tv The Stream Al Jazeera December 19, 2022 10:30pm-11:01pm AST
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hard work being able to take our artificial design. he's of, into the want to clean those. look at the health as they are. great. so it's an everyday thing. it's intensive. it's been 6 years since people here started restoring life in this waters. they said that now seeing more fish and businesses are doing better. so i got my home, i saw higher men. sometimes i catch for octopuses. it takes me a while, because i have to rush to beat the high tide. on average, i make about $10.00 a day. my saw many of those who hand the garden, i'll for month fishermen. they say what they're doing is working towards numbers are rising, the community is thriving. katherine saw all the 0 can be fi, county. to a uses a vote, a veil on master stepped down as the platform c e o onto the 1000000000. i ran a poll and said he respect the results. when 58 percent of the 17 and
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a half 1000000 people who responded said he should quit. and the hours since the poll ended, musk has no indicator if he is going to sticks with thomas and exchanges with uses . he said there was no success aligned up. ah, look at my stories now. us all makers investigation the chinese 6 capital riot have now recommended for criminal charges be brought against the for president. donald trump, including one for assisting an insurrection. now select committee is holding its final public carrying out of the release of its report on wednesday. and as you ministers from the european union of agreed to implement a cap on gas prices, you members around the pressure to bring down high energy costs. and the concerns about shortages walk has been trying to reduce its reliance on russia. gas after moscow invaded ukraine. you case high court rule,
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the government is trying to send asylum seekers or a one that is legal. the deportation policy was suspended in june after last minute challenge. court also ruled the 8 individual asylums because it you to be deported must have their cases reconsidered. loving what we all want to see and what i want to deliver is a system whereby if you come to the u. k. illegally, you will not have the right to stay and we will be able to return you to your own country if it's safe or safe alternative, like rwanda, that's a common sense position. i think of the vast majority of the british public. it's my position. argentine as well champion football is are on their way home off to one of the most thrilling walcott finals in the tournaments 92 year history. they beat france on penalties after the game ended. 3 off the extra time, thousands of fans pack the streets knew that his cell stadium and council to watch argentina's parade. and of course, the crowds of fans are gathering for desire is to welcome them home. the stream is coming out,
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ah and i . hi anthony. okay, rushes, war with ukraine is heading into the coldest months of the year. and she crane as we gain territory formerly held by russian forces. russian is now tony, it's attention to attacking power plants and power lines, of course, for civilians. this means less electricity, less power, less heat odyssey has always talents reported from here earlier this week. and this is what i want to share about winter in ukraine and how ukrainians are causing.
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whereas in the womans, he probably be okay, living in a building like this, with blown out windows or a damage roof. when the temperature plummets, such conditions really take, that's whole metal cabins, how some, whose homes are uninhabitable, but they're mains. howard. so in the frequent blackouts they quickly become refrigerators. valentina is trying to stay positive. why a shareholder it commercial culture, it could be worse compared to our boys in the trenches there. freezing. i keep active during the day, but last night it was a bit scary when the lights went off. i put on my hat. my hood, the like tricity was off from one until 9 pm joining the stream today. we have roar we had, we have my la dana noise. i have maria. good to have or for the rivers being you. i mean, you ask your expertise, roy, please say hello tat audience around the world. they, i know they know your reports and remind them who you are and what you do. yes, i am. are al jazeera correspondent, i have been many, many years. or for
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a good number of those years i was out in moscow, has upstairs russia reporter i was there from 2014 to 2018 so. so a lot of stuff happening in that time. most recently i've been out in ukraine and that's where i'm at the moment. i've and keith as the 2nd of my trips here have been here on the 2nd trip for a couple of weeks. and i was here in her about a month ago as well. so, you know, see a lot of what happened in the autumn campaign of this war. i got back in just a moment. my dana had got to handle. please introduce yourself to audience around the world. hello, my name is la donna radson. i'm a former deputy minister of health of ukraine. i currently work a medical network, a private medical network that has its facilities all over kia and key origin b. and my husband is sort of in,
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in the ukranian army. so is currently located in the lead region. thank you for joining us in maria. welcome to the stream. welcome to the stream students. it's what have you here in person, please say hello to our audience around the world. hello friends. my name is maria emerson. i'm the member of ukrainian parliament represent in the city of har, kiff, i'm also deputy head of european, the aggression committee, and the chair woman of ukrainian delegation to the council of europe. so maria, i've had this raise quite a lot. russia is a weapon. amazing winter. what does that mean? v crania is all this events which we are currently living on daily basis is definitely an energy genocide. these attacks are proven to be not very efficient because we are repairing things very smoothly and very fast. i will give you just one number. so
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a day ago was 70 rockets will launched across different regions of ukraine, specifically targeting energy infrastructure, critical infrastructure as you bribe is at to leave the, the population without electricity heating, et cetera. only sick, only 10 were successful. so basically we would say 90 percent of them are hid by our air defense. we can imagine what could have happened in the fall of them with the right people are very courageous as that very lady in the video of for it. there are so many millions of people like that who are staying in holmes regardless difficult circumstances of this winter, which is not the coldest one by the way. and they do not want to relocate. so my colleagues across the globe are asking our expecting any broads and waves of tempered relocated persons with don't think so because we are receiving the help from international community in terms of read the 3rd generators to keep the
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systems going. of course, we've expected this targets of critical infrastructure even in summer we were trying to prepare ourselves for that. but you can't be prepared to witness and terrorism on daily basis. and that's why you can't get used to this. and this is not normal. and this is a result of an act of aggression, which is a crime against humanity. let's just find out how big you had where you are. yeah, monday guy. yeah, yeah. i just want to confirm that, you know, is, is like the largest terroristic attack ever experienced in the history when you got a 40000000 country being terrorized on the daily basis by another country. so i'm just completely agree with maria. but then when you talk about your husband serving in ukrainian army, you rode your eyes. i don't even know if you noticed that you did it. but my, me,
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i, i can imagine why, why you would do that, but it must be a huge drain to have a family member serving one place and you working in another place. what do you know about the conditions that he is serving in that he's working in? because if you're losing power inclusive, what's happening? where the forces are fighting fall of there is no electricity mostly on the entire front line. so they have to use also power banks and field generators. and also they need some equipment like told to actually get their get their facilities warm. they need to have one uniform. what or proof uniform because it's quite tough to, to, to stay in the weather when it's raining all the time. and afterwards it's getting, getting the temperature is getting below 0. so it's kind of challenging and it's an
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additional challenge. however, they are staying, staying alive. they are fighting, they are not going to surrender. in spite of all the difficulties they face, and they will not go back any under any circumstances. if you want to live right now. you chief comments are open. you can ask rory my dana maria. any question you want to know about what's happening in ukraine right now with the russian war in ukraine, rory morale. how would you describe morale? he's been in ukraine is your 2nd tour of duty now? what's the difference? well, the difference for this time compared to the when i say before is this situation with electricity with heating and with water at the end of my last trip here. that was when the 1st of these kind of volleys of,
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of cruise missiles came in and took out a big chunk of, of the energy grid. in the weeks after that, after i left, there were more and more and more of the came and grant the over time, ukraine's power systems were degraded to the point where much of the country was, was living for through big parts of each day. without access to heating, electricity, water, et cetera, and that does take its toll. it, it is very, very hard for people here. now, you saw my report there, valentina, he's living in her metal cabin. she's living in a metal cabin because her home was destroyed at the beginning of the war. this cabin is where she now spends all her time at her, her lifeline bar. it's just hooked up to the grid. so when the power goes, has a set of my report, there it quickly becomes an ice box. it's got problems with,
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you know, milled you as lots of these metal cabins do is not a very nice way of living. there are other effects that this is had. i was in a hospital the other day and we were filming with a 14 year old boy called david, who was in the middle of having his heart operated on when the power went down in the hospital because of the latest round of missile strikes. he was very lucky to make it through. there were power banks, batteries that picked up and the doctors had a head torches on. so the carried on operating and he was okay. but this sort of thing is happening day. i can and i do this takes for example, in our hospital we had like over 275 hours out of electricity for over the last 3 or 4 weeks. so. so you know, we had to change. busy we had to switch for
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a tentative power generator to actually keep the i see you to keep us surgeries and to keep all the patients are connected to the equipment they need. so it's quite challenging for hospitals, for ordinary people as well. you know, when elevators and do not work and people with disabilities could not get out of their homes even to buy some food or even to cook something as well as some, you know, when the electricity is off, as a bio network is also down. so in case of emergency, people cannot even call the ambulance. so it's not only about, you know, having your lights on or out. it's like completely at every part of your life is being influenced. so i'm there and i'm the one that just got
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a light at my home because when we were starting it was a, it was completely dark. we just could see a note in her teeth when we can see the rest and say thank you for that new and interesting. we've gotten rid of that that alpha sized, very important question, a question and answer, why did draw try to use this genocide? they'll act against ukrainian population and the continued to target the infrastructure. they were expecting that people will be out on the streets being, you know, not taking it as, as a challenge b r. i challenge for that. and so let's start that piece. negotiate it did not happen. so all we put in again is calculated and we'll see this here. roy, doctors, we see this operations rolling. we'll see a baby girl in the petrol station. charging her special machine for breathing.
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we see all this happening in the 21st century was the international community we can definitely withstand and put in will never put us down on our knees because of this fan pre energy crisis. but what i want to emphasize as well, this is breaking us to new understanding that altura energy. let me let, let me, let rory in here because you talked about a strategy that may be back firing. roy, go ahead. well yeah, i'm, what i was saying this is that one of the biggest mistakes that the kremlin has made over not just this year, but going back or at least a 2014 is this is to use, here's the misunderstand ukraine and ukrainians. they misunderstood it when they thoughts that are following the might on revolution, that there will be a rebellion against their mind and revolution in the east of the country pro russians would rise up and that the criminal would only have to support that. it didn't really happen. so basically the criminal had to send in truce undercover
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clandestine troops suit to so make what was happening there. looked like it was a civil war. they misunderstood ukrainians. again, in 2022 with the invasion when they thought that the country be too passive to resist or, and of course, as we've seen, it wasn't too passive to resist its military resistance. and as people have resisted. so i think again and again, the kremlin has, has lifted ukraine and got the very wrong picture of what it really is. and the moments the kremlin is thinking that by bombing power stations power plants, it can break the will of the people can set off a new wave of, of refugees into europe. it couldn't perhaps change the mind of her politicians in european capitals and get them to try and push the governments and give it to the negotiating table with russia. but it doesn't seem to be working. there is no sign
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at the moment that they did having the desired effect on the point of view of the kremlin inter phone. yes, exactly what i think as well. okay. and, you know, and they actually know nothing about ukrainian period to end ukrainian. we'll freedom and for democracy in for people. and they didn't now think about people that one to leave in a civilized country and to share the civilized world's values just like human rights and you know, just democracy elections and so on. so they just completely no, nothing about the civilized world world and the values we share. so and another reason i think is to make our economy more week, because definitely affects the economy. businesses who have to have next try expenses to, to actually get the they alternative energy supplies and
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actually have to support people and everybody's cooperating. however, it actually really tough and hard times for businesses as well. okay, so i, i'm just going to share this with, this comes from our audience. are watching right now in youtube. and karen hannon is asking, why is there no spokesperson from russia? he's hearing as ukrainians perspective. roy's perspective, no official russian perspective. we reached out and we try to include it in this program, but we were rebuffed, so that is why i'm going to just transition into the reality of what it's like down on the ground. and so earlier we spoke to anna molina who is at the key, metro, and i just want you to get a little bit higher experience because when you live somewhere where you've got electricity and power like this, and then you don't. what does that look like?
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his anna oliver, only that good. i hope there will be no massive destruction, but they waited until the temperature got to minus 5 minus 6 degrees celsius into like our cold. but we have blanket sleeping bags, camping gas in the metro. i believe we will inter it even if they inflict some destruction today. thank you. so don't know why. where. so earlier i was looking at president putin. he was speaking about being on the defensive. he was at russia's human rights cat. so i'm, i'm going to play what he said because i'm interested in how ukrainians and, and you couldn't politicians like you view it when the president putin makes announcements. my document rights. yes, that sounds very interesting. let's take a look. what's lou lou, but on our part, the can be only one response fighting consistently for our national interest. and so we will be doing exactly that. nobody should ever count on anything else,
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but yes, we will be doing it using different means, primarily by peaceful means. but if we have nothing else left, we would defend ourselves using all available me. i was busy. so please hear what i'm hearing as a human being and a politician and being a global citizen, not only ukrainian, we are the country, we are the aggressor. we are russian federation, which will continue conduct in war crimes, the crime of aggression which we conducted already, 2nd time in ukraine, but we did it in moldova, georgia, syria, gunners and other countries will, will continue killing civilians will, will continue or target an infrastructure we'll, we'll try to put down all the time, was the west to make the west and capable to react. and that's how we gonna impose our imperialistic sick understanding of how russia should the large itself to the previous borders of the u. s. s. r. that's how i hear it. and those 2 sentences, colleagues, we have to understand how do we address the crime of aggression because all those
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war crimes raping skilling 300000 mison children's been deported to the russian territory and temporary occupy territory. ukraine, that would never have happened if not the crime of aggression. that's why we're touring here in this see, go in to new york. we've been to burly in paris, were collecting political so 4th, which is barrel ready to address this crime of aggression in the special tribunal where put in and the top politicians and talk to people in the military who have conducted this crime will be responsible. this is the gap of accountability and international law. i. c. c. international criminal court can not deal with that, but the international community can and simultaneously to our amazing military men and women. by the way, 58000 women are serving. and yesterday, us senate approved 800000000 financial support for our army will continue verified
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in the battle field. i'm here the freezing conditions. we have to take care about the law, accountability and justice. and believe us, there is no other person on this world apart from not only you, chris, but everyone needs to see the justice and action. we. i want to talk lead it leadership style. he's going to start with medina, and then i'm gonna get screwed across to rory. the person of the year, the times person of the year is your president. i'm just going to show you what that looks like here at this point where winter is like you're in winter right now . just a few days ago. this is what present zalinski said about when to time trying to make ukrainians feel like they, they already for winter. you just have to keep going. this is what he said. what it does is put you, i assume the enemy, very much hopes to use winter against us to make cold, winter, and hardship part of his terror. we have to do everything to survive this winter,
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no matter how hard it is, stand up and we will stand to stand this winter is to stand everything. russia still has marseilles and an advantage in artillery. yes, but we have something that the occupier does not have and will not have. we protect our home, and that gives us the strongest motivation possible in my, in them. and then it's been 10 months of war leadership from your president. how is he doing? how are you feeling right now as you're in winter? oh, well, what makes him a person of the year is that here just represents the entire nation. our president actually represents the entire nation which is tending against the outrageous aggression, the military aggression. that with the biggest one from the time. so waldo 2nd, so i, i actually, i think that i, he is doing great with keeping our spirit where i was actually making us.
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i'm sorry, my cad, just jumping ah, yes. so he learned great where i was skipping our spirit resistant and actually making us believe that we're gonna stand up and not not when you go with him. yeah, you can, you can make it. i'm just, i'm just thinking going for it. we spent so many, many years in moscow and reporting on and about russia, that maybe ukraine can also weaponized winter against russians. they could go both ways. could net. i think if we're talking militarily then that the colder months often are harder for invading armies than they are for defending armies. because for a defending army,
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you're closer to your supply lines. and you can go back to a sort of warm space and get some feeling back in your toes, or you can rely on the morale of the population behind you. russia should know this very well, because russia has actually benefited from this. in the past, obviously, her napoleon was in bailey army, came up against the russian windsor and didn't do very wells than the nazis invading her. the soviet union in the 1940 is also came up against the russian windsor. anne's fails on that front too. but this time, you know, that it's the russians who are doing the invading. and i've, yeah, it's, it's difficult to say that the winter will defeat the russians. but certainly the russians have problems in morale. they have problems in equipments. they have problems in training. and these are all things that ukraine is doing pretty well at
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the moment. certainly in terms of morale, the equipment that has, is increasingly of nato quality. and the training it has had recently has been of nato quality as well. plus, you know, the, the initiative and the skills of the ukranian army shown that they have inherently themselves. so i think that the winter months from things we've seen in recently are not going well for the russians. he would say, i don't know if you see him. there's videos not very pleasant ones all across youtube and, and social media of russians are being, you know, that and being there films from drones, essentially flying over the them, in shallow trenches, all pits basically almost being completely unresponsive because they look like they've got hypothermia. and they're not doing very well, it's all. so, yeah, there, i think militarily on how it looks at the moment that the russians are suffering,
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the winds, and more of the credit. and actually it was thinking about morale. now, terrorists do not have any morale. and i'm getting back to what food is sad, you know, what's his national interest just to destroy everything around around the world and to challenge the global piece order. you know, so this is his interest, his personal interest. and that's what they consider of their national idea just to get everyone and leave like, you know, leave like russians, deal with no civilization was no civilized rule. i'm going to, i'm going to leave our conversation that it's so good to hear from you in clever and rory and clever. and maria actually right here in asterisk studio to actually clear ukrainians, talk about how they feel about the onset of winter and rushes war in ukraine. thank you for what i feel you 2 comments as well in view as we really appreciate
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you. i will see you next time. thanks for watching. ah ah ah, to inculcate a culture of knowledge, openness, and pluralism worldwide, and to reward merit and excellence and encourage creativity. the shake ahmad award for translation and international understanding was founded to promote translation and honor translators, and acknowledged the road and strengthening the bonds of friendship and co
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operation between arab islamic and wild coaches. or i joined al jazeera as part of the launch team in 2006, just as a cold for a 1000000 mom march. in that time i've covered wars revolutions, elections on mandatory cruise from the for venice of correct. so the battle fields are on, most of our job is to get to the truth and empower people through knowledge. when do people tell stories and take risks to share their experiences? why? because they most award winning voices telling groundbreaking stories. witness one which is you. there was a time to be direct there basically on the verge of a legalizing racial jerry battery to cut through the rhetoric. this isn't a universal death felony crisis. the seems to be one of particular populations. it is men of the sound bites. there are lots and lots of women who are likely agenda a kind of anti feminist agenda and demand the truth. those the size of batches,
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we have to really recognize what we're up from here. we are determining what is the future of democracy in this country. join me markham, on hill for up front on al jazeera. what's most important to me is talking to people understanding what they're going through here. it al jazeera. we believe everyone has a story worth hearing. lou. hello, i, mary. i'm the mozy in london with a quick look at the main stories of following. now, us lawmakers investigating the january says capital riot of recommended for criminal charges against the former president donald trump. charges include obstructing an official proceeding conspiracy to defraud the united states. conspiracy to make a false statement and insurrection in addition to being unlawful, as described in our report, this was an utter moral.
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