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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  December 11, 2022 9:00pm-10:01pm AST

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i mean, you have a be here, goes to the moral remitted guy. what do you guys think of the result i ah, this is al jazeera. ah, you're watching the news, our life from headquarters in del, himes, eddie and obligates coming up in the next 60 minutes. a city pummeled to the grounds. ukraine. president excuses russian forces of turning back into ruins. a man suspected of involvement in 1980, a bombing of an airline over the scottish town of lockerbie is in us custody. south
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korea's interior minister is under pressure to step down for his handling. if a crowd crush that killed more than a 150 people, ah, how cut her landmarks or didn't use the creative dan setting during the world? welcome to the news. our ukraine's president has russian forces have destroyed the eastern city of bath food, turning it into what he describes as bern. ruins fighting has reportedly intensified around the city in the eastern dani at region and elsewhere near the frontline villa. premier zelinski says the situation remains very difficult, and moscow claims to people have been killed and occupied, southeastern city of mila total blaming that on ukrainian strikes. meanwhile, the you case, foreign ministers warning any peace talks cannot be used as a cover for russian rearmament. i do want to start setting the conditions for what
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ukraine and the ukranian people should accept. ultimately, it's their country that they're defending, it's their son to the daughters they've been lost is their homes fair infrastructure that has been damaged by m revenue, hooton's invasion. and it's up for them to decide the circumstances under which they'd be willing to negotiate for peace. and the turkish president is at a phone call when the russian leader read to play a burden and vladimir putin disgust starting work on exporting other food products through the black sea grain corridor. we're back moods was home to 72000 people. it became a main military target for moscow in august. it's the only major area of the front line where russian forces are still trying to advance or challenge has more in the fighting and back moved from the ukrainian capital, keith. the fighting and back mood has been described to me by some of the people involved in. it says, reminiscence of stalingrad like some of the 20th centuries,
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worst, attrition of bloodbath. but happening in this country. and right now, despite month of intense combat, for new forces, do still hold on to back me quite why russia is willing to sacrifice so many men to take what is a relatively strategically unimportant city. as many observers perplexed in the southern city of a desa, the situation is improving for 1500000 people who are plunged into darkness by russian drone strikes and ukraine is hitting back probably using high mars that precision rocket system given to it by its western allies, its been targeting russian bases and barracks in occupied territory. melissa pole being particularly hard hit. now 2022 is drawing to a close. and ukraine is a country radically altered from a year ago. and our report looks at a group of ukrainian scientists. you have big plans for this year. change an
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instance by russian invasion a frigid landscape of snow and ice, the natural habitat repose specialist. but this is kiera war scarred alpha suburbs, not the antarctic wilderness, elena and our colleagues, should have been exploring this year. ukraine's national antarctic scientific center expedition was due to set off last february till rushes invasion froze their dreams. instead, they've hung up the polar where and their lives have taken very different parts. some of our polar scientists operate in the, in different kinds of france. so some of them and, and bought some of them in the south. but the one group of the scientists form the old unit and they called themselves with the repentance, i believe it's a characteristically ukrainian flourish of humour to help see them through these
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dark times. they even have their own badge. you can see that it's been in cossack style. he's angry by the way. this penguin battalion of arctic scientists is doing real fighting in some of the was toughest battles. the guys also on they, when they somewhere near boston with again, this is for sure. in bob, come back with his tough for bath motors, right? lena can see what the war is doing to friends and colleagues. she's known intimately for years. i see how he becomes old and older, and also he become sentimental. when written to mental about motions. she like, she could start crying, which and some, some small themes all say in and, and what is also important the to 5 to said, i love you. i care about you much more than before. you just love march anchor is the antarctic centers technical director. just out of a key of hospital following a close call and back move to the fighting. he described. there is
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a hellish krakowski of pounding, artillery on hand to hand combat the muzzle. what's key in it usually be what we had a very difficult night battle. if i have a storm by 24 of them, they broke in some parts of the building. we did not control the fighting, was that 5 or 6 meters grenade flying? everyone shooting grenades fell just one and a half meter for my head as i was in a pit under the mac, the mac, the pseudo is for now. we just love can't afford to think of what he be doing. if russia hadn't attacked the point, i completely focused on the war, but i really wanted to end with him to return to a peaceful life again. i want to create something not destroy with it, for now i have to destroy. unfortunately, elinor is busy helping to. she's raising money and supplies food helmets, drones to send to the front lines. it's the things that might end up saving the ives of her colleagues. the story of ukraine's antarctic scientists and how they became the penguin legion frontline warriors crowd fund. this is one of millions of
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similar transformations, everyday lives indefinitely, put on hold. so they can help that country and it's out of need where we talents. how does era keith scott is authority say the man accused of making a bomb which brought down pan on flight one, o 3 in 1988 is now in us custody for me on this. allen fisher is joining us from washington d. c. what more do we know on the story, alan? will i be a gill, mozilla masood was originally charged with her offences in connection with the lockerbie bombing 2 years ago. he's now in f. b. i custody quite how that happened on the become clear once he actually mix it in court here in washington. in the coming days there were reports that he was being held in a libyan prison on the charges that were not related to lockerbie. there was another report that he was actually kidnapped by a militia group in libya and handed over to the united states. he is accused of
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being the man who built the bomb. the brought down the pan am clipper made of the seas over scotland. a 38 years ago this month at $258.00 people on board. that flight from london to new york were killed 11 people on the ground. and no, there's only been one person ever convicted of involvement in the bombing. that was abdel bassett, alma gray, a libyan now he was charged by the scottish authorities in $1091.00. there was an extended debate about how a trial would be held, even involving nelson mandela. eventually he appeared in front of a panel of 3 scottish judges and especially constructed courtroom in the hague. in holland, he was found guilty and he was jailed. but in 2009, it was discovered that he had cancer, so he was freed on humanitarian grounds, and he died in libya in 2012. what is interesting is that there are
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a number of relatives of those who are on board that pan am flight who see that the libyans were not involved, including jim swire, whose daughter, florida died in the flight who has met several people around the world and carried out extensive investigations himself, but no, the americans believe they have the man who planted the bomb and it is clearly their intention to put them on trial here in washington. so alan, now that they have him or what happens next, it is just a case of going in front of a judge explaining how they managed to get him. clearly, he'll have to have a defense attorney appointed and then it will be a case of the united states laying out the evidence that they have against him. but over the last 30 years, 38 years. in fact, there has been a lot of work done by a lot of people who believe that the, that the bombing doesn't point to the libyans,
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that the bomb was actually placed at heathrow rather than a in germany where the flight originated that it wasn't built in malta that the libyans had no impact on this at all. all of these things will be discussed in open court. but please bear in mind one very senior law lecturer in the united kingdom. believe that the conviction of abdel bus at alma gray on the fight that he was involved in the bombing was one of the most grievous miscarriages of justice in scottish, the scottish system in more than 100 years. and the year an observer at that trial in the hague, also expressed their concerns. at the conviction, the u. s. me believe they have as firm case, but there is a lot of evidence that the defense can pull on. okay, thank you so much. allen fessor for that up, they from washington dc and just to pick up on what alan was saying, that pan am flight one or 3 took off from london. it was bound for new york on december 21. 1988. it exploded over lockerbie 38 minutes later. all 259
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people on board and 11 on the ground were killed. so 3 years later, a libyans ogden bassett, alley, mohammedan mcgraw. he and i mean i need a fema, we're in dated for that bombing in 2001 only and my good are he was convicted of murder. so he was sentenced to at least 27 years in prison, but then was freed on compassionate grounds in 2009 after a cancer diagnosis. he died in tripoli in 2012. so the acute bomb maker libyan gala muscle wood, was charged by the us justice department 2 years ago. toby cabman is a specialist and international law. he says the latest development will be well come news for victims and their families. because of the inability to bring the perpetrators who were ultimately responsible for this to justice many, many years ago. the fact that they haven't given up and that they now have
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a suspect in custody, who, who's going to appear before the court in washington dc eminent. they, i think that it sends a very, very clear message to, to the victims that this matter hasn't been forgotten. and those responsible will be held accountable as we already had. there were concerns raised previously as to the trying to have as to that individual who was convicted his level of responsibility. so i think it is, it's an important moment. the us authorities have been investigating this some time and they have clearly been working alongside the libyan are to for some time what the, the us court will have to determine as to the conditions of his detention how that statement was taken at a confession was taken and whether that would be admissible in the us court, if their allegations of treatment and torture, which invariably are in cases such as this as to whether that confession would be
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admissible. that's going to be a matter of the to the u. s. usual authorities to, to deal with serbia says it will ask natal to lead into point 0 and military and police and costco. after a flare up intentions for leasing protesters blocking roads of exchange gunfire. there are costs of those serves who constitute a majority in the north and are angry at the arrest of a serbian former member of the cost of police. the well cost of those presidents of delayed local elections and majority serv. areas to calm the situation. cost of those prime minister ones. nato's mission to remove barricades, erected by kosovo, served microsoft nice feeling. you know, we call once again on the nice or peacekeeping mission in kosovo, to guarantee the freedom of movement. the peacekeeping mission and cause of all is supposed to create a calm and safe environment, which also means to have freedom of movement. the blocking of public roads with heavy machinery by criminal gangs. that shows ed police officers is not acceptable
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and should not be repeated again in the future. we are waiting. organza reaches more from belgrade, served from us north to our steel blocking main roads in the region, while the coast of police close the 2 main border crossings between coastal north and serbia. there are high and couple of incidents reported including several gunshots, but there were no reports of injuries. also european union mission. felix confirmed the fun bernini was thrown as very possible you hire presents, said that you will not tolerate such effect or use of violence. he also said the body case failed lake also serves must be removed immediately and the all actors must avoid escalation. in the meantime, the officials are also serbia on exchange optimizations for the escalation. and so the president public found that got served for, for super us in order to protect themselves. he also said that serbia will ask the
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natal peacekeepers to let it before you, serbia, military, and fully as the gospel. although he believed there is no chance of regret to be approved, it will be the 1st time a bell grade requested to deploy troops and also from the end the warri night. and tonight, your is also said the be off can deploy up to $1000.00 military, police and custom officials to the area to be served majorities and border crossing . but just if such a deployment is approved by commander of nato, submission and possible. it should be said that at the time it was agreed, kosovo was international, recognized as a part of serbia in 2004, wherever possible declared this independence which was a recognizable united states and most of the countries. but that to declare ration was never recognized by serbia. a european parliament vice president has been suspended from her duties after being caught up in a corruption investigation. eva kylie was one of 5 people arrested by belgium
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police on friday. and a corruption scandal which allegedly involves officials from cats are belgian prosecutors say the country may have influence decisions made by the european parliament by making cash payments and gift to lawmakers. ah. so we're in a 2 day break before the football world cup action resumes with the semi finals. let's check out what else is going on though. as part of the tournament festivities 55 concerts and 10 unconventional spaces. and here to explain all of this is laura con was at an arts festival right now and oxygen park in dough. hi laura. i. so i'm actually on dough hot cornish and i have mulatto performance company just behind me. there. an argentinian performance company that
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a famous for drumming stumping, dancing, and it's just one of the many unusual performance venues that people have chosen in cats are during the world's car. and so just to give you an idea, this is a 6 kilometer strip and people represent every country that will be that have been in the football wall, carp, so these guys come from when it's r, as they have been on america, but talent before as well. and we're hoping to send a few minutes on they wells fargo performance behind us. but i have the meeting curators from other interesting and very unusual dance performance is one of them is kata in motion. and here's my report. curtis architectural landmarks at being taken over fight dances from the national museum of cut. her composer nicolai rehearses
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with his music. his t dealt with career fair, benjamin the peer to create the festival in motion making work. none of which is in a traditional performance venue was just really thrilling. something that's happening in the, in the courtyard of the national museum cutter, which is a very complicated, very layered piece. and it was very directly inspired by this wonderful architecture, this festival of dance music is inspired by atari heritage and culture. the career with tell me the don for the traveling through this bar space in order to draw the view as i to the interlocking depth and unique architecture of the desert rose choreography. the also being spied by the fee for world cop the vis or was made in
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her moral dance room. you know. so coming here we had to adapt and tried to fill out the energy of them and their history of the monuments and to connect to maker on the when the when that is where the death it beat the c brochure with hands performers make their way towards olive for the athens art installation, so he would find it quite to free for the performers and all. so we are happy to welcome any audience people that are just passing to you or people that wanted to come and had program to come to, to use her in the museum of his lobby. got choreographer. salisa new created this piece to the court yard. his don't influence by cultures were rob world. o,
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as the day in thief dal boots once used for pulled, i thing provide an unusual stage when natalie allan does choreography. inspired by these ancient vessels look on al jazeera to ha. south korea's interior minister is under pressure to step down following the deadly stampede and soul, which killed a 158 people. ha, leticia are calling for leasing men to resign over what they call a bungled government response. in october units, kim has more from so as we head into the final weeks of the year, south korea's 2 major political parties are locking horns over who should take responsibility. and the halloween weekend crowd crush accident that killed 158 people. and souls eat how one neighborhood on sunday at the national assembly. this democratic party exercised this majority position and together with minor parties,
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pushed through a motion to dismiss minister ease. how many of the interior and safety ministry that vote was boycotted by the ruling people? power party who in protest said they would no longer participate in an ongoing parliamentary probe of the fatal proud crush. it has been now more than 6 weeks. is the accident sent shock waves across the nation, and indeed beyond as among the dead, where people from overseas investigations underway and arrest warrants have been pursued. but there has yet to be any dismissal of a cabinet level official. the democratic party is assisting the buck stops with the safety administer as the police and fire agencies fall under his purview. minister e, in early reaction to the crowd crush, tried explain them much to late response as being because there was no manual on how to respond to
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a spontaneous events such as this later take back those words after public backlash . meanwhile grieving family members of the deceased are organizing to call for accountability. and this parliamentary motion while past is not legally binding. this means that while it may impart pressure on president use on your, to act on his minister, he may well dismiss it as well. the presidential office for now says it has no comment. china 0 cover 19 policy has been one of the toughest in the world, mandatory regular testing and quarantine and medical facilities. but after rare protests, the government dropped most of the strict measures and eased others. nevertheless, the impact isn't what was expected. as iran con reports, you'd think that after imposing some of the toughest coven 19 restrictions on the planet, lifting them would fill the streets and cafes with people and life be getting back
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to normal. by getting rid of measures like forcing people into quarantine camps, letting people isolate a home and allowing free travel within the country. china may have stopped the protest that took place last week, and citizens have express relief. but this is now happening. people are still afraid to go out and we'll hand where the 1st cases of cov 19 were discovered. it's still mostly empty, and business owners are worried. they are though for years businesses are struggling to hold on. let's see how it goes after things have opened up, we'll have to see if there are any travelers. we have to see what the footfall will be like if things are still the same. next year people will have to leave. people are staying away because they're afraid, the lifting of the restrictions will mean more people will be exposed to the virus . but the government is working to reassure people that they are safe to get back to their lives. one of the other big worries is the lack of medical supplies and testing kids, but pharmacists in southern china say once disrupted supply chains and are
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functioning as they're supposed to. there have been times when we've run out of stock because demand has significantly increased, but we have made some adjustments. so if we run out of certain items, they will be restocked the next morning. it will take a while for people to begin to get back some semblance of a normal life. the chinese government is pushed the narrative. the only way you deal with cov 19 is that you don't have any cases at all, but its own health experts are now saying by scrapping regular testing infections are going up. not so say the government health authorities reported 1661. you infection, so beijing on saturday, down 42 percent from 3974 on december 6th. a day before the national policies were dramatically relaxed. transitioning from a 0 covey policy to a deal with coven policy is going to take some time. and opinion that health experts and the government seem to agree on, but how that transition is managed is in dispute with health official fairing
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a mass outbreak. but beijing's worried that the tough restrictions on movement, the lead to rare protests and open critics of the government will flare up again in bunker our desert turning to the crisis and peru. and there's been more protest after the swearing in of a new cabinet under president denot bullet warranty, which had power. on wednesday, her predecessor pedro castillo was impeached and arrested. after trying to dissolve, congress police have been out in force as his supporters demands his release. brianna sanchez reports from lima, anger mountain in the central indian region of him. the whiteness, at least 20 people were wounded in clashes with the police. he's one officer was taken hostage. here in the south of the country, protesters blocked the mean highway fed up with what they see is a corrupt political class. movements are out demonstrating from north to south. most of them with the same demands. we really the only because it's really
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a political, definitely close congress and let all the law makers go, they do not represent us on the form of government. i'm good. how can we trust watty? she said, if president castilla goes, i do too. and she did not stand by what she promised for her 3rd day in office precedent. the novel what they swore in a new cabinet asking each minister the same question, what i was good. do you swear not to be involved in corruption? but before the ceremony was over, corruption, accusations surrounding the new prime minister had already surface jovial, comparable basil life. i am concerned with the appointment of a mediocre cabinet and consequently that it will not be capable of generating enough political strength to quell the protests that are still small. but already all over the country. that that's why 87 percent of peruvians want to congress this whole they do has had 6 precedence in the last 6 years. most former leaders are
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either in jail or under investigation for corruption. anger is wholly because i'm interested in this case because i hard to believe that they can be covered with them on the medical class form a precedent. they look at the your left office with a 25 percent approval rating. he's facing 6 corruption charges, and one of rebellion castillo says his restless, arbitrary, and illegal. he's currently serving a 7 day preliminary detention. the judge has denied his petition for release. i don't know whether protest, i put the form of precedent or not. most boone, they were much into their voices, finally heard the messengers and to see the little heads on the renew our lives for world cup studio. would you want to go for the latest ahead of the semi finals as
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far as 2020 a. away we go with your weather update for the middle east and africa will start this one off in the middle east, some thundering down ports for the southwest of saudi arabia. so let's go in there for a closer look at some of the weather may leak into jet, which of course we just saw some severe flooding there just a few weeks ago when still a factor down through the gulf, but not as bad as they had been over the last few days. so for example, in doha, i think anywhere from about 30 to 35 kilometers per hour, a shield of snow is moving across half gone. it's done. so rain, snow mixing, cobble at 6 degrees, but give it a bit of time. your temperatures are on the way up, whence have shifted a bit in karachi, that's bringing in some sand and dust. so air quality has gone down there as well.
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for turkey or i think most of the rain will be concentrated toward the south as opposed to the west through cypress and then this batch of what weather will move west to east across the la van. so some sharice and b roots ramallah in the days to come central africa, biggest downpours really right across the democratic republic of congo. and let's stick to the south. not only stormy in south africa, but very windy as well, especially for the eastern cape province. i think we got here about 70 kilometers per hour on monday. we'll see you soon. take care. ah. and talked to l, just a guy that was somehow abandoned by the international community. we listen, we have a huge price for the rural. i'm gonna terrorism. what's going on? so money we meet with global news makers. i'm talk about the store respect on al
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jazeera in with with
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with welcome to welcome. today i'm trying to get her oscar. i'm alive at off studio on doe has waterfront. the host nation kept up, we started with 32 teens that only 4 remain as we count down to the semi finals from carry on the journey in katha. they look to and think the weights for defending champion. select a trophy heading home the england players say that goodbye is off to that quarter, final exit and the pride of africa, morocco and their fans prepared for the biggest day in the continents football history. we're joining mean is studios are football analyst, gemma, so i will get her thoughts and just to moment,
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but let's saw with the defending well cut champions. france who had been celebrating, reaching the last the semi finals, but he received a hero's welcome as they returned to their hotel, following the courts. a final victory over england, france preparing for the 7th semi final in the tournaments history. no team has successfully defended the well comp since brazil in 1962. this is the contrast thing seen at england's hotel gal southgate and seam heading home g. bellingham signed old cross and off fans to stick with the t. this was the 7th time england had been knocked out at the court. the final stage of the well co pay is the action from the math. should albert stay david was wrong. who went to head through it? really? sure. many calling his shots, pos, keep a jordan. pickford. parley in the 2nd hall, english were awarded a penalty. when buckeye, as sucker was found in the box and harry kane equalized, we spoke to level wade reece, england,
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goal scoring record. the $53.00 then came to like drama, and it is true scoring to reclaim the leap of france. but england had the chance to level her 2nd time when teo mondays gave away. and now the penalties that this time pain sky, his strike into the stand, a den couldn't manage an equalizer, so bronze claim to hard port to one victory. this is the 1st meeting of the nations in the knockout stages of a major tournaments. male calling for sick on personal for we know we be very dangerous on accounts for attack and this kind of match is one of fine margins being efficient in the to penalty areas in ours. and if there's, even if part of our success came from cain, missing his penalty, even so we showed an incredible spirits altogether. the subs the thoughts is even the plays on the bench pushed every wants to go above and beyond. very proud of how their brain only tonight, but through the whole tournament to some young clays of announced themselves on the
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world stage. i think we've shown a different side of ourselves in terms of the way that we've played. we've shown character to come back from going behind tonight in which we stood, pressure expectation, everything really. so i couldn't ask more of the group or players all the group herself. they couldn't have given any more. let's bring in jamie salon now. jemma, france, we're impressive, went a yes they were very good, but i see it was a very tight game. and now the details, sir, made franz, sir, we're not in this type of game. they have the best for far worse in the chart. i mean, i'm sure about that the meet feel is really refreshing and powerful, but i so are some of their weaknesses in the back. actually they haven't been able to to have
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a clinch it in the whole tournament. and now that made me say that maybe that was not as impressed as i expected it. i think it was not their best performance, but they have for players, you know, very good for my said you do get is my now and of course in but been that's why they are in the semi final. england's funds will feel very deflated now that they're out of this tournaments. what did you make of england's performance in that match and in the tournament as a whole, i can understand that, but he's about the result because the performances, as i was mentioning it was just details righty. of hurricanes card that penalty. i think the next gen of england is really promising. just bellingham, it's meant to be the captain of these sir national tim rochefort soccer. they have so much talent there to feel for them. so i think they do have a future, but it's through that when you are the england national team, most of these players play in the best leak of the world with the best managers, may be able to expect something more from, from the bank. because this, this theme,
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i think, i don't know if they have a lack of confidence, maybe because of the historian, always competing, but never to getting the title that something with that with england that they cannot really understand. but i think the future, they have a bright future. 30. yeah. growing up in england, we've always been used to sort of heartache when it comes to england team. but let's go back to france. yeah, only 2 teams have defended the world cup title before that was actually in brazil in brazil with the last ones who did it 60 years ago. so all france, the team to defend the title again. yeah. and if this happened is not her because it is a chance, it's very difficult to manage success for a manager. once you have her warner or cups or title so important, you have flag deps with some players. and sometimes it's very difficult to deal with that to manage that after success. what her happened with the charms that the generation that one in russia were young. and they were able to take that course
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out or will be coming into the last aid because no one was able to eat in the last 24 years. and they wouldn't like it with injuries. but at the same time, i think that is some kind of like their to because the meet felisa younger refreshes and different because of that injuries and the connection with judo and him. but there wouldn't be the same with been semi that he's a terrific forward. but maybe he's been a kind of lackey and now i think they have the pressure out being at the semi finals. they already did the great and they can do it, but morocco will be there, of course. yet speaking of remote morocco, thousands of moroccan fans have traveled to cat r as their team progress through the tournament. on a historic run to the semi finals. americans have beaten belgium, spain, and now portugal to reach this stage conceded one goal in the world cup as well. and that was an own goal. rocco's coach says it's no fluke there in the semi finals
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to pull on one to launch the law. even if you don't have as much talent as much quality as much money, if you work hard enough and you show that desire and passion and belief than you can succeed, i think my plays have shown that it's no miracle. i think that many of you are going to say it's a miracle, especially in europe, but we've played croatia, belgium spine, portugal without letting in a goals. that's not a miracle. that's the result of hard work. an african teams arab teams work hard, am i? i'm not getting carried away because i know we could have conceded, but we've made our people happy, proud, and we've made the continent happy and proud. and i think we've made so many people around the world happy. when you watch rocky, you want to support rocky balboa because of his heart and commitment, and i think where the rocky of this world cup, rocky balboa, though of his her cup. all right, well, how surprised that huge emma, that the americans beat portugal just a little bit. i know they were not favorites,
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but i was surprised when morocco held an illegal drug and segue shandy opening game because they did so would. i was surprised when they were able to beat belgium for me, one of the favorites. and then everything they did is not a surprise because they are doing it better and better every game they have such an amazing defend. no one has been able to scar to them only on own girl against i. canada and display yard have done that. they are hungry to when they have a be tallied the they have the player number 12 with that with a bodily, the fan base being are all about a morocco. so i was a little bit surprised. yes, because they had the semi finals and yes because they have never. i got a big torino woke up, but the team is that has these amazing energy. i went on rinaldo. he was criticized for the way he came off off to that sir. match didn't acknowledge the winners of them, of the match. morocco didn't acknowledge the rest of his team. our members was take
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on that. i mean, sportsmanship has never been his big thing. he's an amazing football player. an amazing lead. he. he's almost a rock star, but he was extremely upset because say he wasn't aware that this is probably, he's the last experience, you know, walk up and maybe in lead football. so i guess he was extremely disappointed to not be in the starting 11 to, to see his team where the feet that very frustrated because he honestly did his best, he had chance, says, but couldn't help his team. and i guess the frustration was said to be can, it's going to count on. it's like a rock star and done. maybe we can ask him to be perfect. that every single moment . yeah, i guess emotions got the better of him, the gemma. okay. well stay there. we were joined earlier in the studio by welcome when a have martinez, he won the trophy with spain in 2010 and believes the spanish can be title content is again that you are
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a 2026. but martinez told my colleagues geminus and pizza stem. it what it will take for them to compete for the crown at the next? well cup. i think we're spin. miss is a key player. sorry. you know, we don't have a player who come at the side. the game for him make one against one who can suit from outside, who can go, goes like we had that we know we need them. we don't have this kind of player who can they say the game you know in, and we missed a lot to again, step on because that was behind was defending very, very low in his books. by the way, then half a player, we had a lot of situation one against one. but we could not take the vintage of the situation, you know, and i think that we, what we miss in that game in this tournament, what did you make as your country, spain during this time, and where did it go wrong? well, it has a conversation with friends to know it was before miracle game. he asked me
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something that, you know, he asked me how many players of a spend will play in like friends, england, you know, talking about the quality of the game. and i thought about which prayer will be in i said maybe one or 2, maybe 3, not more, you know, and maybe now it's a new begin with the young players that they have to develop. if i see the player we play with with very jam, please, like got the penalty their teenagers and that but give me a lot of confidence for the future. i think in 2 sites in 2026, we will have a break with team better than england. i think england had the one of the best him of the last years of all the principal, so defensive. but you know,
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the small details decided today or yesterday, and the thing was time for friends, but i think england has to be proud of his tournament and i think they, the radio is building down. they have a very good players who can the next year they will dominate to your pan football. also, spain, i have to talk about chain because also they have the very good junk team and i'm very confident about england and spain gives it a possibly unfortunate that enrique is not continuing with this team. i was surprised, i think is the right code for, for the stand, but you know, i don't know what's happening in the board. i don't know if you're listening rico one to, to continue. but in my opinion, listen, i guess maybe after the best, the spanish coats right now and the loser. i know lucas, wendy is a new goes of spain. he's from he's not from the ball, but he was coaching,
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move off for many years. i know him. i know his, his way to work and i think he can do a great job with his pain. let's look ahead to the semi finals krasier sounding very confident as they prepare for argentina defender. yes to be around of it. so secret of their success is that to get us as a team is criminal. i don't think we need to say anybody. we need to look at ourselves to play our best game. we will do a thorough analysis with the head coach and the technical stuff. and then we will see how we will attack the game more i would say the secret of our successes out, togetherness, our unity, the fact that we act and play as a family. everybody plays for one another. we play as a team, and that's our secret. jenna, how do you see these semi finals going? i'm in the we're seeing cook with are the head of course i thing, argentina, i'm friends, have more a reasons,
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more resources and to go through. but morocco and croatia, they have proven the read that to be that tough esteem with her best defense. so i think it's gonna be a both of them are gonna be a very deep tied to a games, especially that croatia, gen dina. they were talking about the togetherness. i think both the squats have that the special competitive spirit. and i think for argentina, this crash, how will we at a might ask staff as the netherlands, one or, or even worse. so i think anything can happen for me, that normal thing would be in the final to, to student is there are gen dinner, birds, those friends. but these cut out has been the woke up of this braces. anything could happen, right. do you get some easier being a under dog or a favorite going into a world cup? semi final i sing at this point. it's easier to be the under dark. but, but of course, at some point of the game, you might feel that i cannot do that. that cannot be defending champions of friends . but i think morocco, they have roofed dad thought that they deal with that being under the dog and being
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favorites. no one was expecting them maybe even out of the in their groups. they just so they have this kind of refreshing approach toward to the games. they have absolutely nothing to lose. and also they have the blair number 12, which is the public, the fan base. yeah. and katara, every one is pushing for the underdogs or morocco and they just, well it is a rest day to day gemma. we don't rest here out. neither of no thanks to jemma. so for joining me, we'll have more in our next world cup special at $2130.00 gmc, now it's back to during in the studio. we'll see you later though. thank you so much for that analysis. still ahead on the algebra news, our latest chapter of nasa journey to the moon comes to a close. oh ryan, back on earth. mission complete now says ryan cap. so successfully lands in the pacific ocean after it's voyage around the moon. and we're on the largest butterfly
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sanctuary in central mexico, where there is a push to keep the endangered monarch butterflies from taking flights. ah, kennedy made represents a truth or merely mimic the perception of the beholder behind the camera. preconceptions, one sided imagery, reclaiming narratives, and the trauma of colonialist zation and its lingering legacy delicately addressed . as a western filmmakers seeks artists in the democratic republic of congo, stopped building a witness documentary on al jazeera. we know what's happening in our region. we know how to get to places that others hang on. i was thrown here guy by the put a youth on purpose. i did 0 had the time in its programming. go live on the amazon, you go live to work. another story that may not be made for you is happening. as i
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said, i'm going on with the way that you tell the story is what can make a difference. lou ah. so now, so was artemus spacecraft has completed its mission to the moon almost one month after launching from cape canaveral the ryan capsule squashed down on the coast. how california just a short while ago. the unmanned test slide is part of her plan to put humans on the moon again in 2025. ryan's next trip is in tears with for astronauts expected on
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the flight. let's talk about this when leo and right was the space journalist. he's joining us from dublin, welcome back to al jazeera. so what do you make of what you saw earlier on? how successful has this mission been? world call for the last couple of weeks. and we've also been watching the moon cold as the americans look to, to raise their standard once again on the surface of the moon. it was a picture perfect landing 3 main shoots is always the most important co that comes from mission control. we saw those 3 parachutes gently placing the capsule into the pacific ocean. this was important to the americans, the american, the head of the american space agency. bill nelson already said that this captures what is essentially american, but he, he did acknowledge that this was also an international project because the
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service module of the back of this caps you was in fact provided by your rate. but re entry a was a, some would say the single most critical phase of ryan's journey. can you explain that and from what you saw, how successful was that? well, this was absolutely critical, gorey this had to work because the spacecraft is coming back from the move. it's falling literally falling from the moon and by the time it reaches the earth's atmosphere, it's moving at something overt 11 kilometers a 2nd. so this spacecraft hits the earth's atmosphere very fast heat so to hotter than the surface of the song. and so it was absolutely critical that they make sure that this cap soon could survive that kind of treatment before
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they put women and man aboard. so for them to day it was a success, right. so what sort of data has come back from this mission and how does that then help? now says quest to put people on the moon that later this decade. well, one of the biggest problems that they face, both the americans, the europeans, and also let's not forget the chinese are looking at sending their own people towards the moon. the biggest problem is radiation. so aside from testing their heat shield, they also spent a lot of time and effort. looking at how much radiation did the markets on board. because they had several mannequins who were designed to measure the radiation dose that a human would experience on the way to the mode. that data will only be analyzed after the mission. and that will be very important to understanding just how safe
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is it to send women and men to the mood for long duration mission. and to very briefly, does this mission put nasa ahead of private firms and ahead of china? well for the moment, yes, but i'm be completely blown with you. and the commercial space program is moving very rapidly. one of them was launched just today that will attempt to land on the moon in about 4 months time, a robot. but also i don't rule this owes the chinese are looking at landing after notes on the blue. and there's always the possibility, like the world cough that there could be an upset just like the world. couple one, right. thank you so much for speaking to us from dublin. now, a new chat bought the uses, artificial intelligence to generate human life responses has been surprising users
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online since it's launched this month. it's called chat g p t, which stands for a generative pre trained transformer. the user types in a question or prompt the program type. so a response, emphasis sharif shows us how the so called chat box deliver answers at high speed. so let's see what it can do. let's begin with an easy question and that would be how do you make chocolate cake? ok, we seem to have the ingredients, algeria, that's pretty quick. second question, let's try something harder is artificial intelligence capable of free will? now finally, one question to the boss might be, continue enemy, how do you get a promotion some useful tips there may be ation implement them. so we have one minute,
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3 questions. i'm pretty quick answers. well, david duncan was professor northern illinois university and the author of the machine question, he says chat and gpc presents a lot of challenges. so we've had chat box for a very long time since wise, inbound created the eliza chat about back in the mid 900 sixty's. and previous chap us have been formulated by explicit instructions that are programmers, right? they try to anticipate what we will ask it and the sort of anticipate possible answers. the difference with the new large language models is they are machine learning based systems that are trained on very large or pie of human texts. so they basically scour the internet for all kinds of digitized textual data. there is a number of concerns. let me just highlight 3 of them that i think are very important. one has to do with the truthfulness or the validity of what is generated by these models. these models are only finding patterns of linguistic tokens in
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their data and arranging words in ways that makes sense statistically. and so even if they produce results that seem reasonable, there is no way in which you can say that they have authored those with any sort of knowledge about the world of which they are speaking. secondly, because there is often in these large datasets, systemic bias and prejudice that come from the human texts on which they're trained . we may reproduce bias and prejudice in the outcomes that are produced by these models. finally, we're using writing to really benchmark and evaluate student progress and, you know, with students using these technologies, we have to now begin the question whether or not writing is the best test of our thinking capability and critical capabilities in our students. millions of monarch butterflies have descended on central mexico as part of their annual winter
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migration. and as many well ruffled reports when the mitchell con state efforts to protect their hibernation grounds are more important than ever. it's one of the most spectacular mass migrations in the animal kingdom. monarch butterflies. millions of them arriving at their winter habitat in central mexico. this year, the international union for the conservation of nature officially designated the migrating monarch butterfly as endangered. yes. oh, this is like an alarm bell over the population of that migrating monarch butterfly, and it's a warning sign of what's happening to pollinating insects. experts say the use of pesticides along with a loss of habitat, are the biggest threats to the species. increased forest fires and unusual weather patterns linked to climate change have also been linked to their decline. this means protected forests like l. rosario, the largest butterfly sanctuary, and central mexico are of vital importance. they may be difficult to see from
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a distance, but these trees behind us are absolutely covered in monarch butterflies. now tourists are welcome at this protected butterfly sanctuary here in central mexico. but visitors are asked to keep their voices down so as to not disturb the butterflies. for many, the up close encounter with millions of these vibrant butterflies is a once in a lifetime experience. one that can turn just about anyone into a champion for conservation is going for something cause it's very important to protect this natural reserve, which the butterflies at themselves seek out for hundreds of years. indigenous communities in this part of the country have associated the monarch butterfly with the returning souls of the dead. their colorful ballet has inspired art and dance and even become a symbol of mexican cultural heritage. often feature during mexico's annual day of the dead celebrations. a bill cruise, a conservationist at el rosario says protecting the floors were monarch butterflies
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. hibernate is also a way to safeguard mexico's natural resources for human populations. any more than that than ever was cases having well preserved forests is very important because that's where the water we need to survive, comes from water that goes all the way to mexico city, which experts in mexico see that despite the monarch being designated as endangered, there's evidence that conservation efforts are working, but ultimately the future of this iconic insect depends on the continued protection of their natural habitat. mine read up a low al jazeera, central mexico. thanks for watching the news. our on al jazeera, more news coming up in just a moment, but by ah ah
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for ah, in with ah.
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from the preventative correct. because so the battlefields around most of our job is to get to the truth and empower people through knowledge. ah. a grinding bustle. in southern ukraine, ukrainian forces attack the occupied city of militia pole while russian strikes, if millions, without power in odessa. oh, hello, i'm marianne mozy in london, you're watching al jazeera, also coming up on the program. a lid, the man accused of making the bomb that blew up a passenger plane of a locker be in scholar.

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