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tv   News  Al Jazeera  January 13, 2023 12:00am-1:01am AST

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it wasn't necessarily in southeast asia, but the focus on the philippines shows you whether real heavy rain is here in the central philippines. there are of course warnings out potential for flooding and therefore, landslides and is unusual rate in mainland southeast asia. it stretches up into southern china. this is more reminiscent of picks you'd expect to see in spring, not in the middle of winter. it's warm, possibly record warm in north korea. there is cold weather around, but the real code is a long way north. even north of mongolia, it's not coming south. ah, there is no channel that covers world news like we do. we revisit places, mistake. i'll just really invest in that. and that's a privilege. as a journalist. ah, this is al jazeera.
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ah, hello, i'm sorry. i'm to maggio very well welcome to the news, our ally from london coming up for the next 60 minutes. a special council is appointed to investigate classified documents, found a president biden's home informal washington office. assigned to say last year was the 5th warmest on record with the last 9 years. the hottest since pre industrial times. ukraine says its troops are holding out in solid dar just what the outer nationalist wagner group claiming to have take in the east, in town. thousands of somalis rally against al, she bob in a red protest against the group of to years of violence. i'm in support coming up late to this. our robert lo endow ski schools for barcelona, but that march to the spanish supercop final storm. ah.
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hello and welcome to the news allan and so we've been following development said now washington, over the past couple of hours. attorney general merritt garland has announced the appointment of a special counsel to investigate president joe biden's handling of sensitive government documents earlier on thursday. biden confirmed, a 2nd set of classified documents have been found this time and the guy of his private home in delaware, at the documents of believe to be linked to biden's time is vice president and reported to include intelligence memos and briefing materials linked to ukraine. iran and the u. k. the white house press secretary says he did not know they were their 1st batch of documents was uncovered at biden's former office. and that was a washington think tank that was a couple of months ago. and the information about that was only made public on monday in november, garland named
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a special council to oversee former president donald trump's handling of classified files. after around a 100 documents found at his mar longo estate. people know i take classified documents or classified material seriously. i also said were cooperating fully completed the justice department's review. as part of that process. my lawyers reviewed other places, word documents and my i'm of from my time as vice president were stored and they finished the review last night they discovered a small number of documents, of classified markings, of storage areas, and file cabinets in my home. in my, in my, my, my personal library. meanwhile, the republicans are accusing president joe biden of hypocrisy. they knew this has happened to president biden before the election, but they kept the secret from the american public. he goes on 60 minutes criticized as president, trump even knowing what he has done and he wasn't president at the time. now we
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find another location that it's at, but he refused to answer his press. secretary won't answer the questions we, you watched them leak photos are sitting out files, the president, trump, where's the photos? a president biden's documents. where are those photos that he knowingly knew? this happened going into a lecture going into interviews. this is what makes america not trust their government. my cannon joins us live now from washington, and quite a fraud agitated price conference there with biden's spokesperson carrine jean pierre having to answer questions from journalists about a lack of transparency because it wasn't disclosed to the public. when at these documents were discovered at those 2 locations? indeed, yes. well there, she was pending of questions from reporters. the ones phrase of note that emerged from that lengthy news conference was the full use of the word inadvertently
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misplace saying that these documents, which were 1st found in november at the latest being found in the course of last night. they were inadvertently misplaced, she says, but, but press secretary, absolutely adamant that she can't take questions as to the basics off. this particular story that everything must now be referred to the department of justice, where a special council has been appointed. this was announced earlier today by the head of the justice department, mary garland, and this is what he had to say. earlier today, i saw i signed an order appointing robert her a special counsel for the matter. i have just described. the document authorizes him to investigate whether any person or entity violate the law in connection with this matter. special counsel will not be subject to the day to day supervision of any official department, but he must comply with the regulations procedures and policies. and also
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persistent questions in that press conference about kind of material contained within these documents. exactly. well there again, we heard from the press secretary and from the president himself that he is not a well cannot remember what is in these particular documents. this is all going to be part of the review, according to the press secretary, continue to set any questions or any answers to any questions, must come from the justice department. now that a special council is in place, the justice department is conducting a review. the press secretary says, as such, the white house cannot comment on anything happening within that review. that's the white house's position. she was also adamant the making very clear that since coming to office president biden has been adamant that the white house will not interfere with the workings of the justice department. as many claim happened under the previous administration, saying that the justice department makes its own decisions,
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there will be no pressure whatsoever on any detail from the white house on the justice department that was repeated today by the press secretary. so basically, the white house position is now the review is underway. now a special council is in place the on going to be any comments from the white house as to the details of the case. those will have to come from the justice department as a continues it's review. all right, thank you very much, mike, kind of bring us all the laces from washington or others for the former us associate deputy attorney general bruce find out. he says that president biden has to fully cooperate if he is to restore public trust. you'll notice that mary garland, the attorney general, said that the special councils got to comply with the policies of the department of justice. well, there's one policy which has been around for a long time when i was there, but i wasn't, it didn't support it that says,
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you cannot indict or prosecute an incumbent president. and in fact, when mr. trump was being investigated by mr. mall or he didn't answer questions that were raised by him. he said he would only respond to things that he did before he was president, or they didn't push it. they didn't subpoena him. if we really want to restore trust in the system, i would hope that mr. biden would waive all of these privileges. he would waive the department of justice policy, which is not enshrined in the constitution and says, i'm an open book. let me, she across is a democratic strategist and fellow at the trim a national security product. as jones is live from washington, i'm sure you are listening in to the press conference that we had at just now in washington. a great deal of scrutiny about the discovery of these documents, particularly the timing of all of this. and we had a cringe on p. i really being questioned about why it had taken so long for the
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existence of these documents to be disclosed. is that becoming just as critical as the discovery of, of the material itself? i think it's a pertinent question, but not more pertinent. then again, comparing less to the prompt documents. if you just a few years ago where he is word discovered, we heard the special council announced more than 2 years after he had already had the these documents in hand. i think that one korean john pierre was doing which is prudent and extremely smart, is that she's directing many of the journalist questions to the special counsel to the, to the justice department. because at this point, this is an ongoing investigation. there's only so much a press secretary can say legally. so she was quite repetitious in speaking to the statement that president biden had released earlier today. and a lot of the information that we already know from that statement. because quite frankly, legally, that is what she is that, that is what is in her real power to actually say, yeah,
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but also the journalists were quite justified in that, in their questioning, in why it, they essentially sat on this information for a couple of months. it's raised questions about you know, their level of honesty, transparency, and disclosure. and i guess that just kind of feeds the criticism from the republicans about double santa's. so it's not necessarily, these are republicans who just a couple of days ago were able to finally get a speaker of the house after 15 rounds and multiple multiple tries. the issue here is that i think there is a concerted misunderstanding or one that the media is trying to push for click bait that the wants these documents were discovered, it was reported to the people, it needs to be reported to the archives department if they were in a conversation with the, with the department of justice, these are, these are the channels. it is not within the channels to call up the new york times or the washington post on it. it was sherry, but anesha is it fair to say that journalists are just asking for click by the
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trying to make something out of nothing. i mean, that's not entirely who is a legitimate question about whether they deserved to know about the existence of this information earlier before the election. the information again was given to the parties that were the ones that needed to know. again, the, the archives department needed to know the justice department. we're going to go down this. we're going to go down this path anyway. thus far, we don't know anything about nefarious activity related to this at all. we do know that when president leave office or when vice president leave office, there are times in which they are documents that are here or are mixed in. and in this case, it seems as though that might have been what happened with that being said, i don't think that we're going to, and i don't think you're going to find a legal scholar who binds this, something that isn't a barrier or something that goes down the path of their being criminal activity associated with it at all. and that's precisely what the special council has been appointed to investigate. we don't, we haven't got to the bottom of that yet. it's going to be much more damaging for bias than it was for trump. i don't think that it was damaging for trump and i
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don't think we are going to be damaging for, for, by neither. here here in the united states, the issue that matter the most to the general public that came out and drove for democrats, particularly in the midterm, are those of inflation or those of the economy or the student loan debt. are those of civil rights. those are the issues that people care about here. so i think that those issues are not going to change the time to do at bet. this is going to be another one of those cases of republicans and box news pundents running with something they want to create and just very briefly show the issue of public trust in a just him wanting it. yes, american public care about all those things, but this is a demonstration was supposed to restore public trust in institutions off to it was sort of undermined a road in the trump years. this kind of job, department of justice, both they are operating with the department of justice bully and that was something that the previous administration did not do. so i do think that there is a, just the position here that we have to be honest about cooperation with the
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department of justice being there and having those conversations with them, presenting to them what is needed. that is extremely important. and that is what this administration is doing. well, thank you very much for the discussion of misha cross joining us staff from washington. thank you. now 2022 is the joint 5th thought is years since racquel is began. more than a 140 years ago. according to the global climate change report issued by the national oceanic and atmospheric administration along with nasa, the average global temperature was 14.76 degrees celsius. more than a degree higher than pre industrial levels, as it has been for the last 9 years. the general trend range inexorably outputs with the top $28.00 or to see his own record all coming from 1988 on woods and $28.00 nations including china, united kingdom, spain, france, germany in new zealand, had vowed his ears ever recorded the antarctic sea ice cover was the 2nd lowest ever on february, june, july,
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and august had the lowest monthly levels ever recorded out. there is rob reynolds reports. now 2002 was the 5th hottest year on global record stretching back more than a century. government report says, when you look at 9 of the past 10 years, they're the warmus years in the modern records sense, 1880. now that's pretty alarm. ah, climate scientists say the warming is caused by industrial age, heat trapping, gas emissions, which have been rising steeply since the 1960s. they say rapid reductions and emissions are needed across the globe to slow or reverse the greenhouse effect. extreme weather events in 2020 to include devastating floods in pakistan caused by heavy rainfall and severe drought in europe. that dried up rivers and spark wild
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fires. in the u. s, there was catastrophic flooding in the appalachian region and hurricane ian. one of the strongest storms on record lashed the state of florida. it's warning. all of us force fires or intensifying hurricanes are getting stronger droughts or wrecking havoc. sea levels are rising. the economic cost in the us of extreme weather events was more than $165000000000.00, at least $474.00 people died in those extreme events in the u. s. last year. if 2022 was a bad year for whether 2023 isn't shaping up to be much better already here in california, a series of severe storms has battered the coastline and the interior of the state, causing a number of deaths and up to a $1000000000.00 in damages. rob reynolds al jazeera santa cruz,
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california join me now as kate, calvin and nasa chief scientist she is at tennis, has gone on space flight center. and maryland. tell me more about this report and why you chose to put it again. we obviously it's been a year of extreme heat waves, droughts, devastating floods that have affected millions of people. we're seeing effects of this now in the state of california. why have you put this report together now? yes to every year we update the global temperature record and report out to the public about how warm the previous year was. we've been doing this for awhile now and what the report this year says is that 2022 was tied for the 5th warmest on record according to nasa records and is collectively the last 9 years have been the warmest and modern record keeping began. how much was could get well, so what we know from science, the 1st of all, the warming has continues to the last 9 years or warmer than the years before them . and what we know,
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the warning that we've experienced up until now we've been driven by greenhouse gas emissions from human activity and how much warmer it gets in the future depends on how much more emissions are emitted. but if we continue the level right now. so there's different pathways into the future that, that look at how much warmer it could get. but what we're seeing are increasing trends. and along with those changes in temperature, we're also seeing impacts all around the world. and those are expected to increase with forming as well. where abouts are we seeing the worst impact? so there's different impacts in different parts of the world to some of the impacts that we see. we see declines in arctic sea ice. we see increases in sea level rise and that leads to impacts on cultural communities all around the world. we're seeing increasing extreme events like heat waves and wild fires out in the west in the us or other parts of the world. we see increases in the proportion of hurricanes that are strong, the stronger, hurricanes are coming and that impacts some of the southeastern parts of the u. s. and their impacts in different communities are experiencing different impact. i
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mean also you reported on anti take c ice cover, that's the 2nd lowest ever. right? and so i'm just wondering is already too late then for many glasses. so melting is going to continue. what is that going to mean for water security? still what we see, what the impacts of there's a lot of impacts that are driven by increases in temperature and with future warming. those impacts continue. some of these impacts are reversible in summer, not so things like melting of ice sheets and increases in sea level. if we can't reverse on century's tim, lenny as the once those were the warming occurs and those impacts occur. we're going to experience those for a long time. in terms of water, we have different ways of monitoring water and looking at how it will change over time. and one of the goals we have at nasa is to provide that information to the public, so they know what's happening where they live and they can better prepare for it. i mean, the thing that comes to my mind because they were many different climate change
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related stories last year. and i know that many scientists don't like to link these extreme weather events to any one thing. but i think it's pretty much established now that this is part of climate change trends in global warming. but i think of the, the floods in pakistan and the drought in the horn of africa. and it tends to be those lease responsible for what is happening that pay the highest price. so we are seeing and it impacts in a lot of communities, a lot of really vulnerable communities. and that's one of the goals that are we do free and open data and we're trying to make it accessible. so those communities are aware of what's happening in terms of what we're experiencing. it does vary around the world's, their floods and drought in different communities. and we're trying to provide information to those. oh, thank you very much. k calvin for joining us. thank you for having me. united arab emirates as saying the head of the se oil company will lead this is cop
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28 climate summit. sultan o job or is also the u. a's minister of industry and technology. and it's climate envoy is offer, says he'll be shaping the conference agenda and working on into governmental negotiations. but campaign to say the influence of major fossil fuel produces is watering down ambitions to tackle the climate crisis. with the news ally from london, there is much more still to bring you. india starts demolishing buildings in a remote indian town that's crumbling beneath the feet of its residence, drank as for present, my true impala series center is fine for failing to stop the 2019 easter sunday bombings will. and whilst rallies, cricketers have pulled out of their 3 upcoming matches against afghanistan. ah, now there are conflicting reports about who's in control of the east and ukrainian
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town of soda. where fighting remains. intense grain says its forces are still holding on in what seen as a key strategic battle. their russian mercenary wagner group is leading the offensive and says it sees the town, the crown, and his warning against declaring what it called a premature victory. according to daniel gander, more than a 100 russian troops have been killed in the battle in the last day. ukraine's deputy defensiveness to says russia is sending more soldiers. o e rush, we're fighting is fierce in the solid, our direction near buck march. despite the difficult situation, ukrainian soldiers a desperately farting rusher is trying to break through our defense lines without any luck to capture sola dahl and the enemy has high losses. theory are outside, the city is covered with the bodies of potions, troops. the russians a moving over the orange corpses, or sold our own, he has a population of around 10000 rates. location makes a,
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a key strategic target. just 12 kilometers from the regional capital back much which russia has been trying to take for several months sold. our is also a deep salt mines that more than 200 kilometers of tunnels that could be used to safely housed troops and equipment for an advance out there. as child stratford has more from just outside buck mutt were about 5 kilometers outside of buff move solid . hours around 10 kilometers in that direction. i'm not sure whether you're going to be able to pick this audio up, but there's a lot of heavy sharing going on all around this area. we in the last few minutes as well heard heavy machine gun fire. this is checkpoint very close to us as well. we will prevent you from going any further towards that check point seems as if they're allowing the military through i was a want to and a half, 3 months ago. and it's fair to say that the situation has dramatically changed
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since day. and i mean, we used to go down this road and into back moved, then it is a lot louder, a lot more heavy shilling than then. we've actually been speaking to soldiers this morning who beat inside buck mood and asking them about the situation in both moot and solid. they said to us that russian forces were in the center of solely dog. they said that they were in control of that salt mine. they described russian tanks in the center of solid r as well. they said that they were concerns probably have such that there are concerns among the ukrainian forces about possible escape routes for the ukrainian forces inside solid. all he said, what they were trying to do was protect a western root out of the town. we've been speaking to some of the soldiers behind his head this in this vehicle. these people have been getting ready to evacuate soldiers out of the moods. they say that there is still a lot of civilians inside,
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but we also how many civilians they were inside solid. all he estimated around $500.00 civilians still inside sorted as the fighting goes on. wagon group mercenaries have been playing a big pass on the front lines of the conflicts in this bit of east and ukraine. alger is honda, abdul, hamid takes a closer look at the group and it's role in this war and elsewhere. it's a small mining town, but one that could represent the 1st military breakthrough for russia in months. but the forefront of the battle is the wagner group. a private military army, finest and equipped by the russian government is leader is the of gainey, pri, gozine, a former convict, and close ally of president vladimir putin. he was recently seen in the so lines of solid are well that this is eugene promotions like ship military mission. it's in backward disorder. and you, jennifer goshen is locked currently in
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a shadow war against the russian defense minister as hell. graham channels are describing survey shall i, give is also clashing with our regional governors like st. petersburg governor as under bad law. and he's rumored, half political aspiration as of his own. private military armies are unconstitutional and in russia. but the wagner group has grown to become an informal, an unofficial unit of the regular russian army de wagner. group 1st appeared during the annexation of crimea in 2014, in 2000. and 15 about 300 fighters was sent to the dumbass to support the russian backed separatists. the group has also operated in places like syria, central african republic, libya and malley, among others. initially, about 300 wagner contractors took part in the invasion of ukraine in february 2022 . their mission, according to ukraine and western officials, capture and killed president vladimir zelinski by march. their presence had triple
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to 1000. and the pentagon currently estimates at least $50000.00 fighters operating an eastern ukraine of which only $10000.00 r contractors. the remaining 40000 r convicts. russia initially called the invasion as special military operation that would quickly achieve the kremlin schools. but it stalled and russia had to rethink its military strategy. that's when the role of this private army became more prominent in easton ukraine with the support of the regular army. how is it a great assa? usually a samsung carnell or a decent o clock is considered rational regular. i'm it usually control r l i v i r z group. our eyes use a special as units of soldiers or more,
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possess falls, a stormy or some of the defense orange will fall. now you can you the group also enjoy is a legal loophole which allows its missionaries to operate more freely. they are glorified in a recently released movie, funded by the group pulled the best in hell. even though the wagner's group has been accused of human rights abuses in several countries, it operates in them. if solid are fools, it will paved away for the russian army to head south towards bar mood and west towards chroma torque. it will also likely increase the popularity of the wagner's group among russians for to blurring the lines between the private and regular armies. but abdul hamid al jazeera, thousands of people have taken part in a rat protest in the somali capital against the arm group. i'll ship bob. the government organized rally was one of the largest public gatherings in mogadishu.
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the last decade i'll she vibe which is affiliated to al kinder. he's been fighting somali, his government for more than 15 years. president hassan shahan, mahmud declared war on the quote when he came to power last year. marie newton look a. so my, the, it means we will never accept extremis. and we will also never accept the killing of our innocent people. so we will protect them from our shoe. bob, anyone who kills innocent people will face trial or justice. still had flames. ah, police in germany continued to live climate protest is held up in an abandoned village for the last 2 years. and on the way in school infringement is 14 stages in a row, a dot com rally that just closed. ah,
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as the grounds become sudden once again in england upcoming rain, this weekend is not going to be welcomed. you see is a massive cloud already, but in the immediate future, much of those bringing the right on towards denmark is causing some melton. the snow's already on the ground in southern parts of norway and sweden. as you can see, the wind is fairly strong and quite coated who feels only single figures of the picture on friday in the north, down towards a iberia. this rain just touching the north of spain and just trying to catch the edge of portugal. but again, we got dave reasonable sunshine attempts in the teens even 20, if you're lucky in the south coast. in contrast, what's happening in good part took you, for example, we've had something like a half months with a ride in 2 days and on talia. and the forecast that rain spread through cyprus, into lebanon. there be snow for the lebanese mountains and brain having the coast
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of egypt as well, leaving much of turkey dry and in the sunshine, which is actually the case for good part of mainland europe. but as snow may be on the back of that frontal system, but this is the rate on its way through it, it goes through the u. k. that in sink down to france will be more flooding as a result of this as well. it north africa, things are largely dry, proper, few showers, round the coast and west. here the hamilton is blowing steadily as it should do. ah ah, why did one of toilets most decorated clubs, flee the country in fear of his lie? to prod investigation? one on 18th revealed, explodes to validation, a police corruption on out to 0. are they protected or profiteers of free speech of lago, documenting facts on the ground or a purveyor of the state line unchecked, the media can distort narratives and reshape realities. the listening post keeps
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watch on al jazeera, examining the head dying. how big a breakthrough is this story moment for all towers research, unflinching journalism. i can see the part of the tree where 2 of the bullets hits there about my head, high sharing personal stories with a global audience. nature is so much more than an income for shareholders. it's a library of my people. explore an abundance of world class programming on al jazeera lou. ah, ah, i'll come back and look at lane. stories are following now. us attorney general is
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appointed a special council to investigate president joe biden's handling of government documents. 2 sets of papers have been found. one was at biden's, delaware home, the other a washington office you assigned to say last year was the wells joint, 5th war missed on record, and the last 9 years with a war mrs. pre industrial times expired. say the late to state to put the power agreements goal to limit global warming to one and a half degrees celsius. in serious jeopardy. and ukraine says its troops holding out despite heavy fighting around the salt mine a town of solid, dark eastern ukraine. russian ultra nationalists, wagner group claims to have captured the region. but moscow is officially proclaiming victory will in all the stories of following india has set started demolishing unsafe buildings in the himalayan town of judgment. residents have been evacuated after cracks appeared in hundreds of build eggs. it's big blade, or nonstop construction in the area and
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a changing environment. avenue metal reports now from the town in northern india, cracked and damaged this home in joshi. mont has become unlivable. as he surveys the damage regime through law tells us he 1st spotted cracks in 2021 but, but he says, authorities ignored him. these became wider and destroyed his whole. it's better gama holy. we are living in fear people that we don't know what the future holds for us, isn't it? we haven't eaten properly for days. but children are missing. school of our daily routine have been disrupted. me go with the are struggling and don't know how to handle the situation. similar damage can be seen across this more himalayan town. in northern india roads have fishers, many homes are falling apart. nearly half the town has been effected. jo, she might, is the gateway to hindu and seek religious sites. it's also an important military base near the chinese border. authorities are blaming bad granted systems and all
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the population for thinking this land. young authorities have moved hundreds of people to temporary shelters. families are sharing one room and have brought a 6 advisory over. the robert family says this meant all their savings to build their home. they're anxious about their future. if turned away today, but he won't do it when i'm the are shivering in the school. it stuff for the children, we have to warm milk for them. it's becoming difficult to look after them. jeopardy authorities are giving us food, so at least that is taken care of. but what about our future? what will we do? are you use to give experts said they've been wanting authorities about the pace of development in the area for decades. they're blaming corruption and lack of leadership for the disaster. this is a total failure of government. no government has tackled this issue properly. they didn't listen to scientific advice. it's not just just the mafia. there are several of the towns in chima locations, but could face similar disasters. authorities are marking high risk areas and homes
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. they're also offering $1800.00 is compensation. several people are leaving town before the situation gets worse. many said they will need more money from the government so they can relocate and start rebuilding their lives. pardon me with that al jazeera joshi mud, northern india. well, this is a report from human rights watch, says it unchecked. authoritarian power is leaving behind a sea of human suffering across the wild is spotlights abuses happening in more than a 100 countries covering everything from war to media, freedoms, gender rights and refugees. it puts the war in ukraine at the top of the agenda, saying russian president vladimir putin is operating with impunity. it welcomes the international communities response, including efforts by united nations agencies to collect evidence of war crimes. but it says a situation and ukraine means that all the crises of being ignored, calling on governments and international organizations to take action. while our
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correspondents have updates from some of the countries mentioned in that report in. ready ready ready ready 2022 was your trash to make 1200000 people came to germany, claiming refugees faces the vast majority of them. ukrainians, many of them from germany, bolan's main central station here where the application process could begin. but it's estimated around 200000 people from syria, afghanistan, iran, iraq also came to this country. the treatment very received. that was slightly different because koreans have freedom of movement around europe. as others don't. ah,
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lebanon's political class is accused of denying people their basic rights by failing to address an economic crisis that has pushed the 80 percent of the population into poverty. low income households have cut back on food, while the large refugee population has been hit hard, decades of corruption and mismanagement has nearly bankrupted the state, which was no longer able to provide serve is like electricity, financial losses are in the billions of dollars. ah, ah, for the report details and litany of apparent russian war crimes, including in butcher, a town north of keith was occupied by
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a russian forces un certainly 70 people were unlawfully killed or again in mario pole. in the south of the country. russians formed a theatre that had been clearly marked out as a severe shelter. hundreds of people were killed, including children. with 230 palestinians were killed in conflict and confrontations with israeli security forces in 2022 and a further 9000 injured those figures, palestinian health ministry, and that includes those killed in 3 days. i was ready for icon garza in august and israel is for the financial school on the palestinians. and now deduct more than a 3rd of the $256000000.00 a year. it collects on behalf of palestinian authority in duties and taxes. al
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united nations actually generalize renewed his condemnation of russia's invasion of ukraine and attacked israel's expansion of settlements on palestinian territory. actually the terrace was speaking a debate on strengthening the role of law to maintain peace and security. the russian evasion of ukraine has created you meditate in human rights catastrophe. dramatize is in the nation of children, and accelerated the global food and energy crises. any annexation of states that he thought by another state. the resulting from the strength or use of force is a violation of the charter and of international law. 2022 of the deadly and for most politicians and israelis, we can them all and lawful killings an x by extremists. there is no justification for the federalism at the same time. the expansion of supplements by israel as well as open demolitions and the evictions that iving and,
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and dispense the policy. and alpha ministry says railey forces, us killed 3 palestinians in separate operations in the occupied west bank. one of them was 41 year old samir son who was shot in the columbia county near ramallah during an early morning right on thursday policy, an official say a plan was trying to defend his son during and iraq. later witnesses in, janine reported a firefight, and the ministry said is really forces shot dead to on the palestinians with a head of israel. supreme court says a judicial reform plan proposed by benjamin netanyahu convert would crush the justice system and undermined the countries democracy. applied includes limiting high court rulings against government policies and laws, while increasing politicians influence it selected judges that a yahoo took office again last month said that he will preserve the independence of the judiciary. about him, you will get the hoot mc honey mikka. ironically,
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the master minds, the quarrel graham glowed program to fix the judicial then the owner of a and i say it is a book that little marshal, butchered it attention, but quality in you have all anyone who claims that the majority who elected their representatives to look nasa thereby gave them an open cheque to do as they please and bear the name of democracy in vain. for michelle, i can present my triple a series. santa and other key officials of his government have been ordered to be hundreds of thousands of dollars in compensation to victims of the 2019 east. a bombings announcing its decision on a series of petitions. the supreme court said serafina breached his duty to protect banal, fernandez as more now from colombo. it's a bittersweet the gloria. 3 years after her father george under a 2nd and was killed with 268 others in churches and hotels across relentless capital on easter sunday. there's some accountability as
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a citizen of this country. i'm happy because at some point we got, oh, just says it's kind of a winning regard for us. but as an order of jobs, i'm not happy because i may, again, again, ww are trillions. but those that money can had being made at our back. on thursday, the supreme court ruled former sri lankan president my 3 policy re siena. and for seniors, security officials violated the rights of the bomb victims by failing to protect them. they were ordered to be hundreds of thousands of dollars in compensation to the victims, families. then secretary of the ministry of defense, the police chief and heads of the 2 main intelligence agencies were the others who were fined. at the center of the petitions, violin court was the fact that the government had received intelligence regarding a possible attack nearly 3 weeks before the bombings and did nothing to prevent them. the court said, we conclude that the former president citizen has been lacks, in affording the protection and guarantees enjoined under the constitution and
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other laws. and he has breached his duty to protect adding that this dismal failure on the part of the former president sidney santa, resulted in disastrous consequences for this country ahead of the attacks. the government was divided after president citizen has failed attempt to sac his prime minister. the now president runner vicar missing, and replace him with the defeated president man, the roger boxer. many here, believe this division may have affected crucial aspects, like national security observers said the 2 camps were so busy fighting each other . they failed to act on valuable intelligence. the supreme court acknowledge this fact saying there was specificity, exactitude and clarity as to the likely attackers modes of attack and their targets, the victims families, welcome the decision, but say there's more work to be done to find those who carried out those attacks
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and bring them to justice, a few days after the bombings, i say, claimed responsibility. but many doubt that claim the government has filed more than $23000.00 charges against a group of at least 40 suspects. accusations of possible involvement by intelligence operatives claims of cover ups and allegations, by the archbishop of colombo, that the bombings were part of a plot to bring the raj, a box of brothers back to power, have not been investigated. no one just says i please, i can sleep peacefully, laid out aid because of these people for the reason i was that and i v v as victims die for justice like gloria many victim said they would continue their campaign until they find the truth. mina fernandez, ojo 0, colombo, we go to lab and, and now where the high judicial counselors fell till point, an alternate judge in the case over the 2020 bay report explosion. the move was
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a win for victims, families who have been demanding justice for nearly 3 years. more than $200.00 people were killed when a large amount of ammonium nitrate stored at the port exploded. but tis outages in a hold in our ports of battle is not over. as the investigation still remains blocked i. they won this round, but families of the more than $200.00 victims of the explosion at bay with port are far from achieving the justice they demand. 7 it's been nearly 3 years since one of the largest non nuclear blasts in recent history. and lebanon's leadership has been standing in the way of accountability, trying to replace the judge because by the judge that is politically automated with follicles. so it's a big, big deal. we will know that they managed to do so. the case of
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the board was just, you know, this is gone so far, the authorities haven't been able to appoint a 2nd judge. every judge in dead must know though to precautions of them are contributing to the divergence and to the covering of the justice. but officials have blocked the investigation for more than a year now. they have filed lawsuit against the lead investigator thought it better preventing him from proceeding with his investigation. it has been established that officials as high up as the president were aware of the presence of highly exposed material as a port warehouse and did nothing about it. an investigation by human rights organizations concluded that multiple authorities work at a minimum criminally negligence. many here say the answer lies in an international investigation which authorities have repeatedly rejected. the international comes
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in to have the frontier. that's been, you know, my rights should. i mean, how long would they wait? can't they still had the that the pied here is governmental and it will be dormant forever. if nothing comes from outside, it's been a long battle for families who are up against a political and security establishment in a country with a culture of impunity. zanna could their elders. eda natal, brazil's new president who has a nasty lily to sell his as he plans to have his government's policies ready within the next $100.00 days to get the country running at what he calls at normal speed. again, it comes 4 days after supporters of his predecessor jar balsa doro, storing the seat of government in the capital. priscilla luda told reporters that what happened was a huge warning, and that fanatic ballston aro supporters is still very dangerous. is justice
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melissa says they will investigate the whole network of people behind the attacks and see it cooperation with other countries, if any suspects are abroad. now, the turkish government has summoned sweden's ambassador over video posted by kurdish group based in stockholm. it shows a puppet of present regime, type odo on, swinging by his legs from a rope and calls him a dictator. diplomatic ra comes as the country is pressuring sweden and finland to clamp down on kurdish groups in exchange for support for their data. membership beds anchor classifies the kurdish separatist movement as terrace in germany. police are continuing to evict crime activists from the village of lead, sir f. people have been kept there for the past 2 years, protesting of the decision to demolish the village debate way for the expansion of a coal mine. but he say 200 activists left voluntarily on wednesday, but there are still around 300 their protest as have been throwing stones and
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fireworks at the police steadfast and as war here, police this really rapidly demolishing the camp that the climate activists have built in the last 2 years, they basically have built all these wooden structures, wooden hub and fill. you can see climate activists up there. they're still waiting for police to reach them to have put themselves in height and complicated position to make it harder for police to get to them. but very rapidly. also, these cranes have been brought in by police. they have been hearing down all over this whole side to sell a lot of free houses left that some have been demolished already had this house is now also been demolished by police a few 100. maybe it's very unclear to say how many are still here, but they're holding up as well in the houses that remained from this little village . it was a village that around a 100 people many and most of the rest and all the residents. i have to say have
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left a while ago because the energy company, w e had basically compensated them. they were long legal battle, but they lost all these legal battles. but a 1000 climate activists had moved in here for the last 2 years. they had they base here, they had the community here. so we've been speaking to them all day and they're in the very sad condition right now because the whole community is be basically been torn down. and this is not, of course the main problem. the main problem is that the mind that they were protesting against which is right behind us is going to be expanded very soon now. still had for you on this news out from non looking for your list for in this story iraq going strong in that time it's national tournament in more than 4 decades. ah.
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ah ah. with whole
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ah ah welcome back, josie and now at the sports mary, i'm thank you very much. we'll defending champions, rail madrid will face barcelona for the spanish supercop after the cat lands just beat rail bettis in the semi finals in red. it was tough going for bathroom, the saudi capital, chavez men, had 2 goals, rolled out outside a star strike of robert lemond off. he got them on the board in the 1st half, that is equalized to force the match into extra time where and to fatty put barcelona back in front with a stunning effort. but then bettis equalized again, and it was to to so went to penalties where boss went through 42 and it is
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barcelona. will play around the drink for the cup on sunday. meanwhile philip and chelsea held a minutes applause before their premier league matched on a young coffee ali the former chelsea strike her manager died last week of cancer on the field of play. it was a full much chelsea man who struck the games 1st goal. willie on increasing the pressure on blues, both graham, puerto, who had just won when 10 at this one of his did manage an equalizer vote through defender holiday, kill it bally, but it was a nightmare debut fin. you big name, loan signing, jewel. felix not only did he missed his chances, but he also received a red card full and took advantage. carlos initiates netting to make it to one to mark a silver site. and mash is in its closing minutes. netherland strike a vote. beg horse has joined majesty. united on loan until the end of the season, beg horst half most recently played club football shaped us in turkey. he joined
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burnley almost a year ago, but couldn't help them prevent relegation. beckles represented his country at the well cup incatel last month. house to rock a 3 to the semi finals of the arabian gulf, cut off to 5 no thrashing of yemen and group a mr. fight nadeem open the scoring for the lions of mesopotamia with a looping header in the 1st half am jet at one double. they lead with a superb str from the edge of the hall. i am insane also grabbed to before his sane alleys sealed the victory and a place in the last 4 of the tournament, which is the 1st international football competition held on a rocky soil. in more than a decade, iraq who play and or next door to they eliminated saudi arabia from the tournament . a mom winning to one had had a saudi with the pick of the goals. in the 84 minutes were morocco pulled out of the arabian night, african nations championship being held in algeria,
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after having its request to fly there directly on morocco's national airline. to night. algeria closed its air space to rock and aircraft in 2021. after breaking diplomatic ties with its north african neighbor morocco, that vending champions of the term of under $23.00 players to play domestically on the african continent. leonor messy has been nominated for men supplier of the year at the fif of best football awards. messy helped argentina when their 1st well cup title since 1986 last month in cattle. the argentine has actually won this war before back in 2019. is national teen bosley and l. scholarly is up for the coach of the year award, as is, while you are a groggy you famously lead morocco to the semi finals. afghanistan's cricket board says australia decision to withdraw from their upcoming one day series. as pathetic
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3 games was scheduled for march in the u. e. box. after consulting with stakeholders, including their governments, the australia men seemed pulled out because of the taliban restrictions on women and girls. last month afghanistan's taliban lead administration imposed a ban on women attending universities. girls been banned from high school since march and have also been excluded from parks and jims, afghanistan, remain the only i see, see full member nation without women's team. they say they plan to officially right to the i, c c over australia's withdraw cricket australia said they are committed to supporting growing the game for women and men around the world, including in afghanistan, will continue to engage with the afghanistan cricket board in anticipation of improved conditions for women and girls in the country. the afghan at crockett board posted its own statement saying it was extremely disappointed and sad, and by but the pathetic cit statement of cricket,
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australia. calling it an unfortunate attempt to enter the realm of politics and politicize the sports. they also said they be rethinking the participation of afghan players. in australia is domestic big. bash, leak africa's 1st heavyweight boxing wild champion. heavy could sir, has died. could see arose to fame in 1983 when he knocked out michael doki to win the w. b. a version of the title in ohio. the wind was named upset of the year by k o magazine. and actually he broke his right hand in that fight. he had been struggling with illness and recent years could see it was 67 frenchman's best in lobe has won the 11th stage of the dac hall rally, but he remains some way off. overall lead and matha alice here, lobe is now if actually $14.00 stages in a row that still trails his khatri rival by more than an hour and a half. a frenchman has never won the dark hall race despite being
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a 9 time world rally champion. alice here who has fall dakar, rallies over the years, is looking highly likely to complete a 5th title here with just 4 stages to go. oh, that was all his fault for now. it is back to mary. i'm in london. all right, thanks very much. jai, that's it, than he is out, but i've got another person coming out for you in just a couple of minutes are going to be live in washington. for more on the latest validates that a special council having been appointed to investigate the president's handling of classified documents. ah ah,
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a fear is at a tipping point. scientists are telling us that we have just 12 years as the world's leaders fail to agree upon a solution. people are taking matters into that we're talking about the property now. we're trying to get people to understand that it kills people and that it kills people. now it's already killing people, thrice the people's voice on al jazeera and a new generation of young people and making demands to we balance society. welcome to generational change, a global theories that tends to understand and challenge the idea that mobilize you around the world in london to activate tackling the root causes of youth violence. many young people that perpetuate violence against other young people themselves have also been victim multiple times. my generation can try me,
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design me shape. this generation change on al jazeera farming is changing drastically in romania with this years. some well harvest devastated by drought. it's milder weather at a lower rate for what are changing the seasons. farmers around here so early, 2 seasons these days instead of fall the summer and the winter autumn this year in temperature terms only lasted a couple of weeks. the around is planning differently for the year ahead. there will be no sunflower, no call, no wheat. all this bomb being replaced by cops more resistant to drought use, defeat livestock, not people. he and his son are slowly adapting, but climate change may well pace them. ah a special.

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