tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera December 27, 2022 12:00am-1:01am AST
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oh, when he was telling groundbreaking stories, witness on al jazeera. both jen is in the police violently. this person protest this. these are sort of a book, tens of thousands of people trying to flee all inspired to program making. welcome to generation change unrivalled broadcasting. white people did not want black children in their schools. we have to fight for it. and i'll just see are english proud recipient of the new york festivals broadcaster of the year award for the 6 year running. oh,
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this is al jazeera ah. hello, i murray. i am the mozy. welcome to the news. our life from london coming up in the next 60 minutes. a year of desperate journeys, the un refugee agency says 2022 was the deadliest for hunger refugees at sea. for nearly a decade. ah, honoring the victims of friday's deadly shooting in paris. supporters of on truth and justice. south career scrambles helicopters and fire warning shots when at north korean drones enter its air space. china's cove, it spread becomes too big to track, but a rival restrictions will be eased anyway. and in sports, the premier league, we're turns off to a 6 week walcott break. we'll have the best of the action this hour with joe.
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ah, well, and welcome to the news. our or the united nations has said that this year is possibly been the deadliest for rang visit c. in almost a decade, the one refugee agency said that at least a 180 wrangle refugees had been stranded at sea for weeks. a presumed dead refugees are continuing to leave desperate conditions encamped in bangladesh where more than a 1000000 people who escape persecution and me and mar are now living rights groups are saying the number of rang the leaving bangladesh by boat this year jump 5 fall from 2021, nearly 200 people were already feared, dead or missing before this latest announcement from the you and hcr are often trying to reach places in southeast asia like malaysia and indonesia. earlier this month to wrangell writes group set up to 20 people, died of hunger all thirst while trying to make the journey in
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a boat carrying the east. a 100 people. 240 people have arrived in indonesia is actually proven. so that is since sunday pull rece brings us this report. now. this boat survived its dangerous journey across the indian ocean, now reached on the shores of northern indonesia for weeks. it was home to dozens of virginia travelling from refugee camps in bangladesh. their family and where, where you go clear my mother's when my father, my mother, the refugee said that been drifting at sea for a month before that boat washed up near the fishing village of ladon. i think 3 of them are in a serious condition, but most of them experienced dehydration. that's why they are quite weak. further along the coast and that 185 men, women and children, received medical aid on monday after being spotted out at c. m,
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i'm attend the when a man had given his choice, i didn't have any money. i believe many, many genocide don't want to modify that with their escaping places like this refugee camps in bangladesh. i'm to many of the 1000000 rang your muslims who escaped persecution in my unmarked. the un refugee agency said over the weekend that a 180 refugees who left bangladesh in a boat in november. when our presumed dead. the un estimates the number of rangers risking the crossing is increased by 500 percent this year compared to 2021. we have seen that more people who would need to to seek safety. and this is the point we are trying to make. reset been, people do not see that there are safe hot ways for them to seek protection. we will sadly see more and more people are trying to take these dangerous and risky journeys. we're playing and asking for international support to bangladesh and
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local authorities and communities. but also on the real estate that to when den know there's a boat out there with desperate human beings need to be in gesture, they should act. these refugees are lucky. in one respect, they're still alive. but where they go from here is another question. pull rece al jazeera but as we heard in that report, refugees have been seeing an overcrowded camp in southern bangladesh. algae there is tanveer, chandry has more on that now from dak on right now. the condition in the camp is a desperate lie, a high crime rate, inter rival gang violence in the camp. many of the refugees i spoke to said the violence is very, very intense and they want to leave the camp. there is no opportunity for jobs or any kind of means to earn living. and without any hope uncertainty, there is no repetition process. there's no international, serious involvement in getting this message is back to me on my end,
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right kind stage. and we also know there is a serious, intense insurgency battle between, but these are our kind rebels and the government forces which have gradually moving towards the bangladesh border. so considering this and also the fact many ro hang woman actually gets married over the phone with a male who are living in southeast asia, mostly in malaysia. that is another reason. so there is a desperate attempt to leave the camp by a rickety fishing trawler saw a very poor condition engine bold that the traffic are used with very little probation or communication device in there or any navigation device. and i spoke to some of our growing accountants today. they said the last contact with 180 records is stuck in the sea way, at least about a week ago from malaysia. someone contacted that in the boat. we don't know if it was a satellite phone or regular phone that they were able to get signal. and since then they haven't heard of anything. missed his arnie is
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a human rights activist from me in mind. fellow at the genocide documation documentation and take cambodia. it joins us by skype from wiltshire in the u. k. so we saying a shop rise in a ring that prepared to lose their lives at sea in order to escape life in the camps. what did they tell you about the conditions in those camps and why they are prepared to do this? well, i mean, i've visited the camps myself like at least 3 times since the largest exit does. took place in 2017 as the direct result of genocidal destruction of their community inside where my, where they belong. and you know, the cam stay are sub humans and none of us, you know, we're to consider ourselves or see ourselves in those situations. that absolutely no future, no hope,
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that no prospect for getting any type of like your substantive efforts from the, you know, wealthy industrialized countries, the way the ukrainian refugees have received a since the war. earlier and april of the 300000 rangers our school age children, the from kindergarten to the university levels, the bangladesh denied them any type of access to any anything that we will call education or schooling. and so you're absolutely wretched sub human conditions. and so they consider themselves dead on land. that's why they so you know, this is the same as his army. they are feeling poverty. these are genocide victims . he'll of ling desperate conditions in those camps. and often they try to get to places like malaysia or indonesia. now, how do they, how do they do this? and tell us more about the way in which they are exploited by gangs in making this johnny's well,
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then not fleeing poverty emphatically that they are fleeing or what i would say secondary prosecution. you know, they're denied the right as refugees. and i even addressed as refugees, because bangladesh fears that calling them refugee refugees for mandate them to give them a refugee, right? so they're, they're frame to legally or illegally by ballad, issue government, as you know, forcibly displays people in terms of like, how they get out. well, i mean, there are human trafficking gangs, and many of them the bangladesh themselves and bangladesh officials are involved, you know, in every single case of human trafficking, state officials, and business men as well as politicians are involved anywhere in the world. and so that's not, there's no difference in terms of how bad the ruins or genocide survivors get out of the situation. you know, they pay, you know, they, they,
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they have to pay lump sum of, of, you know, dollars to human traffickers and that they're often to, you know, to ruthlessly treated on these like, you know, as long as they end up on these boats and that's stranded at sea, sometimes a boat drifts into areas and they want intended for and as you and hcr sent, the hundreds of people are presumed dead. and then separately, 200 people managed to arrive in indonesia and northern ha province. now what the government's in south from southeast asia and need to do to try and help the ringer are. they were in a wendy's distress schools a sent out at sea and i responding to them. they are responding to them. some of us attempted to provide the g p. s a location. and, and i was in touch with a few humanitarian activists in thailand and other places who were tracking these boat. and they want to send out boats with the emergency relief supplies. and then
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often to, you know, the, the official just shrug golf and you know, part of it is like they said, when are part of the refugee convention, we don't have legal obligation. well, like, you know, these distress signal so sent out all the states, all of the required to obligated to rescue the people at sea. and so i think the that what's happening is that in the worst case scenario in places like india where like, you know, that some of the boats are drifting in the air, bail bang gall at toward street anchor, or india. although that attempt a destination is at places like malaysia or indonesia, particularly malaysia, where they receive lenient treatment by malaysian government. they're about over the $100000.00 rou. hinges, refugees are just such a virus in malaysia and in india because of the hindu fascism. you know that that is known as hindu dvr. you're also
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a nationalist in do these ro hindrance or at best frame as economic migrants, flea, you wouldn't call holocaust survivors, economic my migrant at worse at their foot framed as a muslim terrorists. and so far from discharging their moral all legal responsibilities, these governments, particularly like, you know, sri lanka, or india, or even like, you know, some in like it, southeast asia like thailand or cbo. they would just shoot, you know, shrunk off and do nothing. le eagles, i, it's been going on very important. yeah. well it is, it's a very and point and outs, and they buy the land hcr. this is now deadliest if a wrangler, a trying to flee at persecution, and that not even dying, etc for making up paradise. johnny, thank you very much, and mr. zante for joining us. thank you. sistani's ally from like all still have for you on the program. an arctic snow storm continues to wreak
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havoc in the united states, killing east, 48 people, and leaving hundreds of thousands without power. look back up britain's tumultuous here in politics, 3 prime and it says ballooning inflation and a wave of strikes. ali trauma is more than 100 yacht set, sail in the sidney to hobart ocean race ah, now the 3 people killed in a shooting, a kurdish cultural center of been honored in central paris. crowds walked from the scene of friday's attack to the site where 3 kurdish activists were killed in 2013 has been shock and anger among the kurdish community over the past 2 days. a 69 year old frenchman has now been charged with murder. he told police he had a pathological hatred of foreigners sullivan, java as more from paris f kurdish activists commemorate the 10 years of the death
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of 3 of their comrades. we're hearing more details emerging from the prosecutor's office details which included the the perpetrator says that he was a racist. he wanted to commit suicide, but wanted to kill as many foreigners before. he would commit suicide. all that from the concert by the credit community, a diverse goodish community here, people who are not just from iraq, they from syria to, from iran and from 30 event. and this has given them a chance to express their own particular problems in their own country. then we're hearing a chance of freedom, we're heading chance for justice and revenge as well. and what these people are calling for is justice the calling for it now. and they're not happy with the way the government have dealt with this incident so far away in miss sasha a tier attack planned and carried out by a racist, an attack against the kurdish community and against the kurdish women, the kurdish. she wants the french state to tell the truth, the victims were refugees and the government didn't give them proper protection.
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one of them was here for 2 years, and she didn't even have proper documents. we were asking for protection before, but now we want justice, continental yada. what be our thing is that they don't deny that this with somebody who are the races to guard on the fact that this needs to be declared it. there's incident so that there can be a proper investigation. now south career as the says is that it's fired warning shots when several north korean drones entered its air space. local media, se the drones were detected in civilian areas and gung g province. south korea's military dispatch jets and helicopters to respond to the threat. 3 days earlier, south career accused north career of launching to short range ballistic missiles. eunice cam has been following these latest of elements from sol. bearing from south korea's joint chiefs of staff. who said that there were at least 5 unmanned aerial vehicles detected since 10 30 am this morning. apparently one of them flying past
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the border area, town of pad you before getting as far south as the north part of the capital sol. there were at least 4 other drones detected over a congo island that is an island near the border area on the west coast. and of course, the military here condemning this as clear provocation as it does violate south koreans sovereign airspace. now, other than trying to shoot down these drones throughout the afternoon, south korea also took corresponding measures. we are learning that south can military sent, manned, and unmanned surveillance aircraft near the border area, if and also north of the military demarcation line in a tit for tat of sorts. to take pictures of north korea as military installations. now the drones,
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the north korean drones that is dead fly for several hours. some media reports you're saying as, as long as 7 hours since being detected again at around $1030.00 this morning, passenger flights were grounded just after lunch, including at the main airport in china international airport as a safety precaution, as these drones were flying through civilian areas far as cold as a former us assistant defense secretary and says the event is a dangerous escalation. this is pretty serious because we thought it all back 5 years ago when we made the agreement in 2017 that they would stop this. and but in addition to what they've done by flying over in south korea this year, they conducted 90 to missile tasks alone. so they're getting more, you know, getting more provocative. and i do think that you know, the south korean, not a, not only shot shocked out most of the roles and they got into north korea as well.
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hopefully when they saw how many were shot down. and then south korea response even to north korea, they'll think again about it, but i think they believed that there would be no response to it and they could get a lot of information. it was very dangerous. i mean, they got right near the capital of soul. i mean if that has led to any type of civilian casualties, we could have another war or the korean peninsula. i think since nothing had happened the last 5 years, they. busy sort of relax but now they're going to, i think get more and more. busy ready to make sure it doesn't happen again, and if it does, to make sure that they can shoot them down before they get, you know, not close to the capital again. you know, the development to taiwan is report to china is largest ever incursion of its s space, $71.00 aircraft, including fighter jets and drones, crossover, and 24 hour period. 7 ships also sent towards the island. china claims taiwan. is
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it silver in territory to the drills or in response to provocations from the u. s. and taiwan. a drone shot down by russian soldiers has killed 3 of their colleagues . i shall defense ministry says it was ukrainian drone, flying over an air base in sar, or 12 in southern russia. security cameras near by filmed an explosion about the time russian air force personnel shot it down. falling debris killed 3 technical staff base houses, heavy bomb aircraft used to attack ukraine. rushers accused ukraine of previously targeting the base. ukraine has not said if it sent the drone or child stratford has been reporting and keep, he has worn out on, on what's been happening inside ukraine itself. ukrainian military say russian forces have been shilling, dozens of towns along the eastern and some front lines. they talk about the regions of donates, can new guns as well as zach parisha and in the south head of san. now there is no
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specific details as to casualties or indeed what has been targeted and it's impossible to independently verify this information. what we do know is having spoken to the authorities in hair song, they are saying that one neighborhood in particular on the west and banks of the neat pro river, a neighborhood with around 8000 people living in it, is getting hit, especially hard journey around 700 meters, they tell us across the river to russian forces. they saying that russian forces are shelling that area and the area is very vulnerable to sniper fire. the head of the lou ganske military administration this morning claimed that ukrainian forces have pushed russian forces back a few kilometers along the front line that was established about 2 and a half months ago, near the russian occupied town of camina. as i say him,
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impossible to independently verify this information. we know that is ongoing heavy fighting around the flashpoint city of moot where we understand that the russian forces have been trying to make proving attacks now for days if not weeks to try and surround that city. meanwhile, with respect to the supply of electricity across the country, we spoke to the head of the national electricity operator. this morning. he said, up to 2000000 ukrainians, a still having to endure rolling blackouts and not 24 hour. they do not have access to heat 24 hours a day because of this russian campaign targeting ukraine's energy infrastructure. how are shes present as im, a putin hers met were central asian leaders in st. petersburg revelations, the commonwealth of independent states have been holding an informal meeting. a russian leader says they plan to work more closely together despite disagreements crews, and also says the blog is facing security threats from outside the region with
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through january saying that from january 8th overseas arrival will no longer have to spend time in quarantine. passengers will need to provide a negative p. c. r. test. a chinese present. gigi ping is urging officials to take strong steps to protect lives from covered as the country experiences the wells biggest surge in infections since abandoning at 0 cove. it policies, aging, as it admitted, the scale of the outbreak has become impossible to track. but health officials and ginge young province estimate that at least a 1000000 people a day of being infected. and ching down about half a 1000000 people they're being infected every day. despite these figures, china says have been, no coven related deaths. in the past 6 days, florence louis has more from hong kong. this is not official data, but one private hospital in beijing is chief medical offices that they're receiving 5 to 6 times more patient than they normally would. and you also said that the average age of patient has shot up from 40 to 70 in the face of
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a week. now in another private hospital stuff that they've been told to report to what even when they test positive and have a fever. and i think that really just underscores how desperate the situation is in china at the moment. now in cases a breaching a 1000000 and they're expected to go up, especially with the new year celebration coming up next months, that's been described as the biggest annual human migration with tens of millions of people. chris crossing the country, one health data firm based in the u. k. estimates that as many as 5000 people are dying a day in china. that's of course in sharp contrast to official data. the government has recently announced that it wants to increase the rate of explanation amongst the hours, and some senior citizens have told reports that they're afraid of getting vaccinated because they're afraid of the side. effects. and officials now have to persuade the out. and he said that it's safer to get vaccinated than it is to be without the
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vaccine. now what makes us even more urgent is the fact that china is extremely strict. policy is meant that case numbers have been very low. so there are few people who have the natural anti bodies as well. and so the spread of cov, it is that it's not only going to be deadly, but it will also be very 3. now at least 48 people have died, a severe winter storms panel. pamela us, and canada. freezing conditions also brought travel chaos with more than a 1000 flights grounded. roslyn jordan reports. ah, the u. s. is 1st major storm left behind, picturesque ice creations and opportunities to play in the snow. but as officials said on monday, this storm was and is all very dangerous. i have the very sad need to report that in addition to the 13 confirmed deaths yesterday, the erie county department of health medical examiners office has confirmed an
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additional 12 deaths bringing the total. ready for the blizzard to 25 deaths county wide, that number is expected to go up, not just in new york state, but across the country. as rescue crews struggle to reach both residence and drivers trapped during the blizzard. new york state was already trying to recover from a blizzard in early december in this last storm. his historic storms are no longer historic to us. that's become a way of life in our state and that's result of climate change. as you seen, see extreme weather events all over our country. but all of us in state and county, local government know we had to prepare for the next big one. the storm forced us airlines to cancel thousands of flight, meaning hundreds of thousands of travelers nationwide have to wait and wait to get to their destination. while in south carolina, a frozen pipe that ruptured has put that state's largest food bank temporarily out
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of business. oh, that is in the water in all the food in our region where to take all of it is all meteorologist they temperatures nationwide should rise during the week, making it easier for the ice and snow to melt residents of the buffalo area that break in the weather can't come quickly enough. another 30 centimeters of snow is in the forecast through tuesday. rosalyn jordan al jazeera has also been heavy snow in parts of japan. that's left 17 people dead. more than 90 injured disaster management teams are saying they were killed or injured when trying to move snow from a roofs or buildings. hundreds of homes are still without power. some areas of ne, in japan have had 3 times as much snow as usual this season. united nations mission
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to afghanistan is told the taliban administration to reverse a ban on female workers. the agencies, the acting head of the un mission met the economy minister on monday. or i'm is, alack, we're of says the millions of afghans need assistance and removing barriers to this is vital. 6 major 8 organizations of now suspended their operations in the country . christian aid, an action aid, became the latest and yos to start working in afghanistan. bain out their decisions on monday on sunday, save the children and which in refugee council care and international rescue. missy committee said that they were halting their services in response to the taliban decree. so early we spoke to ross me, faruqi, action aids, director of asian humanitarian response. she said it's important, her continued dialogue with the taliban. we've been working in afghanistan since 2002. we're
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a deeply rooted organization that was very closely with communities and extremely hard to reach and who are facing a huge difficulties. so the decision for us to temporarily pools our programming has not been taken lightly. but unfortunately, this move makes it very difficult for a team on the ground to provide support. women are essential to any humanitarian operation. so in the context of, you can start even more so where women can interact with women. we are actually working very closely with other agencies and trying to kind of keep watching brief on the situation. we're hopeful that through our connections and our engagement. we've partnered with government that we can try to press a reversal of this directive and things will become one abling in the country so that we can then resume our work. and you know, obviously we're providing life saving support at
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a very difficult time in the country. and dialogue is the key slide foil, and which is why the removal of these willow trees is key to restoring one of the ages largest fresh water lake from boom to boss 20. $22.00 proved to be a top year for several tech giants. will look at what's behind full and useful action from the focusing day task between australia and south africa. ah, let's get going with your update for europe in africa on tuesday, please to say that things calm down right across siberia unpacked. we have a stellar stretch of weather here, suns out temperatures in the twenty's in sun spots. so that's above where we would expect to see you for this year or more rounds of rain come pouring into the
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islands of ireland and britain. and because there are low temperatures in the morning and overnight could certainly see some black eyes over the republic of ireland. precipitation bumps into colder air that means snow for western russia, including moscow is just a few days ago. that snow storm that dumped about 50 centimeters, central europe, temperature still running above average. okay. sure. we got some rain rolling through the bulk and that will drop you by about a degree or 2, but you know, it's going to head the next several days. this trend of all above average temperatures will continue. now for the levant, as that rain pushes away, it's going to leave a legacy of cloud cover for beta root and ramallah. you know, what still breezy for coastal sections of egypt. on monday, including cairo to the south, we go those heavy rounds of rain push away from that eastern side of south africa into southern moves and beaks. so round, but put so, and some showers in the mix for the vin took nothing major though with the high of 34 degrees on tuesday. and now you're in the know will soon take her
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to inculcate a culture of knowledge, openness and pluralism, world wide. and to reward merit and excellence and encourage creativity. the shea come out 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 operation between arab islamic and wild couches for science. this the evidence is the refutable. but america's climate change deniers stubbornly mistrust of the fact. despite soaring temperatures, raging wild fires and shrinking water reserves, the world's largest economy is still split along ideological lines. so can it ever reach consensus to avoid catastrophe?
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climate wars on a jazeera lou ah ah, i'll come back watching the news, our life from london. look at the main stories. now. you, as a refugee agency, says at least a $180.00 range refugees who were stranded at sea for weeks and now presumed dead set for incident. at least 240 people arrived on indonesia, northern actually province. since sunday, after spending weeks at sea, the 3 people kills and shooting a kurdish cultural center have been honored in central paris. crowds walked from the scene of friday's attack to the site where 3 kurdish activists were killed in 2013. china says that from january 8th overseas arrivals will no longer have to
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spend time in florentine. instead, they'll have to provide a negative p. c r. test. china is experiencing the world's biggest surge in infections since abandoning it 0 coven policies. an ethiopian government delegation is in the northern tegra region for the 1st time since conflict broke out 2 years ago. it follows an agreement between the government and the tig right people's liberation front, which was signed last month. visit is aimed at ensuring the deal is implanted violence. integrity is killed, thousands and prevented humanitarian aid from reaching millions of displaced people . large scale protests against sedans. military leaders have been held in the capitol harton crowds marched towards the presidential palace, demanding an immediate transition to civilian governance. military leaders this month agree to a 2 year transitional period to handle the power. but pro democracy protest is a reject of the deal saying the army would still have too much influence over
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decisions. have been several setbacks for democracy in west africa this year with delayed elections, coups, and attempted, cuz their affairs, the instability could help on groups linked to i cell and al qaeda. nicholas hack brings one another. drill for soldiers in togo and exercise, encountering possible attacks by al qaeda. and i saw at least 5 have been reported since the beginning of the year in, during dozens of people. and displacing hundreds togo has become the latest target for arm groups. operating imbecile solo to prison, instructed us to take all necessary measures to ensure that we can protect our people, that we can deal with this credit, which is making headlines in our region. researchers from the armed conflict, location and event data project have recorded a surge in attack since a hell countries in 2022. they say togo's neighbor, burkina faso experienced
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a 400 percent increase in violet incidence. in january, the democratically elected president caulked mac cowboy was toppled in a cood by colonels amoeba. he promised to bring an end to attacks by armed groups, but face of them a series of military set in october, a qu, within a qu, saw a brain power overthrowing them. eva after soldiers lost control of 60 percent of burkina faso to arm groups. not only is this another delay to democracy in a region that has experienced a cruise in a few years. what can i mean? but gentle leaders have made as little progress as the democratically elected officials. they toppled in curbing the violence fighters from iso or gaining ground threatening coastal nations in the gulf of guinea. we come to you to watch him and how the activities of terrorists and extremist groups have resolved to view the unfortunate disregard for the national sovereignty and territorial integrity. law
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states. the painful deterioration of the strength log democracy with the want to displacement of masses of our populations. and the needless loss of considerable numbers of lives in november of french president amendment my co announced to the end of back gun a decade long counter terrorism operation. 3000 french soldiers are expected to leave the sale. stepping into the gap in molly are russian fighters from the wagner group. but so far, they too have failed to stop the attacks that are making countries such as been in ghana and togo, the new frontline, the fight against arm groups. nicholas hawk al jazeera alto napoleon, newly appointed prime minister, has been sworn in and the capital cat man do now is commerce partly to push back
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a mile to hall will lead a coalition with another communist party. from a rebel was nicknamed the fierce one. are free for the country's monarchy in the ninety's or the 17000 people died in that violence. at least 18 people have been arrested after violence or opted between protest as in police and southwestern pakistan, internet and telecommunication services of also been disrupted in the city of guar . dar demonstrators have been demanding a stock to illegal fishing which deprives them of their livelihoods, come or hide, has more in this, from his armour, but thousands of protesters have glass through the police and a port city of gorda and baluchistan along the at avian c. gorsline now these projects that have been region guys sit in on a key. busy road leading to the board city there warned that illegal fishing should be stopped in the seas adjoining the area regard. this is a main source of livelihood for them. these projects have happened before,
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but this time the protest as clashing with the police. the police are not going to jeer guys, has relative making arrest. the administration say that this trying to resolve this particular issue or the leader of the group of got this threatening to continue that blockade of the city by blocking the road dungeon. dead them on the meg idea daughter. these are saying that they are trying to pay for their dog this issue, but this is not a new problem that has come up in the boss. the administration, of course, has to take this seriously, given the fact that baluchistan has also been dropped by a number of our dogs. again, the security forces in recent days and because of the high red, alert, and area. so the progress of god still sticking to their demons. key access to the area had been blocked, telephone and internet services. i've also been shut down. and most of the video footage appearing is on the social media. men john knows it and focused on
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have not been carrying their story. but we are told that they said indeed a large broadcast that the government has to take seriously. decades of mismanagement, a choking what used to be one of the largest lakes and asia, a problems it will, our fresh water lake has taken a serious. tal that now farseason indian and minister kashmir say, and taking action to remind that company mental reports. ah, winner lake and the cache me valley is preparing for winter boats like these are making the last rounds as villagers extract any remaining water. just nuts, the lake is famous for them. an output has increased over the past 2 years, but you are still 0 is used to be a field. there were trees here, but after the dredging water chestnut started growing back, and livelihoods resumed before that the silt and marshlands made it hard for us to
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sustain our lives as dwellers. oh god! one nestled in the himalayas. the willow lake is a critical source of water in the region, and thousands of people depend on it. but in a matter of decades, it shrunk by nearly half an hour because of these willow trees. thousands are planted for firewood trading mounds of silt that are choking waterways, affecting vegetation and water quality restoration projects are underway. the government aims to cut down 2000000 trees by march. so bundari is one of the contractors that you like to bud guillermo, growing. i planted hundreds of thousands of trees for 35 years, but it was a mistake. it destroyed the lake well that the government wants to restore it and cut down trees. this will bring back the lakes, glory. i feel very lucky. i got the contract. authorities are planting other trees, still, belly for of the 90 square kilometers of loss. office area have been restored in 5
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years. basically the located or changes seasonally or from you can say at the door . 050 square kilometers. so it is not necessarily that were where you had to rest or haul on the india as a water body, because ruttland has its own feature that has, it has to how it is mud flaps that has to hurt us. ah, solid areas are wear or burst. instead, the leak serves as a natural barrier against flooding. but environmentally c, pollution levels need to be controlled for it to be effective. the ju morphic set up of which meanwhile, is those that it is beyond flooding. and most of these flood waters used to find a sinking ground or disengaged in inward. but if you look at land system changes that have happened over the course of last 50 years, i filed the kids saw and all that had been substantial lance assumptions. we're just not l o, basically water's flood waters to sink into all our leg. authorities are planning to restore another 23 square kilometers. villagers node it. take years for the leak to return to its former glory. but a happy with the 1st signs of revival party method al jazeera 2022
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has been a chaotic year in fresh politics during the past 12 months. country are seen at 3 prime ministers for the finance ministers and 3 interior ministers. spend the butt of jokes around the world, but tis andrew simmons explains. people living in the u. k. hasn't had much to laugh about. his report contains flashing images in britain, they call christmas this season of goodwill. but you won't find much bonham me here, downing street in 2022 produced pantomime style politics. it might have been funny if the consequences weren't so serious. forest johnson led the way so called party gate, dragged on a police investigation, a fine for johnson o. v. rooms were broken, and that is what i have been repeatedly assured. and when photos emerged,
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the story changed. it did not occur to me that this might have been a breach of the rules. he lied frequently. and after a while, people didn't take seriously what he said. there is no doubt that the office of prime minister has been demeaned over the over the past year. up berries, johnson became a joke. the parliamentary party eventually decided johnson was a liability. many commentators described it as the downing street soap opera. firstly forest johnson simply had to go against his well, his parting words as to love distant baby. i'll be back then. liz truss. she's been described as playing the leading part in a psycho drama and then enter stage, right? we she soon act no friend and less trust. and his nickname, the invisible man sooner was dubbed the invisible man because he's been keeping
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a low profile with his conservative party, so split support can't be guaranteed to interesting to see, he only had to look back on the debacle of the list trust premier ship to realize how quickly back bench mpg can get rid of their leader. she proposed massive unfunded tax cuts, but the sums didn't add up, and she blamed her friend and finance minister quasi caught saying we did a new approach for a new era. there was a currency free full and ballooning cost of government borrowing. she fired him, but it didn't stop and all my t financial crush, she talk better. oh, i am a fighter. i know i had to walk my baffles. payton to his majesty the king, to notify him the i am resigning as leader of the conservative party. britain was a laughing stock worldwide. one newspaper here featured afresh. let his web cam
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would it outlast bliss truss yes, but with inflation now it's a 41 year high. no one's laughing. strikes over paid amone's bound, hitting public services, their frequent and that causing major disruption. the royal mail. the trains the national health service hit by paramedics and nurses working out i think his government, especially after we saw what his process and collect public finances on. i think his government is fits on a slingshot, let alone complex health care system ivy. and i guess, but can we, she sooner can get away from the invisible man image and set things on course. again, he's a bit boring so far, but i think he would be quite happy to be boring. and i think quite a lot of voters would be quite relieved to have a boring prime minister and boring politics for a while. but maybe just,
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maybe this is a time for managerial problem solving at rather than vision. so there could be no humorous ending to the foss of british politics in 2022. there's an irony instead, the u. k. was promised tax cuts spoilers trust. instead, it's now way down with the biggest tax burden since the 1950s. andrew symonds out, a 0 london, much want to come on a snooze. allen, just a moment, including the premier league back onto the wild cup right around out the best of the action so far in sports with a johnny both dog perceive, you know, there's a very for everything. there's a lot of corruption and beautiful, like a beautiful lady. you have to be very patient and already so. so the say as a somebody, cuz i was in charge of sure when my father and my mother were arching for king,
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for the personal story, to discover the source of one of the most expensive commodities sent from headland on al jazeera, across the globe ecosystems. under immense threat, this later started moving back. it started melting off. there is something deeply warm in this drawing something we cannot create. a thrice, explores how the law is beginning to hold multinational to account. we are all connected estimate both by those emissions and how the idea of giving nature legal rights is altering our relationship with the planet. this is what it's all about. it's about ensuring that life one action continue planetary justice on al jazeera. ah
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ah, jo isn't dow ha now with all the de sports. mariam, thank you very much. will the premier league is back can lead us arsenal looked like picking up where they left off before the wall cut break. they fought from a goal down to lead west ham 31 in the closing stages. west ham went ahead with this penalty from side ben rama. rama just got themselves back in it. 8 minutes on the break english buckeye, a sucker catching martin older girls poorly plays short to make it one. all dressing didn't take too long for the home team to move ahead. gabrielle martinelli, putting this one in the net, giving also a to one late and at eton, katia completed a fantastic team move to make it 31. that's how it sends with less than 10 minutes left you castilla seconds. they continued where they left off before the break,
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leasing lester 3 mill with 2 of those bowls. coming in the 1st 10 minutes. i don't see from chris words and then a really well work go from miguel. i'll admit on that. now. 9 goals this season for the paraguayan national it was been jo linton, who's for 3rd to secure newcastle 6 when in a row that list them above man city you didn't paid until wednesday in mondays 1st game it looked like it was all going wrong for hurricane and tottenham when this go from ivan, tony put them to nail down. at brentford bots came, started the fight back heading in with 25 minutes left just a couple of weeks of the missing penalty ending this quarter final defeat to france . and then another woke up player, denmark, peer, emil jolla got equal eyes of a spurs, came almost one it with a header against the crossbow. they had to settle for the draw and stay in 4th place. incidentally, cain is now scored 10 boxing day goals, which is a premier league reynold behind in rather a for years don't mentally. if you are
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a top player, if ha, ha, i player, i'm a big level. and then there is a moment to that that you are to put in one side and they get evil a situation at all to move on. time off seems to have worked for liverpool. they with 31. when is aston villa, mama, sal. i got the open of 5 minutes in a system of 50 full for andy robertson, pulsing late in bainbridge, the defender with the most is this implemented history budget. and i added the 2nd to give little pool a comfortable lead a half times aston villa got one back and 2nd off with an ali watkins header. hopefully back close shut down by 18 or 7 bytes by 6. going his 1st go for liverpool who have now 13 in a row for the 1st time receiving 6 than play left. next back in business, we have to do our part and we have to all positive means winning football games.
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and we will see how close we can get, but of course we must be the target, qualified for the gmc, and we got 3 punch in. that's the best way to, to get closer to these 2, these spots. and as long as we can see them vilified, forgetting them, that's it. and a big result for, whoa se moved off the force of the table with a to one when edison, i am a notary school the when a 5 minutes in stoppage time to give us a look. taking a wedding managerial day. you to 18th in the lane, just 1 point one place on edison, the fans booed them as they will offer good, isn't paul many questioning the future edison manager, frank lampart, cloudy over any areas, manage several teams in the premier lee, but now he's my, he returned to the club where he made his name as manager 30 years ago, italian assigned to deal with calorie, who sits in italy 2nd tier. last time he took charge of the coffee, help them secure success and promotions in the late eighty's. it also managed
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a number of clubs in italy and spain them yet he was sacked from his last job in charge of one foot in january. after less than 4 months in charge. boston celtics came out on top in the battle of the top 2 teams in the m. b a. they were up against the milwaukee bucks whose start. yes, eskimo was up to his usual tricks with $27.00 points, but the celtics produced some magic of their own including this vase, obese from sam hauser at the end of the 1st quarter. it was jason tatum who stole the show with 41 points including 20 in the 3rd quarter alone, the celtics winning by 21 to say top in the easter box all over in the west. it's the denver nuggets who had talked the standing things through some impressive moves in their overtime when against the phoenix sun effort. and they call you landed a triple double with 41.15 rebounds and 15 a space for the most eye catching moment has to be this incredible dung. wife. erin
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gordon. definitely work a few more. let gordon finished with 28 point. so room on the nuggets one by 3 for their full freak tree. you know, right. it was a battle between 2 generations in dallas mavericks street. the l a lake has gone j going 38 in his 17th christmas game the most in history. like seen a whole fine, but dallas turned up the heat. going 51 point in the 3rd don't it's getting 32 is the mavericks need up to number 8 in the way? would still be too cricket. now what are we could have been for cameron? greene now, so becoming the 2nd most expensive finding an appeal history is now taken 5 week. it's frustrating. it's put them in control of the boxing day test against south africa through all out for 18923 year old will. rambo is snap up by the moon by indians. $2100000.00. second only to englishmen, some curren job kings 2500000. it was
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a record breaking dave to for pakistan. baba as against new zealand, who were touring pakistan for the 1st time of peace out him 3 east national bay from 161 in karachi. they become his country's highest run score and the calendar year with 2485 in all formats supporting mohammad uses in 2006, pakistan close on 317 for 5 years. and finally, hundreds of years, taking part in sydney to hobo ocean rice that there was drummer as the fleet left sydney harbor on monday would be $100.00 footing super mac seals, narrowly avoiding each other, just tossing gun maxie under. comanche had leave it as they had towards the coast of mania. all right, those are useful for inspect mariam in london. ah, that's lovely. thanks so much joe. now 2022 was here. the technology industry in the united states came crashing down to earth. after flying high on pandemic era
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profits out there is rob reynolds. explain why it all went so wrong, so quickly. tough times in silicon valley. more than 200000 tech company employees laid off major company revenues down the dow jones s and p tech stock index falling nearly one 3rd. to ha, to was a very tough here in tech. in part because we were paying for past since over exuberance, over hiring, over expectations, an hour in trough and is likely it's going to last for another year. so what's behind the bust? many tech companies spent too much during the pandemic when consumers were stuck at home practically living online, they over invested and hired a lot of people don't very short amount of time. as the virus waned, consumer habits changed, although the online buying hang over remained,
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snarled. supply chains, inflation and higher interest rates, along with the expectation of a recession, all combined in a big macro economic mass. in addition, some top tech executives blundered. facebook seems to be pursuing a mark sucker burbs great white whale of the met averse russia. and he believes it, that's the future of tech. oh, we're all going to go live in cyberspace. and he spent hundreds of millions of dollars pursuing it. and he hasn't had much to show for it. so facebook stock, they've lost billions over this obsession of his in october a lawn must marched into twitter headquarters in san francisco and soon began firing employees left and right, including most of the content, moderation staff, partly as a result of those cuts and policy changes. hate speech has increased dramatically
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on the platform. for example, anti semitic postings on twitter, increased more than 60 percent in the weeks after mosques take over, racist extremis posts have also risen dramatically. these changes have alarmed industry analysts and human rights advocates to me off. tremendous concern you know, setting at presidents an example where a popular platform with millions of use us are having such completely 0 moderation, isis related, i call and have tripled. it's not just hate speech, so it's a, i think it's also national security issues. recent history shows, however, that while companies rise and fall tech always bounces back, recessions are good for entrepreneurship, is because you have free time, you been laid off. so you go to starbucks and sit there at
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a table. and you can hire people who've also been laid off. you can't tell by the people sitting there which table. so winter of one of those tables is going to create a multi $1000000000.00 unicorn company. silicon valley is full of talent, ideas, and money, which eventually combined to start the next cycle of boom and bust. rob reynolds al jazeera loss angelus, that tiffany's al, but i'll be back on that was much more the days used to round up the top stories coming up very shortly. i'll see you in a couple of minutes. ah ah.
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a range and torrential floods in sudan has killed at least a 100 people. tens of thousands of homes have been destroyed. the rainy season has been described by some as one of the worst they've ever seen. the downforce has affected nearly the whole country. j 0 is one of the states where the government has declared a disaster. dozens of villages have been submerged here since the beginning of the rainy season, leaving hundreds of families homeless, waiting through flood water is the only way, add them. it's mike and his mother can get to their home blood watts's wreck, the property and their family was forced to seek dryer land and low come to water. entering the homes, got out what we could do. there was nothing left. many have sought refuge on dryer lads, but they said there yet to receive any help. adam says he wants to wants us to receive, so he and his mother could go back and rebuild their home again. but after waiting
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for 2 weeks now, he has no idea when that might happen. african narrative from african perspectives embark on emma, wendy, about a new series of short documentaries, by african filmmakers from nigeria, south africa, and cameron rule. you buy property corporate space and turn it into a, a ford photo. as stone cautious song, gorilla garden, and modern peanuts of camera, africa, direct on al jazeera, a diverse range of stories from across the globe. from the perspective of and networks journalists on al jazeera. ah.
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