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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  December 7, 2022 6:00pm-7:00pm AST

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simba on al jazeera ah, this is al jazeera ah, hello, i'm adrian finnegan. this is that he is, are live from doha, coming up in the next 60 minutes. german police arrest 25 people who are accused of plotting to overthrow the government. china as president, she's in ping touches down in riyadh, looking to boost ties with saudi arabia. the people have spoken democrat profile warner wins a one off for the you. i state of georgia giving the party and outright majority in the senate. ah
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epic when to more go the policeman's knockout spain advanced the quarter finals of the world come for the 1st time. ah, germany says it's foiled a fall right plot to overthrow its government. it rides at $130.00 sites across the country. it's, prosecutor general says that 25 people have been detained and that the group wanted to build a new german army, a soldier, a judge, and a russian national or among those arrested. a former german army officer has also been detained in italy, is 100. see here, guns of this is obviously one of the largest terrorist organizations that has existed in the more right wing sector in recent years. in any case, as far as like in it's the worst we have seen so far in the environment of this
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rice burger. and q and unseen. we can see that what some people consider to be completely absurd. fantasies can lead to a highly dangerous decision to act more on the block. now from out, as here as dominant came in berlin. this is a very large operation which man more than one european country, apart from germany, involved 3000 offices, there were thereabouts, 25 people taken into custody. many others also believed to be of interest to the police in this country. some of the details about specific individuals who have been picked up in these rates are particularly interesting. so the knowledge that a judge working in the berlin district, the berlin circuit area, legally lab person, is also a former member of parliament, was part of the previous parliament until 2021. and now is accused of having been involved in some sort of plot to try to overthrow that parliament. others are
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believed to be people from the military. we know this a suggestion that a serving member of one of germany's most elite military units is part of the alleged plot is alleged to have tried to recruit others from that military unit. lots of different elements of information about those who have been arrested emerging and they all point in a particularly interesting direction. any russian involvement has immediately been rebuffed by the russian government meter, he passed scoff spokesperson in the kremlin, has said, well, this is the 1st that the russian government had heard of this. like having a question of any interference by the russian government. and they only heard about it through the news. so officially, russia completely rejecting any suggestion of involvement. the interesting thing here is when you look into the allegations against these people, it is clear that they believe that there's some force at form of deep state
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operating within germany, along the lines of the sorts of things that were heard from the united states of america. in the course of the last few years, this idea of a government within a government hounds. jak options up is the senior director of the county extremism project. he joins us now. live from berlin. good to have you with us. how close to fruition was this plot? could it have succeeded and what do you make of the people behind it? how extensive is the network? well, thank you so much for having me. i succeeded in, in what sense is really important, obviously, is succeeding and destabilizing germany. absolutely no chance succeeding in meeting out a lot of violence, especially on the local level, as also pointed out in the indictment. absolutely. now, these $25.00 plus $2725.00, arrested $27.00 under investigation group is part of this by the ag ice good movement, which is the decades all conspiratorial movement that holds that germany is an
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illegitimate power structure. and that the german guys never ended in 1945 and continues to exist. now vida movement according to the german authorities comprises $21000.00 individuals that are part of that. and now this is a small sliver of this, but obviously a very determined and a very dangerous liberal this novel as it and all of this must have come as a huge shock to the political class there in germany when, when they heard this years, or when it broke and what does it tell us about the strength of the far right? particularly in germany. when i asked my organization to come to excuse budget has been pointing out in the last decade, the did see a continuously strengthening ripening extremist movement. not just in germany, but also transnational. we had seen a boost to their iceberg movement, as it was for several other ripening extremist movement to the cove at 19 pandemic, which not only enlarged,
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but also radicalized elements of this iceberg move when. so we do face a considerable challenge here and that certainly from the iceberg, and will lend a lot saddle with a really dangerous endeavor. that was a similar network arrest the couple of years ago called the hannibal network, which was outside that i still got dropped but planning something very similar. so there is an actual terrorist threat coming from the right in extremist movement inside gym. and as we hook this group had connections beyond germany, they dos russia to help. what does this say about the threat that liberal democracies like germany face? what i mean, 1st of all, there was a rush national part of the core group. so it's natural, i'm that that would be the 1st connection would be to the russian federation. i, even, the indictment says the russian federation didn't respond for this. find the credit is not totally mine. that they had no knowledge, i doubt, but they didn't respond positively, at least according to the indict. i'm the others arrests in italy and in austria
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where germans residing there. so they weren't austrians or italians, but germans who basically enjoyed their retirement in those countries. really good story, sir, but if x did hands here captions other from the counter extremism projects in berlin, china's president sheehan ping as arrived in saudi arabia for a 3 day visit. he was welcomed by king solomon, who wants to deepen relations. china is the gulf nation's largest trading partner with goods worth $87300000000.00 exchange last here a saudi arabia is china's biggest oil supplier and st. billy $44000000000.00 in crude. the in 2021. the oil market is expected to dominate the talks. it comes as a price cap on russian exports imposed by the g $7.00. e. u at estrella takes effect roberts organ nikki is a senior resident scholar at the arab gulf states institute. he joins us now live
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from washington goods. have you with us, sir, at what does saudi arabia want from its relationship with china is rolling out the red carpet or the president she meant to signify that saudi arabia could well shift its allegiance to china. that it no longer sees the us as its primary ally in the region. well, thank you for having me. first, let me say that both crown prince mohammed ben selman of saudi arabia and president she of china want to make a splash on the global stage. both leaders have been consolidating power at home. mom had been so mom has been doing this for a number of years president, she most recently completed this consolidation of power at the national congress of the ccp. but both leaders also faced a number of challenges in saudi arabia, had been some on and other government officials need foreign partners and investors to help support a very ambitious,
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inexpensive social and economic transformation plan known as vision 2030. and i believe they view chinese partners as important part of that equation. at the same time president, she is facing some domestic descent and protest at home. and doing this trip to the middle east really allows him to act as a statement to be part of a red carpet roll out in saudi arabia and actually return i believe the plan is to return to beijing with a certain degree of political and diplomatic cache. so i see this trip as it's quite important for both saudi arabia and china. now, to your point about whether this means that saudi arabia is looking to move away from us partnerships, i don't believe that at all. i think that saudi officials are engaged in a very delicate balancing act between global partnerships. you have us on one side and european partners. and on the other hand, you have other partners like china and ultimately saudi arabia is going to have to
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be very careful about how they approach this balancing act. so they don't create the perception that they are leaving their partnerships with the us. behind. you talk about the political and diplomatic cache from china's point of view, with relations between the u. s. and saudi arabia, tepid to cool. right now, is china seeking to step on washington's toes here in the middle east? what context is very important here. the last time president, she visited the middle east and i believe saudi arabia was 2016 that saudi arabia was a very different country at the time. and mohammed been some on and really not fully consolidated power vision. 2030 was an idea rather than a reality. of course, coven 19 was not on the agenda, and russia had not invaded ukraine. so the geo political context was very different
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. but if we look at how this, this summit says stacks up at the moment, we have to go back to early january when a delegation of foreign ministers from the gcc traveled to beijing. and the idea here was to make a showing of the strategic nature of the part of their partnership with beijing. and now i look at the this most recent trip as essentially the response from beijing. beijing is sending a very high level delegation to the region. and of course, this comes on the heels of president biden's trip. all right, many thanks, dave, to being with us. robert mobile, nicky, that in washington dc. china has announced that it's loosening and 0 coven policy. people who are a symptomatic or showing mild symptoms, will be allowed to isolate at home. the government's also reducing its mandatory testing requirements. move comes off the widespread protests against lock downs and mass testing. it's a major reversal in a country that impose some of the toughest pandemic measures in the world. the beam
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to seabees is the further deepening of the understanding of the virus ended disease . the reduction of the risk of the disease efficient supply of vaccines and medicine. and the improvement of emergency response and treatment capabilities are some of the required conditions or key elements for us to resume the living conditions before the outbreak happened. and andrew k, p long is a china strategist. he says 0 covert policy was never meant to ensure 0 cobit cases . it is a design to implement at earliest possible detection early as possible. ready isolation, earliest possible possible. ready dimension, and it is possible killer. and in fact that that strategy had been relatively successful compare with other countries, according to a recent independence survey conducted by new york based. well,
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we now research institute called the elder and trust. so being all countries long, well, in response to their government's ability to cope with the pandemic. a charlotte came up tops, but it's been 2 years and paid people's patients are very thin. and as president see a reason he met the visiting european union president face to face in beijing, said to him that he realized that there was a lot of impatience on the part of the people and he's responding to it. and also, another factor is the pandemic. now change to be more like an endemic, even though more serious that approve it, even though it can be a relative be more deadly than the flu. but again, comparison with the early stages is it still is changed quite significantly enhanced. and this relaxations
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ah, in the us down across of type that grip on the senate. off the raw file, warner defeated republican challenger, herschel walker in georgia knox victory in the raf means the democrats will have 51 seats. in the $100.00 c chamber, the 2 candidates were separated by less than one percent of the vote. it last month's mid term election. let's go straight to washington. our white house correspondent. kimberly how good is that for us? so the democrats were tipped to get a hiding in the mid terms. remember that one look at them now that they're in control of the senate, although they don't control the house. yeah, that's right. but for all intents and purposes, the senate is the more powerful chamber. this is where there is the opportunity for the president to push through his appointments and what not. so this is really the one. if you're going to control a chamber, this is the one you watch in terms of political parties in the united states. so
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there's no question this is being viewed as victory because as you point out heading into the mid terms, all the pulls indicated that it was going to be a republican sweep. and that certainly was not the case. the math now looking like the there is a very clear majority. now for the democrats in the upper chamber, the senate in the house of representatives, the large chamber controlled by republicans, but just narrowly. and that was not predicted to be the case. and of course, donald trump, or rather phone trump, the former president of course, very much still present in us politics, but it is joe biden, that is in the white house right now, a democrat. the reason i'm talking about donald trump is because this, according to joe biden, was a real rejection of donald trump's politics. in fact, he even congratulated raphael ward off in on twitter. he called them right afterward and said that this was really rejection of the brand of politics that
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donald trump has been trying to paddle for the last 2 years since he left the office. and so, democrats are really looking forward to 2024 feeling somewhat optimistic now because george was really kind of a state that typically had been republican, but now seems to be very much leaning democrat. and that is very good news for joe by that because we're seeing this trend in a number of states including north carolina. so democrats filling really fraud right now. not only because the legislative map for the past for legislation looks positive for the president for the next 2 years, but also because this really both well for jo bivens reelection chances in 2024 white house correspondent, kimberly how could live there in washington. kimberly many thanks indeed. former us president donald trump's company has been found guilty of tax fraud in new york. it
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adds to the myriad of legal was facing the trump, as he campaigns for office. again, my car reports for washington. it has a major financial implication for the trump organization. these crimes of tax evasion went on for some 15 years. and although the fine itself may not be that substantial, that will be divided at decided by the judge. in january, he'll announce exactly what the fine is, but the economic impact on the organization will be substantial. obviously, it's going to reflect his relationship with banks with other lenders, with other companies in terms of its ongoing attempts to do business. at this, at the judgement is likely to reflect very negatively on the trump organization as a whole. but for donald trump himself, it's just adding to his long list of legal woes. one must remember that there's a separate case pending against donald trump and his organization wrote by the new york attorney general that is pending. and even more seriously is the investigation
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being conducted by the department of justice into 2 elements. one is donald trump said, taking documents from the white house to his mar, a lago estate, and how serious was the misuse as its put of classified documents? the other issue that the attorney justice department is investigating is trumps. attempts to overthrow the 90 a 2020 election. so this is now just another in the long list of legal problems facing donald trump. argentina's vice president, christina flanders. acosta has been sentenced to 6 years in prison. she was convicted of corruption at a $1000000000.00 fraud case. there is a bar reports from one of our us. * o. d, so so borders of christina fernandez, kirschner who came to the federal court building in when a site is to protest against argentina's judiciary cushion,
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or was sentenced to 6 years in prison. and given a lifetime ban on holding public office. after being found guilty of corruption is the 1st time an argentinean vice president has been convicted of a crime, wealth in office. little made in l. e. s. s. kirschner is a victim of political persecution, to log again, and it is the same. so what they want to do is get her out of politics in a good way or a bad way. they fail to kill her. and now they have this option 3 months ago, kitchena was the target of an assassination attempt. when a man pulled the trigger of his hand gun inches from her face as she greeted supporters, the gun failed to fire. on tuesday, a panel of 3 judges found kitchener guilty of aggravated fraud. continental christina elizabeth fernandez. the kitchener is sentenced to 6 years imprisonment. life disqualification hm. holding public office legal accessories and the cost of
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the proceedings because she is criminally responsible for the offense of fraud, lent administration to the detriment of the public. o. kirschner is accused of directing millions of dollars of public works contracts to a family friend. prosecutor say, they have found dozens of irregularities in public works contract in the province of santa cruz, where the kirshner family originally comes from. the former breasted and denies all charges accusing the trivial in charge of a political witch hunt and serving the interests of the opposition. you mercy, this is much simpler. it's not, no fair, but it's not a judiciary party. it's not a pattern of state and mafia. it's a judicial mafia. christina hernandez, the kirshner was argentina as president for 8 years between 20172015. it is now this country's vice president. she's an advisor bigger in contra while there are many continued to some water. there are many others,
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would like to see her in prison. kirschner is expected to appeal against the court's decision. despite her conviction, she has congressional immunity and is unlikely to have to jail any time sooner, younger than before, the baby. so i'll just see that one aside, is the taliban is allowing afghan girl to take the high school graduation exams this week. girls in middle and high school have been banned from classrooms since the group took part in august last year. the latest decision reportedly applies to 31 of afghanistan's 34 provinces, as well as i do that. my name is saturday, grade 12. i'm in a very bad state right now because we have an exam today for class 12 and we haven't studied a single book for it. we hate to answer 140 questions without knowing anything that we have nothing in mind. what exam should we give and from what is on what you know before me? a job and i had nickname. we are a bang the job role. but since we are bay,
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then they should also fulfill our wishes. we don't want much. we only want to study in our country because it's al, right in the half of the population is women like we have a right and they should give us our right to prosper. and 2 people have been killed and 8 wounded and a suicide bomb blast. and indonesia, it happened at the us donna, anna police office in band on west java. local media say that a man entered the station on a motorcycle and detonated explosives where police were lining up for morning roll . cold. ithaca had apparently brought 2 bombs to the sea, but only one went off. was java's governess, as the counter terrorism unit, is investigating. the trial of 2 men accused of bombing a popular shrine in bangkok has resumed after shifting from a military to a civilian course. the 2 ethnic weaker suspects have been in detention since to 2015. difficulties finding translators delayed proceedings. and then the coven 19 pandemic shut down the trial. now, 7 years on survivors and families of the victims are still waiting for answers. the
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study chang reports. oh, for asian tourists, it's one of the biggest attractions in bangkok, the arrow on shrine, hindu god, but a symbol of good fortune for all these days can can so me, i can only watch from afar to get any closer is too painful. you can guy, well i felt like i couldn't walk hosted even through the skywalk now i can't but i'm still scared if i have to walk straight. even when i drive past and stop at a red light, i pray that the green light will come quickly. can con, was there on the night in august 2015, when a bomb exploded. 20 people were killed. the 125 injured. most of the victims were tourists, including a number of chinese nationals, prompting the theory that they might have been the target. now, after several delays, including the pandemic,
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the trial of the main suspects has restarted. helena, the problem of this case started with the military coat, the military co put to everyone who could be a potential witness. in this case in normal course, they only allow witnesses that the cam, your crucial voice, my case. but questions remain about the 2 accused. both were traveling on false passports, chinese nationals, but ethnic wiggers. cctv footage is far from conclusive and circumstantial evidence has been contradictory and confused. that didn't stop the police, awarding themselves $90000.00 as a reward. but the speedy resolution of the crime had been. and even though the case has resumed, that my verdict isn't expected for several years. of course we have to regard to the driver to weaken. but at the same time, we have to give some kind of legal protection in terms of procedure. so that
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even an as well, but that takes time. the attack on the arrow on shrine was the worst bombing anti history. yet 70 is on that still no clear answer. the question. who is behind the attack or who with a targeting. and the victims still struggling with injuries and memories. one answers when i do that time as getting enclosure passed a long time ago, it's so long that i don't feel like i need to know hated it yet. but do i want to know? yes, i do. that resolution seems a long way off. tony chang else's era. thank nearly 130000 refugees and migrants have taken the balkan route to the european union. this year. the e u has increased its border protection, making it harder for people to enter the blog. but there's another risk on these journeys with some people getting caught up in gang wars between arm smugglers. sebastian reports now from the serbian hungarian border. they're trying to keep
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themselves warm surrounded by their own waist. dozens of syrian refugees have taken shelter in an abandoned factory here the serbian hungarian border. aiming to climb this fence the gateway into the e. u, but heavily armed smuggler gangs controlling the border region regularly clashing with each other. 10 days ago, a 20 year old michael was shot in the chest. you're in the conflict between moroccan and i've gone smugglers out of fear for police and smugglers. the syrian men don't want to be identified. we tolerate everything here. the colds, hunger, and problem. sure it's police, but our problems have got more complicated because of african americans and a conflict between them. we have peaceful people, we just want to live a peaceful life at the pressure from the e. u. so we are rated several camps and tightened is fees of re policies. but sasha, but our goal, you was investigated to smuggling gangs,
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says the government is only paying lip service to brussels. so they are saying, wanting officially to the you officials maybe. but they're there closely corrupt, collaborating, and tolerating these groups. my research mind instigation showed that there are many links with the serbian police and security services with the smugglers. he says he found evidence smugglers bribe border police to allow people climb the fence. the interior ministry did not respond to a request for comment. after the fence failed to stop migrants and refugees from entering the european union. hungry has now decided to increase the fence by one meter. but researchers say the fence has created a dangerous market for smugglers who have put founder of people escaping war and poverty at risk. human rights lawyer, se matches put in place in 2015 to stop smugglers have not solve the problem. i still cannot understand how after the 7 years the countries have failed to
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understand that this practice says which i titled as, but i then think illegal, illegal when i get the migration combat thing organized, crime human trafficking. when human smuggling is failing because the trafficking in smuggling is flourishing, the more distinctly measures introduce at the borders. the prices of smuggling will increase a high price, the syrian men and many others, like them continue to pay for the possibility of safety and a better life. steadfast and al jazeera in northern serbia. straight ahead here on the as far as live world cup studio and for the for the latest news and action from capital 20 to me. ah,
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hello. we got some hot sunshine. it's a central part of south america, large the clear skies here, some heavy shower stu, plaguing that southeast corner of brazil shall, is pushing over to was rear. they will be heavy at times. possibility of some localized flooding west. there was a brazil also seeing some wet weather pushing into peru once again and i shout extending the way up towards venezuela. diana sharon, i'm french gonna sing some weather weather as we go on through the next day or say more of the same there. she can see as we go through thursday, with a hate 39 celsius. therefore, since you know, on thursday afternoon casa caribbean, it is lottie. try and find lots of lovely tropical sunshine. maybe a showers that we will see will be across the western side of the carven, just pushing through on they sleep in nicaragua, sinks and went to weather on gears guatemala. seeing the range setting in a little more as we go one through thursday, pushing up towards police, but for the island cities, lottie, fine, dry, sunny, and warm. so some lovely weather here. not quite sal,
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obviously push up into the u. s. stationary area of rain just making its way across the u. s. southern plains as we go through our wed tuesday night is a little further north with heavy downpours as we go on into thursday and further north. of course, this cold, if not, snapped me. ah, the latest news, as it breaks the killing is brought immediate condemnation from the palestinian authority to describe it as cold blooded murder, detailed coverage, health officials say the transmission of this virus among humans is very rare, but they're worried because the summer system is about to begin from around the world. form of probably be okay, living in a building like this with blown out windows and the temperature plummets such conditions really take that whole ah ah
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ah ah ah ah welcome to world cup today i'm far ex model and we're live at our studio and joe has waterfront in the house nation. cats are,
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it's the 1st rough day of the tournament, but the fight been built for the 18th left in the competition. morocco's dream of veterans katara continues up if you me tours the, despite the thought take if they reach the quarter final after beating spain on penalty. gun fellow ramos, take the line like for portugal. p bags a hat trick if they hit switzerland. 5th presidential approval fee for boss johnny . vino held katara 2022. as the beth group stage. ever seen at a world cup. a well johnny, me in the studio is for ball analyst at your home with ye shall. we'll get her thoughts in just a moment. but 1st a day of history at education, city stadia, morocco reach there for world cup quarter final by beating spain on penalties of spain, playing and blue had the best chance inside 90 minutes. then the almost shot capped
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out by keeper bono, and 2 extra time and morocco. biggest opportunity, the fellow substitute one lead to dera, buddy scott, to show that the problem could have put spain through with the last take extra time . but he hit the post. so the match match went to a penalty shoot out there. we also had the post with thing 1st bought cake, spain, 2nd and 3rd penalties were saved by keeper bono, including from captain sergio basket of that last he me with a chance to win it for morocco. the man who was born in madrid and played for rails, you team showing i was there 3 know the score in the shoot out a historic moment for morocco reaching the last 8 for the 1st time out of world. fain bow out of the tournaments in the round. the 16 for the 2nd time in a row or more moroccan fans are on their way to college. hard to watch their heroes
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. sorry here i caught up with supporters already here at the c walk if for reaction to the results. c today, when people are out to god, when the press center. right? so coming together, the under player said how game against every to be was the final will make it right. and i think born yesterday it was totally focused on the penalties. all the guys that are getting charged, they were a matter of fact one of our play a penalty. i knew it was ok. i mean it's just that if you book us, you deliver and he just how it's, it's ability that the, and i just want to,
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as is also that of mind, we trust in our gym and there is the play and eventually the spectators that they were there where they did good job yesterday they trusting the team and the you have to know some think is the more can team is call of the family. it's not the team, it's family. maybe we don't have a machine. we don't have ronaldo but we have trusting each other. do you think you'll win against spend? we'll get you through to the semi finals. definitely. we 100 percent. i tell you one thing. when i book my flight, i book for december, 2nd after the friendly game against chile part i go i, i went back and i changed my flight to december 20th. i'm here to the 20th because i'm going to be on the final part of the final is a morocco. and you can come to me on that part of the final is morocco. today the
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bus rest day for all the football has been calling them and often, but the funds are resting. in fact, the more moroccans on coming african american national carrier, i think creve like this when so i sure looking back on it, it's not really a fluke that morocco or through this is a product of long term planning and investment into the country football association. yeah, absolutely. when you look back at the strategy that the head of the federation back home in morocco posey lecture, he's had a great time. he's had an open, you know, cache book saying you can spend anything you want on the game of football, whether it's development, whether it's, you know, playing for the games and organizing the built to send. so for about $65400000.00, and this is a world class facility with about 80 pieces which are at the show not 2 graphs. and these, you know, is really to help these players that play, especially in europe when they come back home. they are at the same level that they
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have back, you know, in europe when they play at club level. so, for me it's been, you know, an incredible site to see morocco and see this at the woke up where lead ra, groggy. you know himself has been growing as a coach. he won the cuff champions league with we did a blank in may this year and he understands, you know, the culture of morocco and the football reach history that they have. and really it's not even just the senior man. steam is the senior women, they qualified for the women's woke up that will take place in australia, new zealand. next year, the and the 17 played that the fee for and $17.00 women woke up in india and their beats soccer teams that doing well at the foot. so you know, at doing well they play that the are a championships as well. so it's really just, even the king, you know, we saw him celebrating on the streets just the day and bad. he's very happy because the investment now is paying off. in fact, if you think about it, it's the atlas lions that were lagging behind, but now they stepped up and made that country proud. and really now it's, you know,
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how do they pick it up from here? can they go to the semi finals and be the very 1st african and seem to make it to the last 4 of you so well, we shall see portugal cruise into the quarter finals with them. father 61 went over switzerland while leaving star man christiano. rinaldo, out of the starting lineup console almost started the game i had renewed that when repaid his manager said to me, 17 minutes. they were to out about the break when have a made a bit of history of his only 39 year old becoming the oldest player to score in the world cup. now got stages. portugal kept up the pressure. early in the 2nd half ramos got his 2nd of the night and the 44 added by raphael guerrero to put the team in. total control was like 2 in one back through man. well, i can g, their 1st stage goal since 1954, but the driving continued ramos completing his hat trick 1st of this world car after 67 minutes and an injury time raphael leo made it one with possibly the
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goal of the night. portugal going through to the court of fun for the 1st time since 2006. but the omission of rinaldo still left everyone talking about his future. his coach says he so happy to have him in the squad. oh, it's still something that has to be defined. i have a very close relationship with him. i always have had, i've known him since he was 19 years old in sporting since he was 19 years old. we've always had a very strong relationship, and then he started to develop in the national guard. when i arrived in 2014, i've already said that many times and this relationship only develops. i think when i don't, i never misinterpret the human and personal aspect with data manager and player of what we need to do during the match. and that is what we will do. i will always consider that he is a very important player to having the team rinaldo on the bench. but kenny really
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complain after the way that he behaved. absolutely not. and especially not that it happened just a few weeks ago with his co, his former coach, every 10 how much se nights and so now people starting to see a button here, you know, why does he try to put the focus on himself? and instead of a team, when the team is trying to achieve something, especially that now we know this is his last woke up. if anything, he should be the center, the leader in the group to say guys, what can we do to make sure that we get to the next level? but looking in hindsight, perhaps it was even good that he wasn't the best because now we saw a new player born onto the scene, was out around was before that game yesterday. it just that just 3 minutes of international football and look at him signing and scoring the fast trick here in the walk up and just talking about, you know, quiz general. now, i think that, you know, if he thinks back to what his korea has been and have respect for the coach,
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whatever decision the coach makes, going into the quarter find, i guess morocco if it can respected and actually have an opportunity to convince people once again, that he is the starman and perhaps he could even be the difference in that game. why do you think the coach waited so long to use ramos to pick ramos? i think it was just a matter of an occasion. he was just waiting for an occasion and this was actually the perfect one. not that he planned that ronaldo would react the way that he did. but the fact that he did he say, ok maybe now is the chance you know for him to go out there and you know, launch his debut and play the way that he did. but i think it also just shows us, you know, the, you know, the youth structure that they have in portugal. it's not just about rinaldo. we've seen other players grow into the squad, of course, but they still playing in defense. but when you think about bruno for 9, this is sort of like, looks like the, the currently, the of this, but you give side at this woke up. is that an incredible tournaments so far? but i think, you know, we'll see how,
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how that goes. okay. all the fee for present believes cuts are 2022 has shown the gap is closed between the bigger and smaller nations. jenny and 15 also says the tournament has delivered the best group stage ever at a world cup. matches have been of great, great quality in beautiful stadiums. we knew that already, however, as well the public care. ah, who was there was incredible over 51000 on average reco breaking figures on, on tv or the lower 2000000000 viewer switches. which is really credible to an hour 1000000 people in the streets of laura and a few 100000 every day in the stadiums. altogether cheering together or supporting their teams, untasted atmosphere, great goals, incredible excitement,
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surprises, service, small teams, beating big teams. so other normal small teams are normal victims. the lever is very, very equal for the 1st time as well. a national teams from all continents going to the knockout face for 1st time in history. this shows that foot board is really becoming truly good. we simply want to give some, some joy, some smiles to people all over the world. that's what football is about. that's what the welcome is about, and that's what should happen from now as well. until the end, we've already seen some great action on the field, which finally is a, a, you know, the most important part of what it is. some of the biggest err stars performing very very well, but the memories are fine or the mexican fans are or the american fans or the saudi
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fan, sir. ah, want to speak about the g tina, brazil. iranians, every one of the moroccans who were, who were really cheering their teams that tunisia is, i mean, i can, i can just name at the synagogue. i could name them all probably now where each really competitive the top competitive phase, where course, the big start, the big players, big teens, would make the difference on the page. so i hope, and i'm sure we'll see a fantastic conclusion of this work up. a part of the legacy of this tournament is called a project called generation amazing basing katara working with countries around the world and using football to promote inclusivity and gender equality among other things. well, the organizations executive director,
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now are all corey joins. this is to tell us more now now for this project aims to inspire and empower future generation. how did it all begin? so yeah, i mean, generation amazing was established 12 years ago at the early stages of the bits for the world cup. there's a csr component of any bit with fi fi that you know, we had to sort of set up a legacy initiative. and so generation amazing was created even before we won the bit because we believed and the leadership of that time believe that you know, sports specifically football, transformative power to unite people to bring people together, entrepreneur and inclusion across the board. so generation and the thing was established to look at, you know, a lot of marginalized communities entered and turning these place, the populations and the arab world, about time in 2010, there was a lot of migration of refugees from syria to jordan, to lebanon. so basically we started by setting up football pitches for a lot of refugees. so we started with their football pits in jordan, and then another football pitch and i've been on and to the very decision
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a bit for the world cup we, we created the safe spaces for the community members who provide access to a lot of refugee populations. you know, the party never stops down here, but i want to know what has generation amazing role been during the world cup here? yeah. so over the last, you know, since the beginning of the world, we had our 4th edition of the youth festival, the festival. that's something that we do everything every year alongside mega sporting event. so this year is your festival was a bit unique because there was a year long school exchange program under the world cup umbrella. and it was very unique because it's never been done before that you had a school exchange program link to a world cup where, you know, you, we brought together us from all the 32 countries to help out it for $4.00 to $5.00 days. they not only attended the people were at the top on attendance matches, but they got to do a lot of workshops, capacity building burning about you know, them sort of agents of change so they can go back to their communities and get back
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and using football for social impacts and kind of, you know, we promote, we use football, the tool to promote, you know, united nation sustainable development goals and the national vision, 2030 and everything we do, we both capacity and our slogan as pass it on. so everything we do, we built the skills and the youth and our coaches for them to pass it on to go back to their communities and pass on the skills and everything that they learn with us back to their community. yeah, i will. you're also working with the house of the next world. cobb. tell us about that work. yes. so we have a partnership with comcast that looks it looks, soccer grocery store for development programs across the 41 member associations on their behalf. so that's mexico kind of the us in the caribbean islands. it's a 5 years strategic partnership that was launched last year at the gold cup where our national team competed in the gold cup in houston. and so the idea behind that is, you know, we decided to partner with konica from a legacy perspective, to look at, you know, developing cross or soccer for development programs building,
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you know, capacity amongst community coaches across the comcast. so when we roll out the programming and 10 countries per year over the next, you know, 4 or 5 years, and that's basically from a legacy perspective. it's the 1st time also that you have, you know, a legacy that carries on into the next world cup. so it's a legacy that was beyond about that 2022 and we're extending about legacy to united $26.00. and the idea is that we host the generation amazing youth festivals and the united states and canada, mexico and the lead up to the next world cup. but we also do more, you know, we're talking to a lot of partners in the us now on, on providing safe spaces, building football pictures, soccer pitches, i should say. and providing the safe spaces for the communities across the us. okay . amazing stuff. thank you so much in class or for joining us. thanks. sinatra. usher for joining me for the show. we'll have more in our next world. have round up by the 830 gmc. it's now back to adrian and the studio for many thanks. we'll see
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again a little later still to come here on that. he's on another meeting to say the planet will find out if a summit home biodiversity will make a difference. ah, i they all ready for the 1300000 football fan. ah, tell me that this is only the beginning, that echo noise going to keep moving forward with that made or break moment for synagogue more than happy here i can tell you that phones with ring is displayed insert, make sure they got it to let's say if it was not that happened, this belief is when argentinians are feeling here in central when the side and here
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in the center of so you could almost have been given. but thinking that sat through a, with an opportunity for found to be created and celebrate their t. o ah, ah, ah, ah, hello, and 28 migrants of fled off to the plane, made an emergency landing in barcelona. they were traveling from morocco to turkey, or a pregnant woman, reportedly fake labor pains prompting the crew to land. the aircraft in spain least attained 14 of the 28 people, a quarter mozambique,
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a sentence 11 former officials for their roles in a depth scandal that crashed the country's economy. stay turned, companies borrowed nearly $2000000000.00 and elicit loans from foreign banks. mozambique government was accused of trying to conceal the loans from parliament of that, as well as the public. those found guilty include the son of a former president and have been sentenced to up to 12 years in prison. scientists, white advocates and representatives from nearly 200 countries, a meeting in canada to discuss biodiversity, the you and lead conference known as cop 15 hopes to create a road map to protect ecosystems and slow climate change. a draft framework aims to raise $200000000000.00 for conservation by 2030 as one percent of global g p g d p . he went secretary general antonio garage to live at the opening address with our bottom less appetite. what unchecked and then equally economic gross humanity as
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become a weapon of mass extinction. we are treating nature like a thigh lips. and ultimately, we are committing suicide by proxy because the loss of nature and biodiversity gums, we the steep human cost, a cost we measure the loss, jobs, hunger, diseases, and death. acosta remeasured in the estimated sit trillion us dollars in rent or losses by 2030 from echo system degradation. more now from out of here is gabriel elizondo who's at that conference in mon trail representatives from nearly every country in the world have defended on this convention. center here in montreal, canada, where they plan to have weeks long meetings to try to come up with a framework to better preserve bio diversity on planet earth. they have a huge agenda and they'll be looking at more than 20 different issues. but maybe
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the most high profile proposal on the table is being led by france, the u. k. and coaster rica where they are trying to come up with a framework that would preserve 30 percent of all of planet earth, land and water by 2030. now it's certainly very ambitious and more than a 100 countries have already in principle agreed to this. but there are certainly many challenges ahead. as i heard from a greenpeace official, that's taking part in talk here. we need to realize that 30 percent, these are really the bare minimum for the global community to protect our planet. there is also a strong connection between that target and the climate change agenda. these meetings were originally scheduled to take place in china in 2020, but they were postponed for time because of the corona virus pandemic. so there's
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a lot of time now to make up. already there has been some signs of success. as on tuesday, european union and out that they would ban all products, they deemed contributed to deforestation. the meetings will be taking place here in montreal until december 19. o. madagascar is a unique biodiversity hotspots, more than 80 percent of the flora and fauna can only be found on the island. however, many of these species under threats from deforestation, hunting and illegal trade and wildlife, nick clark reports now from miranda. this is what monoculture looks like. the crop in this case is sizes used for making rope as far removed from the rich biodiversity. madagascar is famous for as could be. but in this sterile c lies a surviving remnant of a huge forest. the sides will fields replaced the parente reserve,
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and here you get an idea of what was lost when the trees were cut down. bring tells lemurs, wonder the forest trails. while the rest of the group sits and nibble flowers in the trees, the star of the show is a little more elusive. and this f hacker appears as only it knows how. this though is a dance of survival through ser tracker. it's critically endangered like many lima species. it's numbers are falling. i hook up with guide olivia gilbert whose be walking these trails for 30 years and he tells me intense drought in the south brought on by climate change. he was making a bad situation too much, too much worse. we've seen the number of the baby born. it's about only a 30 or 40 percent of which is the usual we have. so since 5 years,
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quite unusual happening and here is the number of the baby born from drought to deforestation. the pressures on madagascar biodiversity are intense. on the west coast lies a spectacular stand of barb trees. 7 of the world's 8 species of barbs grow only in madagascar. it is just extraordinary, isn't it? this kind of sums up madagascar is incredible by diversity. and some of these trees are more than 500 years old. but of course, they're under threat. once these trees grew amongst the forest. but the forest is gone and the endangered giants are all that remain bark. exploitation, faro houses, constriction are up, constriction and irving transformation of a habitate into can division. and also they sell their
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fruits and the red, generic and natural is another enough to replace population. of course, what's going on here is not unique to madagascar in any way at all is happening simply everywhere. in fact, of the 8000000 species on earth, currently one 3rd are endangered because of human activities. driving extinction levels from between 121-0000 times natural levels, including 25 percent of mammals, 14 percent of birds, 33 percent of reef corals, and 40 percent of an fabian's. or worlds rich by diversity is a source of constant wonder, but also critical to the health of our planet. and mosaic of life that must be preserved. mcclark al jazeera, madagascar. it would be great if you could stay with us here on out a 0. i'll be back in just a moment or 2 with more, the res news. ah
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ah. a full front, a change in latin america. the same aside to remain high as does violence against gender and sexual minority. i come to when osiris 2 young women were taken different ways to establish greater freedom inequality. welcome to generation. a global theories attends, understand. i'm telling the idea that my life you around the world generation changed on al jazeera,
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under cover reporting for exclusive stories, explosive results, al jazeera investigations. i all ready for the 1300000 a make or break moment for synagogue. happy. here i can tell you that funds with my children go to, let's say, if it was not, i do believe what argentinians are feeling here in central with here in the center of. so you could all meant to be in the given. but thinking that sounds great with an opportunity for found to be creative and celebrate their
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t. o. oh, good to police and germany arrest 25 people who were accused of plotting to overthrow the government. ah, hello, i'm a free and i think this is al jazeera, alive from doha, also coming up from trains to planes. the u. k. 's winter woes continue with the border force becoming the latest to announce the strike. china as president, chin ping touches down in riyadh looking to boost.

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