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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  December 21, 2022 1:00pm-2:01pm AST

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good thing to live better with, let's just throw everything away out there. well, expose the simply living movement aimed at reducing personal consumption credit and class, and i hope to be happier as a result. a simple life on al jazeera lou . this is al jazeera ah hello, i'm adrian finnegan. this is the usa live from doha, coming up in the next 60 minutes, the ukranian president to set to visit the white house on wednesday. his 1st trip abroad since russia invaded the taliban bands, university education for female students across afghanistan, ambulance workers join u k. nurses as they strike of
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a low pe and patient safety. and it was a country in chaos, no food medicine or fuel. we take a look back at a year of economic and political crisis in sri lanka. and i'm he to famous with you . sports news will champions argentina have to swap a bus parade for a helicopter tour. as more than 3000000 people gather to welcome bay heroes home i ukraine's president is heading to the united states for talks with president joe biden in his 1st trip abroad since war broke out in february, for a lot of his landscape posted on twitter. but he hopes his visit will strengthen ukraine's resilience and defense capabilities. he's due to address congress and to hold several bilateral meetings. washington has been caves, biggest supporter providing around $20000000000.00 an assistant. so fall shall
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stratford reports from keith. ukrainian president vladimir zalinski scene. hey, it's hawking to troops in the frontline town of bachman on tuesday, hadn't officially left his in battle country since russia's invasion nearly 10 months ago. and his visit to the u. s. ukraine's chief baccha throughout the wool commerce at a critical time. russia continues to target energy infrastructure, causing millions of people to endure rolling blackouts and freezing winter temperatures. ukrainian military officials points to the ongoing joint russia, belarus, military exercises as evidence that moscow is preparing for a winter offensive, possibly targeting cave. the u. s. is expected to announce another $2000000000.00 worth of assistance and a bill currently before congress would give ukraine an additional $40000000000.00
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for 2023. there is also speculation. it may supply your grain with the highly sophisticated patriot missile defense system. despite concerns, among some us officials, the supplying patriots may push moscow to escalate. i think he's less concerned about congress than we were. you know, 33 months ago. it looked like congress is going to continue the same policies toward ukraine on, on weapons, and particular republicans are solid where republicans are not solid. and where i'm worried is budget support. and this is the category of money. it's billions of dollars. the tax payers are giving to make sure that the ukranian states stays afloat, and that is controversial among republicans. the whitehouse says zalinski is visit on the schools, the united states commitment to supporting ukraine for as long as it takes present . lensky says, the monthly costs, the defending his country is around $5000000000.00,
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but standing side by side with president biden in washington, and the expect you to announcement to billions of dollars more in a will be a very powerful signal supply to may putin. indeed, all right, but i'll just 0. give the tunnel. bob has band all female students from attending university in afghanistan, the latest order cracking down on women's rights takes effect immediately. girls have already been banned from middle and high school. many countries have said that a change in policy on women's education is needed before formally recognizing the taliban government will rights activists say the move shows the thought of bonds, indifference to international criticism. every single time the wall puts a pressure on the toilet. on my saying do this or don't or you haven't done this or this is not done enough. then they come around and they be tied to it and they and they make it harder on the woman. so the women of have janice on actually have,
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have become as i said, you know, they don't for them they don't, they don't really exist. they're not human beings. they are, i don't know what they are. they don't consider them as, as you know, they just, they just are using continuous for the way they think had to them. then they said, you think because they've never erased the woman from the, from the society for work from vacation, from everything from like oh, by the law, by here is a university lecturer of the founder of the campaign. let afghan girls learn. he says the decision is a huge setback for women in the country. this is a recurring nightmare, a recurring nightmares stretching over generations of the same 990 s over this is august 15th again, this is march 23rd. when the band girls from going to high school all over again. we use something like this was going to happen almost 2 months ago. there were
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rumors going around and rumors that had a lot of a verification to it and authenticity to it that something like this was going to happen, which is why we did our campaign and, and kept going with our campaign in the point was to show the taliban and show the world that there were going to be repercussions for such a bad to happen. but honestly, it's just, i wish i was wrong. i wish we were all wrong and we've been sleep walking through the day and waiting for it to sink in. so we can at least figure out what to do next. and the problem isn't that, that this is a temporary done or a change in conditions going to occur because this excuse has been running since the ninety's. the reason women are banned from parks, from, from schools, from a public bots, from jim's, even when they're segregated, is always some or another logistical excuse. and time is
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asked for and seems like the more time we give them the worst things get. i mean, i was put into shackles a few days ago and told that my crime was campaigning for girls education. and the reason was that they were very soon going to resolve it. that's what the authorities were telling me then. and look, even those people didn't know what was going to come next. and so, i mean, yeah it's, it's time to re evaluate what we've been doing. it looks like every move done by the international community towards the polar bond has only appeased them, only embolden them. and it's, it's time to discuss difficult options for all of us. peruse, congress has voted to bring forward elections to april 2024. an early poll as one of the protest as demands following the arrest of the former president pedro castillo,
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but who has seen widespread demonstrations and violence since kasteel was impeached and imprisoned. 2 weeks ago, congress had been resisting cause to bring forward the election, which was planned for 2026, but president dina bolo, artie urged lawmakers to reconsider marianna sanchez reports from lima. lo makers voted 90 in favor 30 against and one abstention to bring forward elections to april of 2024. that is 2 years ahead of when the presidential mandate should and but it was a precedent. the not will not be. who sent this bill to congress and told lawmakers that they should listen to the people. so amanda, 83 percent of peruvians wanted new elections. now, lawmakers here say they hope this is a positive message for peruvians. peruvians are deeply disappointed with proving that congress and i actually would, it would proven political establishment, and they want to bring elections forward. no matter what. okay. now we needed to do
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it orderly. okay. and that means doing it by april 2024. okay. so hopefully people will understand that this is the best we can do if we want to have lectures with reforms. well, this is not the end. this vote needs to be ratified in a 2nd legislative period, which should be taking place next year between february and march. but many are hoping that for now, this vote to bring election for elections forward will help bring down the tensions around the country. certainly, and china have agreed to more high level talks on trade, human rights and security. australia's foreign minister petty wong is in beijing for talks with the chinese foreign minister to try to amend relations between the 2 countries. it's a 1st visit by a top australian diplomat in 4 years. time is between china, the str alia, have been strained since paging, imposed trade barriers, and refused an independent inquiry into the curve at 19 pandemic. i did sit at all
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positions on issues which are now also important to strengthens and are important to the government relevant called compliment, messes, trade, blockages, human rights, as well as regional security, international security, and the norms and global rules. we're trying to pin our prosperity. we have agreed to maintain higher level engagement and we've agreed to further dialogue in range of those areas. richard campbell live for us in hong kong, which is the key takeaways from this meeting. certainly leaders from both sides made it very clear that they're absolutely committed to improving this long standing difficult relationship. china's foreign minister wang, he said he's prepared from his side to completely reset the ties as though the last few years haven't happened. he's blamed australia unilaterally for making this relationship so difficult to under the previous administration of scott morrison in particular. but when listening to penny wong as feed back in the question and
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answer session after these meetings, it was clear. there's still a lot of major difficulties for this relationship, and none of them seem to have been immediately addressed whether it's the trade sanctions imposed on australian exports to china. whether it's accessible australian, consider officials to detained australian citizens in china. whether it's australia's view, which is a western view, in large part of human rights concerns in china with regards to the northwest region of sin, jang, or to bit none of these things have been immediately addressed as a result of this meeting. and so it's not really clear how many steps could be taken in the short term to find a resolution on these issues. but the time being from both sides, a commitment more discussion and for more constructive discussion and to move beyond the difficult types of diplomatic disagreement that was really commonplace during the last 3 or 4 years of australia. scott morrison leadership away from china, australia, diplomacy, china has been holding military drills with russia. what's the significance of that?
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well, china certainly been on the move militarily to try and show that it's still committed to operating in the way that it wants to, as opposed to the way the united states may want to in the asia pacific region. and these drills a being seen as part of that strategy to reaffirm its strength and solidarity with its own aims in the asia pacific by partnering with russia in these drills just days after japan as announced a far more proactive approach towards its own. its strategy for security in line with support from the united states. this is seen as china, really taking an opportunity to throw that back in japan's face and to show that it has partnerships in the security will that it can rely on to enforce its own will in the east china sea. and that's really been the key takeaway. russia has shown that it's committed to china, both in terms of its military strategy and in terms of securing natural gas and oil supply to china. albeit at a discount,
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china is trying to make sure that it retains russia as at least a strategic ally, while simultaneously trying to down plays support for russia over russia's actions in ukraine. president, she, jim ping said as part of these military drills that, well, it remains a steadfast and it's a loyal partner of moscow. it still wants to see what it says. it's a unilateral de escalation of the tension in ukraine, and it's not still either criticizing or outwardly supporting rushes actions that richard camera reporting live from hong kong. richard many thanks. it was a nissan al 0 still to come on the program concert over the face of migrants trying to cross into the united states. as the supreme court keeps a temporary band in place on the rockers world cup heroes returned home to an adoring public. that's on the way a little later in sports with peter ah,
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dylan musk says that he'll step down as the sea of twitter following a public pole on the platform. mosque has faced a backlash since buying the social media firm in october and firing around half its stuff. critics say the changes that the billionaire made at the company have allowed hate speech a misinformation to go unchecked. the un and civil rights organizations condemned mosque last week for suspending the accounts of several journalists. after years of legal battles democrats, of the u. s. congress say that they will release redacted copies of donald trump's tax returns. the white house ways and means committee says that it will release a report of the coming days. it could shed light on the former president's finances and foreign dealings. republicans voted against the move, saying that it sets a dangerous precedent. last month, the supreme court allowed trumps tax returns to be released congress. in the coming hours, the committee investigating the january 2021 attack on the u. s. capital will release
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its report, or zeros particle haine takes lookout. what we've learned so far. ah, on the day this shocked the country and the world in unheard of breach of the u. s . capital building attacked by a violent mob of americans. how did this happen? and who is responsible? that is what the january 6th committee set out to find out all of us here today, focusing mostly on former president donald trump, who called his supporters to washington and sent them to the capital, saying he would go with them. we fight like hell. and if you don't fight like hell, you're not going to have a country anymore. oh, he said the election was stolen. but in testimony before the committee, it was clear, he was told repeatedly, he lost the election, telling aids he didn't want people to know. he lost without objections, but what the committee made the clearest it never before seen video. how bad the
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violence was. how close the country came to seen its elected leaders attacked or possibly killed. several senators told to run from the mob they were walking right into. then this moment officer eugene goodman, lured the mob up the stairs. if they had turned right and walked just a matter of meters, they'd likely would have found an unlocked door with senators inside. we saw how close members of the house came to the mob, making their way to the last possible escape. the interactions breached the window and a protester were shot and killed trying to get to them. we now know how close to vice president mike pence came to coming face to face with those calling for him to be hung only 12 meters. and the committee said, trump knew that his supporters were armed that day, frustrated that so many couldn't come to the rally because secret service was using metal detectors. i don't, i think her that they have weapons, dirt out. you're hurt me. take that thing mags away. and weapons, the committee,
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her testimony, the trump, himself, wanted to go to the capital, lunging for the wheel and had a secret service agent who refused. but there are several things. the committee has not answered yet. why did it take so long to get approval for the national guard to be deployed governor, i know mill with who had been approach congressional leaders that were able to be moved to a safe location by capital police. made frantic calls that went unanswered for hours. we up, you got the committee produced evidence, the trump's inner circle, knew something was going to happen. people like rudy giuliani, i remembered looking at him saying, rudy, could you explain what's, what's happening on the sex up? he and he had some responded something to the effect of we're going to the capitol, going to be great presence. going to be there. he's going to a powerful he's, he's going to you the members, he's going to be with the senators. but what we still don't have hard evidence on. if this was a planned coordinated attack,
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the committee voted unanimously to refer to the justice department for criminal charges against the former president. but they've already been looking into this. there's a special prosecutor that's been appointed. a grand jury in washington has been hearing testimony that will likely determine if in fact the attack here on the capitol was planned. and if so, who hey, the price for it. particle haine, al jazeera washington, the white house as it needs another week to prepare for the end of a u. s. border policy that's been in place since the start of the pandemic. it was due to expire on wednesday, the rule known as title 40 to allow the use of covet 19 protocols to the portal asylum seekers. hydro castro has met some migrants who made it as far as the texas border city of apostle in. you could add what pseudo martinez wasn't economics. professor regina roscoe worked at a call center taking calls from english speaking customers. both are young mothers who say leaving was difficult but necessary because the political violence any
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could iowa was too dangerous for their children. i was about to go to one of their protests and everything i liked. they were starting to show shooting to everybody muscle group not by muscle. we can return to our houses. we were driven away from a home them a family, had sacrificed for years to have martinez says her father and indigenous leader was imprisoned for opposing president. danielle ortega, after some of her students were killed in demonstrations. she took her 2 year old daughter and fled for the u. s. paying off, gangs along the way, and arriving at the bridge to el paso, they left feeling that i mean, now let him, there was an, an ending line of migrants from many countries. yeah. but my daughter was very sick, so people like me past 2 to frantically u. s. border agents treated the child for pneumonia and released them in el paso. she and her mother are now recovering at a shelter run by the episcopal church,
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or these are people who will do and have done anything for their families. um, these are the kind of people i want as my neighbors us authorities are processing and releasing about 2500 migrants a day in el paso. some are sleeping on the streets as they wait for buses out of town, even as temperatures drop below freezing. i don't know, so at the elite, when we arrived at the border between mexico and the united states and turned ourselves in, it was a huge relief that we were finally out of danger. whether the worst was behind us would feel. i saw a low field for all the people you see here who have been granted temporary permission to live in the u as while they fight for their asylum cases. many more remain waiting on the other side of the border in mexico. they had hoped that the u . s. would relax water pandemic restrictions this week, which would likely have better their odds of getting in. but now it appears that will not have been at this time. the u. s. supreme court has temporarily extended
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the restriction at the request of republican lead states that say they can't handle more migrants coming. the state of texas has sent additional soldiers to guard the border north through the sale noise. our wish isn't to invade anyone. levy is to live in a country where we have the right to work to live a dignified life, to be free from oppression. midday the biden administration wants congress to approve 3 and a half $1000000000.00 to secure the border and provide humanitarian aid. meanwhile, the migrants already here say they're that much closer to their american dream. hydro castro al jazeera el paso, texas. the northern coast of california has been hit by a magnitude 6.4 earthquake and its engine at least 12 people. the trauma damaged more than $60000.00 homes, leaving most without water or electricity. residents say that it was more violent
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than usual. the us geological survey said the quake was followed by a route, 80 aftershocks, thousands of ambulance staff are going on strike of the u. k. on wednesday, a day after similar industrial action by nurses up to 100000 nurses walked off the job for a 2nd day this month, calling to better pay and working conditions. the government says that it can't afford the 19 percent wage increase that the demanding journal hall reports from london. the college of nursing, the nurses union used to be violently anti strike action. not any more. it's been this nancy and they have no choice. i think it would take time ration. you can see that you're actually decreasing. i would, the cost of living is just another $1.00. the other go doing extra shift banks to make ends meet. but the ends, i mean, but you're more doing, you know,
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it wasn't long ago that the nurses were applauded on doorsteps, up and down the country for their work saving lives during the pandemic. now they're quitting in record numbers because clapping as they charged doesn't pay the rent and nor does the 4 percent pay rise. currently on the table, vanessa is demanding substantially more as much as 19 percent to make up. they say for years of low pay that's failed to keep up with inflation. the government says the money just isn't there to give the nurse is what they want, as well as giving the national health service what it needs to survive. you can't have one without the other the say. and unless the government engages in paypal in the coming days, they would be more of this in the thing because they come to a point where it's an existential threat shortages and the collective around the
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and i think we are committed to not just the basic pocket sustainable nature to live in a capital like london opinion polls suggest the public her on the nurses side. yeah . getting there support despite the inevitable disruption being cause to know nurtured patient care. and that's uncomfortable for the government determined not to give in to striking workers. when increasingly being blamed for bringing the national health service to the verge of collapse, joe al jazeera london by london, i was a 0 worry challenges with striking workers. worry what sort of disruption are we going to see today? what today is going to be ambulance workers walking out on the job and that means that there is potential disruption to someone survivability. if they get into with
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severe health emergency situation. and a chance force is a warning that some emergency calls today may go on on that. now if you have to call an ambulance in the u. k, your call is basically categorized category one is the most severe kind of emergency, and those sorts of situations we're being told are going to be unaffected. life threatening, severe life threatening emergencies. but category two's all people with respect to include with people with respect to stroke heart attacks, also potentially life threatening, but those kinds of holes. i going to be tree osh, so they will be decided on the call whether it's a significant be serious situation to have an ambulance dispatched or not. now, because of this, the boss is a warning that's patient safety cannot be guaranteed. while ambulance work is a going out on strike, 8 out of 10 abilene services in england have declared an emergent,
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critical emergency situation. now what that means is that they can call for help, so the army, etc, can come in and take on some of the those jobs that are about 10000 ambulance starts. so that's paramedics. that's technical stuff. that's cool. handlers. walking out today. this is a big disruption to a crucial lifeline for the country. remind us briefly, rory, what this disagreement is all about. well, this one is not about specifics. the union's are not saying that they wants a, you know, x amount of money. a course it is about money, but it's more about the way in which public sector pay deals are settles and we have i'm sorry, i think we appear to have lost george. how's the london up? but he thinks indeed glory. i'm still to come here on, but he's out germany convicts. the soap holds secretary of evil and one of its last
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holocaust trials will tell you. is a very good news for live golf was intending to play the 2023 masters pizza will be here to explain a little later. ah, here's what i say for europe in africa on this wednesday. good to have you long 1st . let's start with the good news. the rain is starting to peter out across siberia but got to keep the risk for downpours in therefore, northern portugal, the northwest of spain still a southwest when through the north west of europe. so temperature is well above average, but we've got outbreaks of some rain and showers in the forecasts and as that shower activity bumps in to colder air is particularly for the southeast of germany . dangerous driving conditions there with black ice,
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there are weather alerts in play for turkey. we're in the clear, we did have rounds of rain roll through cyprus, that's now running into the la van. so showers, aleppo, bay root and ramallah on wednesday. off to the top end of africa, we go, showers in the forecast also for the coastal sections of libya. tripoli at 17 degrees that set slightly below average for this and the year and still some sand storms rolling across mauritania, including in the capitol. new auction with the hiv 28 degrees. benz of rain are stretching. now we'll call it from saca rate into the moves and be channeled that is just pouring into southern madagascar. but across south africa, things are starting to dry off here as well on wednesday. that's your weather update. see later, ah ah,
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[000:00:00;00] with to inculcate a culture of knowledge, openness and pluralism worldwide, and to reward merit and excellence and encourage creativity. the shade come out award for translation and international understanding was founded to promote translation and honor translators, and acknowledged a road and strengthening the bonds of friendship and co operation between arab islamic and wild couches, or lou
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. ah, hello again. this is al jazeera adrian sitting here with that he is up. i headlines, ukraine's leader is heading to the united states for talks with president joe biden, in his 1st trip abroad since war broke out in february, florida. zalinski will also address congress and hold several bilateral meetings. the taliban has banned all female students from attending university in afghanistan . goals have been banned for middle school and high school. and thousands of ambulance staff are going on strike in the u. k. on where to stay at day after similar industrial action by nurses up to 100000 nurses walked off the job for 2nd day this month,
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calling to better pay and working conditions. the deadline is looming for the formation of a new israeli government. incoming prime minister benjamin netanyahu has until midnight local time to finalize his coalition. let's go live now to west jerusalem . out there is rob mcbride is that rob hegan finalize his coalition. netanyahu went in to this election with his coalition, already finalized or so we thought people knew what they were voting for. so why is it taking him so long a favor? put forward his sir, his government to the president. that's why this has been an extremely long drawn out a process. benjamin netanyahu, you remember one this election with a fairly decent majority, 65 seats out of a 120. and the kinetic of lead by his the cook party way back on november. the 1st with predictions at the time of that he a was going to be forming. a coalition would be a very straightforward process. he,
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that's what he said himself. that was our expectation. but this does seem to be going down to the wire for a number of different reasons. it proved to be very problematic in dealing with his new partners. because of course, there has been this a shift in a right woods in the makeup of the canal. it so, and benjamin netanyahu and the could are not only dealing with other mainstream right wing parties, but also these much smaller parties. re over on the fringes of the very, at the edges of the political spectrum at the right wing of the political spectrum of people who were considered to be on the, on the verges of politics. now finally, they have with a few seats, each great influence over the formation of this coalition. and they have been using that exerting pressure on netanyahu to demand various ministries and so on. in addition to that, demanding special extra powers for the ministries that they have been promised, which have meant that netanyahu has, has to push through various bits of legislation in the connected to make all this happen. now it does seem as though with he has now
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a 10 day extension which runs out to day wednesday. it is expected that by be well before midnight. he will be able to make that all important to her phone call to isaac hertz on the president to say yes, he does have in place his coalition and a will then have 7 days for the formal swearing in. but we do know from the makeup of this extra rec government, that this will be the most of the, the most nationalistic and also religiously orthodox government. that israel has had to date rama bride report. he lives there from western islam. robert, he thinks, and he's a caught him. germany has convicted a 97 year old woman from nancy war crimes. own god! fortune was a secretary of a concentration camp in poland. between 19431945, the court found her complicit in the murder of more than 11000 people. don't when it came reports. i am god falconer is a frail, old woman whose elderly years have been spent in
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a nursing home. but whose late teenage years were spent working for the commandant of the shutoff concentration camp. as his secretary, she would type out orders for the miss treatment and then eventually murder of many thousands of people. and then was the an office of us had seriously. and we had to prove what she wrote, we analyzed all the documents which still exist from the concentration camp. and we searched for his signature and her initials, which was an incredible amount of work. he can't compare that to the trials against concentration camp watch guards. in her closing statement before the verdict thought anna had said she was sorry for all that had happened to it off, and that she regretted having been there at the time. in the nearly 6 years of its existence, the camp passed as many as 110000 prisoners in atrocious conditions. it's estimated more than half of them died there either through starvation, brutal working conditions or deliberate killing. after the war polish authorities prosecuted,
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some of those had worked at stuart off 5 of the women guards they captured, were convicted and executed by contrast for many years. neither east nor west german authorities pursued many who'd worked at the camp through the courts. only in the last few years, as that changed with trials like this one does goody, is not legal and can provide. the court has decided that through her work as a short hand typist at the concentration camp, the accused knowingly and willingly supported the cruel death of more than 10500 prisoners through guessing through the inhumane conditions at the camp. through transferred to the ashwood spoken, our concentration camp and through death matches shoot off was just one camp among the many and the nazi system is death. toll was dwarfed by that of outfits and of treblinka. and yet by bringing him god forkner to justice. modern prosecutors have done what generations of postwar predecessors so often failed to do,
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actively pursue those who had a hand in the machinery of mass murder. dominant came al jazeera berlin. that after all, following a few, she'll tanker explosion near the afghan capital has risen to at least 96 dozens of people were injured in saturdays blast. it happened when a truck transporting fuel overturned in a tunnel along the mountainous salon pass. sustan's army says that it's killed all hostage takers at a counter terrorism center, in a remote northwestern district. at least 33 pakistani taliban fighters were killed in the operation. the hostage takers overpowered guards seized arms and kill 2 people. at a detention facility in germany is foreign minister has handed over more than 20 cultural artifacts known as the benign bronzes. to nigeria, the items are a collection of sculptures and plucks that were looted from what was then the
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kingdom of been in 1997. the return is part of an agreement to that the countryside earlier this year. godfrey echo is a historian and co author of the benign read book. he says the hand over is a significant step for the german government. so i think maybe this move it's machine was with action because sometime in the very last year there is, there was this the resolution by the general government being the 1st country to accept this ownership or just going to rep about this should be given to society of origin, and now they are also taking the lead. so i've read on the largest number so far, so we don't 20. so and this property for us, both richer on i'm, it's objects of contra mutation. and again we, we, we see these are very dear to us as people because they were made by our ancestors, part of our civilization and
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a part of our living culture. because these objects are functional within the safety of the been people. sol anker's, consumer price inflation, ease to 65 percent in november from 70.6 percent in october 2022 has been a hard year for us. rankins with food medicine and fuel shortages, tens of thousands of people took the streets, blaming the government for corruption and for failing to avert the crisis. and i'll flanders reports. oh, oh, rhonda christa. yeah. she lanka, her for many like wasn't them would delegate. it will continue. the student leader has been detained under tara laws since august, months of shortages of food, medicine, powdered milk, fuel and gas. combined with up to 13 alone power outages brought people to the streets, demanding president, goto barrage boxer his brother,
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the prime minister and his enter administration stepped down. awfully balop. what i'll do alive though, now are we didn't expect this when we voted for them for the latest to destroy the country for us and our children. tensions escalated when government, loyalist attacked, peaceful protested, who had been camped outside the president's office for months. in retaliation, people, torture government vehicles and ministers homes. a member of parliament was beaten to death in the violence that followed. prime minister mind the roger boxer was forced to resign. the president appointed run a vicar missing her as the new premier. that decision did not go down well with protesters who wowed to continue that campaign. these are the scenes. the government is desperate to avoid. the crowds over and the president's house, forcing present raj a boxer to flee 1st from his house. and finally,
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the country and the sheer number of people trying to get in to see the president vows, is posing a real problem. the prepared 3. any put her attention on the political leadership and what the political leadership could do. and there is now, i think recognition that there has to be political accountability. vicar missing a, stepped into the void, voted in by the pro roger pox, a parliamentary majority to complete the presidential term. and he wasted no time in breaking up demonstrations. this clear out launched at midnight on the day he took his or to warfare. but the economic issues haven't gone away. the crisis at the fuel pump and the wider sri lankan economy is far from over. despite the government's attempts to show it has things under control. what's on it? do you say they have stabilized the economy and are confident of bailouts from the international community? this crisis is primarily a governance crisis that has manifested itself as
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a crisis in the economy. and what's happening now is we're trying to fix that economy without fixing the governance. and i think that is set up to fail. president vicar missing, he says he will use the police and the military to prevent disruptions and challenges to the government's authority. that doesn't face were something with the leaky and other protest leaders who say they will not back down in 2023. with a fernandez algebra colombo, a new mark means a new face on u. k. bank notes through been to long veiled. it's designed for notes with the image of king charles preferred. harry faucet reports from london. with coinage bearing the king's image already entering circulation, the bank of england is announced the next phase of its currency transition following the death of queen elizabeth. and here it is. the new bank note featuring the image of the king. it is a pretty young looking king. it's not an instagram. rather,
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this is based on the photograph that was transferred from the royal family to the bank of england nearly 10 years ago. in preparation for this event. i was looking at my picture younger interface ma, regal. you can have a look. so handsome, nice, gorgeous. have you been using much cash? i know you guys only cause this might be the last not we see one face on it. always go with the cash he's looking a bit young man i suppose is especially is he's allowed to have a touch of artistic license slide. i would have thought quine, what you're not saying what has to happen, you know, but you know, it will be on, you know, it's on expect it to hit the streets until 2024 after
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a 1st print run early next year. that's because the economy needs to be adapted for them. things like cast machines need to be changed to recognize that there are 4700000000 insect ation. in the u. k, the only gradually be replaced as the old ones where out patasha isn't using the same way as in the old days. only 15 percent of transactions last year in the u. k . were cash transactions as opposed to 57 percent using caught the bank, giving them both to say that a 5th of people still prefer to use cash. that while the new king maybe on the cash cash is certainly no longer king. masses inside the lambda has sent what could be its final message from the red planet. its power supply is running house, but it managed to st. this picture. robert landed on mars 4 years ago and has been measuring vibrations from earthquakes. it also recorded the 1st sound of motion wind. nasa went to claire the mission over until inside missus, 2 consecutive chickens. let's so speak to francisco dear go in london. he's
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a lecturer at the department of physics and astronomy at the university college at london. good to have you with us again, it didn't quite have that little amma that, that some of it's mars rover colleagues. hand it was just a sort of a dome shaped, immobile lump of metal, but it was no less important, was it? it was a very successful mission bay inside la lambert has been on mars for a for years and that the living fantastic. thank especially about these idle bars. of course. be dawson ha wheels. he's not that robot properly, but the time it used to sell efficiency from solar panels, which is what all the rovers did in the past. but now, are they the lifetime of these solar panels? he said that there mean by the, the position on bus. that marci somebody'd busty planet, despite that because somebody if he not, must be misled thus to steal blocks, the light from the sun i makes days all upon sir,
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are completely inefficient plan. that is the case. now, it has been the case with all the couple of robust in the past, but not the more than brokers. how about the all right, so that power that they're on power, which is world rama radio, the cell that generates a heat pump goes with electricity. so they are more or less all up on the roof. i saw that solar energy pro all these new rogers effect francisco. what, what did insight teach us that was so important or is fantastic. b, i o, one of the main things he is, of course, is the inferior mars, are they deployed base, i deploy thus haste moment. and this is moment that extreme, in a sense, it the quote that that thing of meet the lights on the other side of mars and see how the waves, the safe sneak waves turns that are traveling inside mars. i'm from that you can, the deals the site structure of mars, the density, especially the lens you get the refund layers, the inside or mars on it was discovered that they, for example, that the color of mars,
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the inside these are solid cor issa is bigger than he see was thought is less dense . i'm not, it is liquid when she's white, but well, quite white. that's quite surprised. and of course, and it sent us the sound of mars for the 1st time we can actually hear what it sounded like on, on the motion surface. while it was a little people. glad, yes. the sound, which was better than improved better than with expensive in south distributors, robert as well. and also the, the site out for me did you not met your logical station that was able to measure a lot of things he done was being marked as well. so he was a multitasking and pro, which fail, i mean one will, the failures was out that they've had a mole that will penetrate. they, at the surface of mars. well, for several meet there's and he failed to lose that they, the, i was to measure how the heat is, is that is traveling inside the inside mars. but even so they emission was extremely successful. it was the little lambda, the tribe that wasn't as you say,
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not, not all of it, it's experiments. were it was successful? yeah, yeah. it was so i would say was 80 percent success for them. okay. yes. and, and, and do we need them? another of it's kind a, they're still more things that we need to learn. will libya and insight to well, these days? i think can they long there's with the fix it. felicia are going to be but, but he said, i think him, most of it and global technicians will be rovers like that we have seen the curiosity and the president proven, extremely successful. we should that have been going for years and years and they carry arm. and that will we will need model that by set, this penetration off of the, of the surface of mass to see how the they inside of madison. their works is that important. and the european mission, also hostile. any boat them vote in the sa, at big and inside the surface of mars. it's always crates. totes you,
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francisco many thanks. indeed for being with this process with air that a lot of they say thank you. just ahead here on these are in the sport pizza will be here with action for the english league come where wolves do manager is off to a wing start. oh yeah, no. do you have been with
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with, [000:00:00;00] with mm pool calling attention to any quality, pollution and extra judicial kelly's in kenny as low income communities. my brother was killed by a, they don't transmit voices, but they want us to do one day, an organizer on the wrapper. how old are these peep off when you begun the promethean board? and how do you want to be put down but it will go, but in generation change, can you change is coming is no doubt about it. on
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a gina lou . ah again, tom sport, his peter, i do. thank you very much. a huge tune out of jubilant fans. forced argentina's, woke up winning football team to trade a bus parade for a helicopter to a more than 3000000 people pack the streets of well as far as to welcome the heroes home. teresa bo was in the argentine capital. aah! a victory parade for your name macy and the national team in winner site is on tuesday. related to we johnny 17. he says he waited 4 hours just to be able to see his. he rose and yeah, we're bridge. yeah. it's such
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a special day and i drink to see the players. people question the coach lee announce galani, but he managed to build a tame. he gave us the corporate america, the fin, alicia, and now the world cup. this is the center of went outside and this is what it looks like. there's people on the top of the hobbit, there's people on top of traffic like 30 people on the top of the local media report that over 3000000 people took to the street in what a cited this all their support for your in their feet. and the national team team members did not want their victory to be politicized. and that's why they did not visit the presidential palace. they wanted to celebrate with the people of origin, tina instead, because of the large crowds organizers were forced to change the parade route. several times people try to jump inside the bus. several people were injured. in the end, the players to switch from the bus to 5 helicopters,
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and that's how that he managed to see the display of affection across when a site is devotion for messy is everywhere. here, 4 years to football star struggled with argentina's national team and the constant comparison with eagle madonna who helped argentina when the world cup in 1986. 1 carol flamingo says argentina needs to ask for macy's forgiveness are mostly thereby sure my daughter did. oh, we failed mercy, all the people here. we underestimated him. and now we are waiting for him as if he's our god. we always spoke about mariah doner. it's difficult to speak and it fills me with emotions. we disrespected, however, is all about argentina has won its 3rd world cup. the football association has already stamped the 3rd star on the blue, one white
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t shirts that were present. the country's flag football in argentina is like a religion. and people here have found in captain neonatal macy and he's team the he rose, they have been waiting for a very long time. he did, he said, well, i'll just seat up with a sighted morocco's national team of also arrived back home of to making history of the world cup. the atlas lions defeated european giant spain and portugal in the knock our face to become the 1st african country to make it to the semi finals. fans lined the streets of rabbits to welcome them home. nicholas hock reports. the atlas lions are back welcomed by a roaring crowd. ah young and old witty hours for the chance to seem to own a team that has made your own kinsman we refund
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of the notion of him and know what they have done this sir. worth in season. yeah. so we're here to survey with them all the things they've done for us and they're although you neither know when the say no, it's very important for us to be, to be proud of her. what we, we made because we all read this together and the yes we made this team showed what moroccans are capable of. and they showed the world how talented the moroccan scene is giving a very happy hemmed adela. oh, we came from mo, from, from harland. just to just to witness this. it's alive, achievement or love. it feels like coming home. tears whose farms everything that you can see to people the, the happiness that had brought everything and there. yeah. man will are we love you margaret? the mom i had a watching from casablanca is 73 year old, former central defender of morocco's national team, and any of dallas,
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he's played in the 1970 world cup in mexico. the team was made up of amateurs. abdul aziz worked as an engineer and practiced with his teammates during lunch breaks, earning a few $100.00 a month to play for the national team. m. at the far less. if we all wish to have been part of this tain the so professional and youthful, that clearly playful to love the country of the flag and of that king. most of the players were born abroad in our dual nationals to receive a heroes. welcome from the country of origin, from where their families are from is not just special. it resonates for millions of people. oh no, i. oh, no man, no moral authority has one. 0 this is that to them are up in hydro has a brighter 1000000,
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we're all good or the world african american turn 2022. 2 not the end, but the beginning of a new journey for the moroccan football team in making history. they now seem unstoppable, carried by the support and love of millions of people. nicholas hong county 0 robot morocco. wolverhampton, wanderers, have beaten dillingham to know in english. li, come to get former spain and rail madrid bus. hulu lopper, tag ye, a winning start as manager, la petite joined wolves after they parted ways with bruno lodge before the world cup. they are in the primitive relegation zone, but they were more comfortable here against lower league opposition. that said, it did take 77 minutes before they got the breakthrough roll. jimenez slotting home the penalty when was confirmed in stoppage time courtesy of iran,
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a nerdy gillian of 3 divisions below wolves. and oh, actually bottom of the table in vain. in another premier league versus lower division. ty less the city east, past m k. donna's school here was 3 known to lester. you re till a months or your say, perez and jamie body netting the goals to send lester through to the quarter finals . they will discover their opponents in those quarters when the draw is made on thursday. players who have opted to partake in the live gold series will be allowed to play the masters next year. it is also the 1st major of the year and could set a standard for the other 3 players who joined the saudi back live series were suspended from the pga to up. but one of the key differences is that the masters is an invitation only event. while i'm sure a lot of girlfriends are already looking forward to that, even though it's only coming up in april adrian, that's all i have to say for now. peter. many thanks data to get as much more news
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for you if you want us to take a look at the website. what you'll find a to al jazeera dot com and i'll be back with a valid use our at 1300 hours g m t here on al jazeera. but everybody's back here in just a moment to update you see again, bye for that. ah ah. and a in depth analysis of today's headlines from around the world. what it did was i said to them they have to sign because if they didn't, they wouldn't get in front assessments. do you think diplomacy still spends a chance?
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i'm not very up to about any kind of negotiation informed opinions. everybody tweets. everybody's on tick tock, tick, tock doesn't vote. you have a winter, it's going to have a whole there. pretty soon insight story on al jazeera calling attention to inequality, pollution and extra judicial killing. in kenya's low income communities. my brother was killed by police. they don't with voices, but they wanted to do one day, an organizer on the wrapper. how old are these people from the gun for me, if you buffle, then how do you, if you want to. thank you, buddy. go button generation change. can you change is coming, is no doubt about it on a jessina. this festival, a dumb music is inspired by cory heritage and culture. the choreography tell me,
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the dance of the traveling through this ball. faith in order to draw the view is i to the interlocking depth and unique architecture of the desert bros for you because it's also being followed by the fee for world cup the booth was made in a small events room. you know, so coming here we had to adapt and try to feel the energy and the history of the monuments and to connect to make one. ah, the ukranian president is set to visit the white house on wednesday. his 1st trip abroad since russia invaded. ah, hello, i'm emily and gwen. this is al jazeera live from doha. also coming up. the taliban

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