, he says nato has found new ways to help ukraine. president putin is trying to force ukrainians to freeze or flee onto they. alice made additional clutches, non little to support, including fuel and generators, helping ukraine to address the consequences of rush asa strikes against their power. great, and the u. s. has announced it will supply equipment worth $53000000.00 to help repair ukraine's electricity grid. earlier stilton burke had assured romania that
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its air force and troops were being backed up by extra reinforcements. romania has usf 16 aircraft that are replacing outdated. former soviet megs and their pilots saw fully stretched. everything is under pressure. so we weren't timely mean to go with them. we fight to again the 2nd romania coordinates with other nato forces in policing its airspace defense to the skies above nato's eastern flank has never been so intense nato faces of colossal challenge. not just in the air on the ground to russia would call this escalation, nato prefers the word de terence here us and romanian forces allan exercise recently. there were tests of aaron missile defenses, but ukraine is saying, such weaponry is desperately needed it side of the border. and the supply line of
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weapons that are available is too slow. decisions on weapons decision on watching, production line weapons in western countries. it has to be made buster. the quandary nato faces is that it won't take a direct hand in the deployment of weaponry. and so it's down to individual states, but some only want to give non lethal support. ukrainians may well observe that if energy infrastructure is repaired, it won't last for long unless ukraine's air defenses aren't drastically improved sooner rather than later. andrew simmons al jazeera, bucharest, earlier, we spoke to kids mer vitale. clinical, he says ukraine desperately needs more military support. main point, air defense and direct systems, sir,
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because safety right now is main priority for everyone in ukraine. and yes, of course we very appreciate for support to political support, financial support, human than health, but we need right now generators for now, for our country, we need to also defense weapons and direct systems and defending systems because one more time. safety is main priority for every citizens of our hometown in our country. it's situation right now hold the grain and also in capital is critical because after the last rake is a tag to our hometown is our infrastructure was also have huge damages destroyed. and we are fighting 24 hours to bring the water and heating back to apartments, to homes in our citizens. actually right now,
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their heating can the water in the homes, but we have the deputy though 50 percent of electricity as mean one half 1000000 citizens of our hometown without electricity. the was one of the most highly anticipated and politically charged match up to the world cup. and in the end, the usa won the crunch group game against iran securing their place. in the last 16 of the torment and the richardson reports from the ultima stadium. when these teams played at the 1998 will be around play as gate won't plan was to the u . s. counter as a symbol. the piece, no such noise that these, this towing beyond be prescribed handshakes, seen it will cut, matches. the us have a wind progress in the knockout rooms with the initial, if it's what somewhat way would the breakthrough they needed?
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it came late in the 1st half christian polis itch with the close range finish. seconds before the break, the us thought they had a 2nd on if the timothy way is efforts to be ruled out the offside. iran, you drool, would probably be enough for them to escape out of the world cup group for the 1st time, but the required go remained elusive. a tension soaked, getting finished will nil. iran go out. the u. s. move on to the last 16 and a match against the netherlands. like i go back to 1998 when, when the usa played around and, and attention to were high. a lot of politics, lot, lot of history coming into this game for them to play again now today. and the neat thing about today is that the fans came together. you can feel attention new, crazy if you couldn't feel attention in there that it was more than football. but i
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think you asked most everyone i was around were made it about football respectful, but we had to be proper. we had to be proper fans. we had to stand up and i don't think we made it more than just a football the night, and i think we did well, was brilliant oper, our fun. i'm the players that did want that good on look, you won't be a considerable that 1st hall. i of equipment the score off of up even though it's dr. hard on. mm hm. but didn't up and we thought there would be a lot of tension sitting with the americans, but i was surrounded by americans where i was sitting and it was really, it was really great. we were all getting a long time. think usa are here on together. every night for all the background noise that it surrounded this stick to the only thing that really mattered about it to the place was what it meant to the immediate well, futures, the best, the u. s. has ever done at a well come the last time the event was held in asia that was back in 2002 when
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they reached the to finals. this generation of players now has the chance to repeat or even better. that effort and the richardson al jazeera and alton, i'm a stadium. renee washington is a college sports journalist and format and national women's soccer league plan. she hopes america success of the world cup will boost the sports profile in the us and lead to great funding. as a former college, all american and a player that was on the other side at one point as an athlete. you know, you see 1st pan, just have the experience can be better. as you talk about soccer will have a lot of growing to do within the united states, and it's explaining the on the collegiate level, all the excitement around the end simply one man, but also, but the emma last is coming off of a, one of the biggest what final that we've had between the union at las, the, the n w s l having the same success in historic numbers and their champions at the portland black one. so soccer is growing and ethically that level with more eyes, more viewers, and just more band laughing and engaging with the sports consistently. this is
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a turning point. you know, us soccer is finally getting the following. the recognition it deserves. and i think the success of the men on top of the women is so needed, especially with how more conversations like this are happening worldwide. so it's exciting, misty, and i'm hoping that this is just the start of some great things become. all right, go ahead on i just will have lots more action from the world cup including england . securing its package as group women and an architectural one day in weston india. we visit a school designed to shelter students from the scorching sun. ah ah hallo. was seen the storm clouds gathering across the deep south of the us, some really nasty weather starting to push its wayne and it's all linked up with
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this cool air that we have across the north and the western parts of north america . and much warmer air coming in from the gulf of mexico. so the cold, dry air that split further south which and that is a recipe for some violence storms as we will see 25 celsius. therefore dallas is a 13 there in kansas top temperature of around minus one there for minneapolis to speak all one through the course of web to say that all sinks farther south as we go with a stormy weather sliding across the deep south easing away from the eastern seaboard late in the day, i'm pleased to say we will see some lively storms linking right up across new england. it's eastern parts of canada as fabulous snow. they're coming into ontario . there's that change in temperatures. make drop minus 5 in minneapolis to celsius for kansas city. 10 degrees of the air for dallas. and michelle, you'll notice there is some snow in the forecast just rather north west. some big snowfall, maybe 15 centimeters, 20 centimeters, a possibility into parts of that northwestern corner of the u. s. and it thinks by
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the south, which as we go on through thursday, wet weather all the way down to central parts of california. ah, why do people tell stories and take risks to share their experiences? from every corner below, binding us together and inspiring us to expand our realities? why? because they most ah, award winning versus telling groundbreaking stories. witness on al jazeera news.
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the me again, you're watching as a reminder about top stories this out in the u. s. to leaders of the right wing. oh, keepers group have been convicted of seditious conspiracy. group found a stuart roads and florida chap. they had kelly megs, are accused of instigating an attack to block congress certifying, jo biden's election victory the us senate nato allies have promised more military a to ukraine and to help keep repair its energy infrastructure. millions of people are struggling with rolling blackouts during winter after russia attacked ukraine's power goods. for more teams have secure that places to the knockout stages that the people walk up and set a goal. the netherlands usa and england have reached the round of 16 sending cuts
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out of ecuador and iran out in the greek stage. a cutter has announced its 1st major deal to send liquefied natural gas to germany. it's agreed to supply $2000000.00 tons each year. starting in 2026. german chancellor, olive shots has hailed the agreement as a building blocked towards energy stability move comes. european countries struggle with high energy prices and uncertain supply as they work to reduce their dependence on russia. dominant came reports now from berlin. from the german perspective, this is a deal which the minister concerned robert hardback has said is great. he said that from his perspective, this 15 year deal shows that category is part of the world market. he says that there are the countries in the world market. but let's be clear. qatar represents one of the biggest parts of the world market. from the german perspective, the governmental perspective, that is, this is also good news because very recently they have shown the world one of the
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new floating l n g terminals. i've been to see myself in the port of vin, hadn't have, and, and so this deal, which would represent 3 percent of germany's gas needs. well, it will when eventually this comes through will be coming to places like that and half, and feeding germany's gas requirements for those 15 years. but what it also spells out is clear that this environmentally concerned and conscious german government is having to accept the needs the necessity of having fossil fuels for a very long time. mr. havoc has said we're going to be carbon neutral by 2045 steel runs till 20. 41. no question about it. right now. the situation, the energy crisis is forcing this german government to make decisions that would really prefer not to, but openly say, they say that this deal is great. of the united nations has appealed for international help to stop
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a deadly outbreak of cholera in haiti. more than 11000 suspected cases had been recorded since it started in october. the doctor say armed gangs of preventing patients from accessing life saving treatment, truly worn reports from porto prince. the epicenter of the outbreak. it is but a tent open to the wither. yet for those stricken by cholera, this is century infants, adults color is not fussy, and it kills when it comes quickly cut, right? it's always an emergency. she did it extremely contagious, especially when it gets in the crowded city like hearing pop. cholera called early is easily treatable, but this is hating where nothing is simple. funny, the over watch is lovingly over her son mickelson register the day
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compared to the way he was. he's getting better because of the nurses and doctors. if it wasn't for them, i probably would have lost my baby. fanny has more than one reason to keep nicholson closed. her son will grow up without a father. after fanny's husband was shot dead by gang members, a routine occurrence input printed in bang. i don't have anybody to help me, so most likely i'll be on the street. that's what the gang's wanted for me to be out on the street. gangs are also stopping cholera patients to losing their territory to get urgent care. haiti has a recent painful experience with cholera. an outbreak here in 2010 took the lives of some 10000 people. now that outbreak was lighted. traced back to the activities of united nations pace cases the you and apologized in 2016,
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but has yet to accept any legal responsibility. harvard human rights lawyer, beatrice lindstrom advocates for the victims who remain uncompensated by the un. and i think that that i've had devastating effect for haiti because it's meant that the u. s. commit meant to actually right. it's wrong. and haiti has been dependent on voluntary contributions has been amounted to a charitable effort, has gone largely unfunded. more than 3000000 people have no access to clean drinking water. mickelson is recovering. the future is tenuous, bag elim, back on. i have no help. nobody love but also great heard in the time of game and color, prove one, i'll just 0. put her, bring the u. s. senate has passed a bill to protect same sex and interracial marriage. in a landmark vote, the final tally was 61 to 36 supported by democrats and 12 republicans. the bill
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douglas set a national requirement to legalize same sex marriage, but it does require individual states to recognise another states legal marriage. french president emmanuel, macro is in the us on a 3 day trip. it is the 1st they visit by a foreign leader. this joe biden took office as high profile receptions were put on hold due to the cove in 1900, pandemic marshes, war and iran on russia's war ukraine. rather. the iran nuclear deal, and china's growing influence are some of the issues likely to be discussed. the time for a full round up from cut our 2020 to roll paddock. is that our work up studio? the u. s. i have dr. wrong out of the wall. carpet secured their place in the law. 6, stayed with a want bill victory at l to man a stadium. rob says choice. keith was on the pitch,
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will kick off off to picking up an injury open, but there was nothing he could do to stop. christian sits putting the us up one bill, but the ford paid the price in during himself. going to 1st go. i was like to sub duff with the way i thought he'd double the us made it the executive of the 1st, but the referee rules about, sorry, iran, what desperate for a goal is a draw would see them through to the count stages and the dying moments the baby was saving the doubt in the box, but the referee didn't award a penalty. so the game tree to the us or to kill their passage is great, which is why beating british rivals while the welsh needed a way to have any chance of qualifying a forego. victory could have knocked down spots marcus rash for that other ideas he had said, my daddy was that after the break that back to spark for the scoring with a brilliant free kick at the bid already said, you have nothing to keep it to do about that. was a bit late to english,
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double there late that how he came with the city. so why did the school 22 year old repairing manager down south states for giving him his 1st stop? 2022 and he was rest, but he completed the scoring ceiling a 3 day when we did go on they told him it's which leaves them as joy top scorer wilds, and that starts to get finished. awesome. and they are out english, but it's all group b one except for english will be set a goal. he secured their ticket to the dock out stages with a thrilling to one. when the gets ecuador, i couldn't remember needed just a draw to qualify, but it was set a goal of the attacker leon, just before the africans where did fronts, where they were awarded a penalty. it's marla saw the story. he says, well, comp goal to get started goal delayed a corner, could all lead to the equal ours that our to the guy was to fade, are escaping his boss to find the back of basically a nation that is on the part of it. though it's hard for us to slice or cap to do color volley scoring the widow ecuador play is that top broke it off the big so
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close to got a through sent a goal because the 1st african seems to qualify for the stage a little sorry, group i that that's lives book that spot to the route of 16 with a comfortable way to the host cats on the dutch are the data that draw in their final good guy just to kill progress. so they were better than that. cody got probably got the open up so that was continuing his rather of scoring it every game so far. well, they let the ball florida bit feel to frankie, the own double the lead for the baited orridge after the break because i feel comfortable waiting for the topic. great. could of it more substitute steven back outside the ball and did it at the bike with the figure about coal, but it was actually rolled out by the i offer a hardball by step. so the build up bad down over hit the ball in the closing stages. but to deal with how it finished the dutch talk that you woke up, jody. the ice champions becoming the 1st high salute, all 3 groups, very games that are beated at 18 consecutive,
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that they face the u. s. fixed for let's have a look at those results without football, i missed one guy, england, that united states that going through from group bay. but did they deserve to be the top to do they do? i mean, based on what they've been able to do throughout the entire body of work, they were the 2 teams most consistent. they were the 2 teams that are end up getting the results. there were the 2 teams that showed the most in terms of some type of play, especially against whale and iran, harper for on. yes, but the us with a better team in that match up against the iranians. and that's where the difference and that are being in that group center. go back and show there's an african nation. that is the last 6 data off the data from the continent did. did it in russia 4 years ago. a great, great for africa. yeah, well 4 years ago they were eliminated for out of the group stage on yellow cards. i mean, how close could they have been that tamara? keep that in mind when you start seeing l u. c. c. and his team go into, it's going to be a very, although the english press are going to say it's coming home. i was out there
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present to as well. a lot of people need to keep synagogue into my go through. but at the end of the day, the senate goal is going to give me a very difficult time and don't be surprised if they, if they are the ones that end up advancing and quickly. the next question says, how strong do i look at the going into the account stages? it's more of a cases you know, that could get a lot better that do what they need to do in a world cup. you don't want to always start out strong. you want to start going through the a sending curve and they're starting to get to that point in this, in this group stage. now what they end up finding out is that, yeah, they play the u. s. they possibly, if, of course, all the statistics and all the probabilities of going the right way, they might end up playing argentina quarter. but how, how big a deal is it to the states, christy police scores today for the u. s. white of aged. we don't know how bad that is, that very good at e d, back back to get to that because he is that creative spark is that he's there. create a spark. he is one of the leading scores. he's that player that makes he's the one that makes that engine rep and pulling against it at 100 percent. you start to see
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some problems with the u. s. joe was doing this the other day and i said, i hate their predictions. are going to do with the what year. oh, so give us, give us, i lost 60 and you know, to compare the fact that i use that better than me. so what do you think set a goal, england's england's usa holland or usa that lives maryland's netherlands. okay, going to be interesting. well let's, we'll have a look here, the interest that those guys that group see. and they also decided on wednesday fun around matches there as well. it's a 1500 guarantee kick off with the defending champion products again. she does. yeah. educate and 50 with australia. a deadlock are going to be interested in this . well, that's what i'll do. thought to get the same, sorry, but that's followed at 1900 gmc for the small bathroom audit. theda up again. paula: the level bessie dusky. that's it said the boy kevin pool playing at the same time . saudi right. the match with mexico lose sight l. i called a beta,
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so thank you to look forward to the 11th of the ultimate all team will have it all covered right here on out the our school enroll india has been short listed flooring award at the annual world architecture festival. haven't even tell when to check it out. imposing an intriguing, this giant building breaks the monotony of surroundings. its terra cotta collar and geometric layout are unusual for a school in western india. in general. most people look at schools, hospitals, you know, in a very straight land manner without thinking of spaces those social interaction for how to make it lively for the resident. because people are spending like half a day to the school as part of the spotty hector township. in rochester state, most residents are employees of a cement factory. the region is hot and dry. the architect has taken the climate
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into consideration in his design. thick angular pillars, shelter open spaces. even in the scorching sun. temperature's hair can reach 45 degrees celsius for the auditorium faces south. i'm blocked much of the sunlight. gas rooms are on the opposite side, facing north, so they get less heat during school hours. joining them is this giant pergola where students gather for extracurricular activities and it does feel cooler here. 2 sets of vertical walls further restrict direct sunlight. inside classrooms are well it, and there is no need for air conditioning curtains or blinds. the corridors are modeled on billet st. twisting and turning, creating looks for students. it's not just about the aesthetic or i truly believe that this infrastructure is also designed in such a beautiful way that it meets all our requirements mathematic teacher. they use the

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