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tv   News  Al Jazeera  January 18, 2023 1:00pm-2:00pm AST

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flowers, no call no weeks. all this bomb being replaced by crops, more resistant to trout used to feed livestock, not people. he and his son are slowly adapting, but climate change may well out. place them, i can unlock my phone with my face, you can access your bank account with your voice unique algorithmic measurements on us that are revolutionizing the process of identification. the biometrics are far from present big convenience and seeming infallibility. comes at a price. most crucially out prices in the 4th of a 5 part series alley re addresses the appropriation of our most personal characteristics. all hail the algorithm on a judge 0. ah, this is al jazeera ah
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allow, i'm sammy's a dan. this is the news i live from dow coming up in the next 60 minutes. at least 18 people, including ukraine's interior minister and his deputy killed in a helicopter crash near cave investment into renewable energy. european leaders looking at moving away from their reliance on russian das of the world economic forum. fax, when through, when jeff, with a philippine called the quits nobel laureate journalist maria, let ross, or of tax evasion charges in the k. c. as in the soul of media freedom, the un sends its most senior female official to afghanistan as calls grow to restore women's rights under the taliban. for a small with the sports rather than a dallas defensive as australian open has ended,
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while number 2 suffered and injured to beat against american mackenzie mcdonald. me always start with breaking news out of ukraine, where the top members of the interior ministry have been killed and a helicopter crash in the town of robbery. and the p, if the helicopter went down near a preschool, a seen people dead so far. that number includes at least 2 children, emergency services are on the scene. natasha butler is joining us now. live from key and let's go that. so your now natasha had been talking us through this crash for the last few hours that you are now at the scene. describe to us what it looks like. yes, we just walked around the perimeter of this nursery,
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where the question took place in kindergarten and commune. it's a terrible scene that you can see the twisted chart wreckage of the helicopter. scattered in the playground amongst the slides and the other outdoor games the children would have outside. many of the windows, a completely shattered that would have been the cost of the kindergarten in the front of this building were part of it has been completely destroyed and is still smoldering and black emergency services. of course, they're the scene, they're working picking up through level a short inside those a flurry of activity. but it seems not, but a lot of teams here on the ground. it is a very sad situation because we know that all of those are on board that telecom, 9 people, 6 government officials, including the interior administered, his deputy and 3 crew. we know that they were all killed and also amongst the
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victims children to children. many of the children injured in a hospital and they really doesn't surprise you when you see the face of this bill behind me and just bring us up to speed because it's quite a fluid situation. natasha with where things stand now visit the casualties. yes. why? well that is fluid because way hearing reports have between 15 and 18 people have been killed, as i said, all of those are wrong for the helicopter. that's 9 people and then others children and some of the adults were here in this kindergarten, but also nearby because this kindergarten is in the center of a residential area. there are large flow flats all around the people, carrying about their daily lives. just stuff day from the morning when this crash happened. they were off to work. people who dropped the children off at the
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kindergarten. the others were going off to school. there's another school just very near by. so there is been an incredibly distressing morning if you look at some of the mobile phone footage, the was film by resident truly sci fi. a lot of this building was a blaze. you can hear people screaming. so a very hard and difficult morning and feet and ukraine's government, i mean, an enormous loss. they have not, not only a colleague, a personal friend, but the interior minister of the country at a time when ukraine is at war with rupture. we'll leave it there for now, although i'm sure we're going to come back to life. natasha. keep is going there because the news of the helicopter crash also discussed in devils as leaders need for this year's world. economic forum on dividing, added to jane space, joins us out from davis and james, how all those discussions being overshadowed by events and ukraine?
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well clearly ukraine was always going to be top of the agenda for this year's dallas, in fact, double was opened effectively by the 1st lady of ukraine 24 hours ago. so here there is shock because what has happened to senior official for the world economic forum. ready that's the formal name of dabble says they are shocked by what they say are tragic events. we have the nato secretary general here with the the un secretary general spoken to the u. n. a moment ago. second gentle antonio terrace is aware of the news. he says he's shocked by the news and sends his condolences to the bree families. we have many leaders from the european union and nato countries . here, one of those e u foreign ministers is the foreign minister of finland. earlier he gave me his reaction to very tragic events and minister of interior test met our finished minister of interior. so it's a very sad day of course on, and that the children are involved in this accident and our demo. and that the
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cares in to see care. so this is very, very dramatic given and james, at the same time was this is all going on. we were expecting present ukrainian president the landscape to speak is that still on yeah, he's on the schedule 6 hours from now. and the world economic forum senior official i spoke to said they have no indication yet from key from the ukrainian leadership that he's going to cancel that speech. so i think in 6 as time by video link, we are going to get president landscape. he will clearly, i'm sure, give his reaction to what has happened and to this helicopter that has come down. but also, i think you're going to hear another cool to ukraine's allies. i'm to other countries around the world to do more to support ukraine. and the timing of this is pretty significant because coming up on friday,
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there's an important meeting of ukraine's allies. it's taking place in germany, of the u. s. ad base ramstein in germany, where ukraine's nato allies and others will be deciding what more they can give to ukraine and focus at the moment is on tanks. and i think a great deal of pressure will be on the german chunk of schultz who is also speaking here today at devils. because there are many who would like to see germany give its left for 2 tanks or some of them to ukraine, but perhaps more importantly, germany is sold those tanks to many other e u and nato nations. they cannot give any tanks to ukraine unless germany gives it permission, and so far it hasn't done so. all right, thanks so much. that's james, based from diverse russia's foreign minister said a lot of his hit out at the u. s. and e for its involvement in ukraine has been saying what's happening is a result of a hybrid war. naval says the crisis again is way before the outbreak of the war
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last february. the foreign minister, speaking from moscow at a news conference, as part of an annual review of russia's foreign policy, a hash is live for us in moscow. so our russian officials, 1st of all thing and the thing about the helicopter incidents in ukraine. no, sammy knows no reaction from moscow on the a helicopter incident in ukraine till the mortgage never him. we didn't hear anything. all right, um we have been hearing from so very laval though and he's had some hard words for the west for the e here for the us about a proxy will brings up to speed on that. well sam is sir gay love. rosa ves, conference to day was an attempt to put to whole war and the whole war into the context of the ocean weston confrontation as he described it. he
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even used that term. the final solution when he was describing the us led coalition as he described. and that's trying to find the solution for the russian question. he also compared the u. s. and weston attack on the and russia, as he said to napoleon and hitler's. and so it was like more into a historical context then he went into some detail with respect to negotiations with ukraine, saying that russia is open to him because negotiations, however, a needs some solid points to stand on. also, he mentioned the meeting between the a had self intelligence in russia and the u. s. and said that this happened often the president biden's request also went to. busy address the issue of the sanctions
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on russia said that his country is working on creating and enhancing some new supply chains in order to avoid the rest and interruptions. so many details in this, in this regard, but mainly the whole process was kind of concentrated on the war in ukraine. how would russia's diplomacy dealt with this war? what's really expected in the future with respect to the. busy multiplan wall that he was a talking about also m, as it spoke about europe's commitment to this war. it said alliance with the nature and how it's becoming and a sub or didn't due to the e. e. a due to the nature and the night states. so this was kind of a block form today to launch an attack on the us on you on nature, and also kind of trying to dwarf the ukrainian
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a role in this war and compare and get to a kind of a proxy roles. whereas the main players in this war, according to set a gate of robot, the nato and united states of america. all right, we'll leave it there. thanks so much. charlie hash him. joining us live from odessa is hi michelle us. she is the director of security programs at the ukrainian prism which is a foreign policy and security, i think time good to have you with us. so 1st of all, any indication at this point of what brought this helicopter down, we don't have the official version yet. so the emergency services and police are on the crowd, but the preliminary videos and the reports that we have, it could be either the mistake of the pilot speakers to be turning several circles around the place, or probably the helicopter court on something. so they haven't been any explosion
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or any other journal as for now, evidences all the facts are still only probably one of the team will check, the appraiser culture that they use will have more information, isn't normal to have this many senior officials of a ministry in one helicopter, at a time of war, usually were trying not to, but sherry, you had to talk to the minister. she's 1st the deputy from time to time. the glued together. i'm to these morning. they were flying to the words old because don't forget that minister contemporary is also in charge of national guard to ukraine. that is, that the problems lie there also in charge of the emergency services to these people who are in charge of different tiers that are important in the peaceful life . but also the prom slides, that being one of those kind of cultures that been delivering them to the forces and how will this last impact the ministry of interior is role in the war and war
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effort. now, i mean in terms of the role in the war effort, definitely it's will not because the ministry institution and you have thousands of people working, we will have very soon the acting minister that is the procedures and protocol. but personally, that is definitely a huge loss of those. the minister and you deputy had a very good reputation. i have known the deputy minister for 15 years by myself while he was just a young diplomatic bedtime. we used to work a lot together. that is a person of the high integrity and very trusted so professionally for the service personally for all colleagues, that's definitely will have a huge impact. but we're also discussing about all the civilians that die to they are because everybody emphasize just the minister. but there are killed kids, a lot of the land, that's just the big tragedy for the town. and then days for sure,
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the loss of kids lives, but isn't clear what sort of necessity there was to fly the interior minister and his deputy, to the war zone. what is it case? was what the operation was that necessitated him to go there? it's nothing extraordinary that any being at the very front line was also visiting the forces they are taking they need talking to the police officers that are fighting there because you need to understand when we think about the cranium forces that the problem lies. it is not only the armed forces of ukraine, that is all security services, security service, all ukraine, intelligence, military, intelligence, national guard, police, and many, many others. that's why they are commanded to coming there from time to time to deliver something to check the situation by themselves. so not to be divided from
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the courses and deputy municipal, for example, you've been really almost weekly at one of the units that are closer to the front lines. so cross that tree with just the regular trees. all right, thank you so much for your analysis. and for sharing with us plenty more still ahead on the news hour, including india poised to become the world's most populous nation. we look at how the growing numbers could boost its economy and prosecutors in brazil present the 1st charges against dozens of supporters of former president, general sanara for storming the nation seats of power. and it's war live all get back to winning ways in the english f a come for us here with that story. ah now caught in the philippines has acquitted nobel prize. winning journalist mary
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eraser of tax evasion, racer still faces 3 other criminal cases though, which are under appeal rights group say it's part of a larger crackdown or media freedom that began under former president rodrigo to 30 grass or won the nobel peace prize in 2021 for protecting freedom of expression. the tax case was one of many initiated against maria theresa during former president rodrigo the 3rd of his term. a news website rattler extensively investigated detailed face anti drug campaign that killed thousands staff faced harassment death threats and legal action company calls the legal investigations targeted attacks. last year, the securities and exchange commission aud raptly to be shut down. that's why the case is pending appeal. shortly after her acquittal, murray rather spoke to my colleague needs. barker began by asking her how she felt about the verdict. i expected it but didn't know whether it was going to happen. i
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mean, i expected it because there weren't, there was no evidence presented during this case, but i, i didn't realize how emotional like i would get because we were preparing, i guess you could call it p s the, you know, or the 1st statement i would write for rapidly be a conviction because that's been that the, the last 6 years. well, this is the 1st time that justice wins. i, i said this earlier, right outside, you know the facts. one truth one, just this one. so yes, farmer emotional then if a conviction had happened, as of course i will signal do you think the sens for the remaining active court cases against you roughly relating to cyber libel? well, there's a 5th tax evasion charge that is on value added tax. pretty much the same principles as this that we, i testified in that court as well and that decision is expected in june. this sets a precedence that will be interesting and then the other 2 criminal charges against
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me. cyber libel is already at the supreme court. and then the criminal charge of the s c. c. case trying to shut us down is still in the regional trial court. it's unclear still, right? but again, this is a ray of hope. so it's half 1st. the 1st time we have one something in our justice system since this nice political harassment began. so i thanked the court of tax appeals. that's been a very professional course, but it took 4 years and 2 months to get to this point. maria, you are of course, without one of the most celebrated journalists around the world, a former time magazine person of the year. and you want, of course, the joint nobel peace prize to what extent of all of these international accolades helped or hindered your case in your home country. you know, at the beginning when, when time name neither one of the persons of the year, i thought it 1st was a sinking feeling in my stomach. and then i realized later on, it was actually
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a shield. it allowed us to bring these instances of injustice that was happening politically motivated in our country to the global stage. and that's precisely what i hope this case does, right? it gave hope not only to us, but for another journalist who's been in jail for she will start from 4th year in prison, french maker. and of course, you know, la la da lima has been imprisoned now. she will start her 7th year in prison in february. so i think that this is, i hope that the upside down which is where we've been living for so long turns right side up. yet i had, i thanked the court of appeals, you know, thank you for the international focus. you have help give us as well because without that laser focus without shining the light, things could have gotten much worse. maria, i say this tentatively of course, but this is potentially a huge reversal of fortune for you. you are staring at the possibility of spending a long time behind bars. all you encouraged by what you're seeing and hearing in
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the philippines at the moment. i can't help but be right, but i'm cautiously optimistic. look these for tax evasion, charges where exactly where business. so look a nomics rule of law and press freedom meet our president. president mark was his in douglas switzerland right now, trying to get investors to come look at the philippines. this is a good 1st step forward to restoring that. i think we have to still wait and see. i'm optimistic. there's a ray of light. i hope it widens and it becomes a sunny day. all right, let's take you now to the united nations. i actually to that also on the stand the inspector general's about license. thank you very much for your welcome and thank you, dear president, shop for your kind words. it is very good to be back in davis and once again in
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person, your team perfectly set salt thy lamb after those wolds we need corp yet. we faces fragmentation and i'm not here to sugarcoat the scale of that challenge or the saudi state them own wolves. we can't confront problems unless we look them squarely in the eye. and we are looking into the i a category $530.00 came out well is plagued by a foot foot storm on a number of fronts start to the short term global economic crisis. the outlook as we, although is bleak. many parts of the world face recession and the entire world face is a slow long and we see deepening kidney qualities. and the rapidly unfolding cost of leading cries is affecting women and girls,
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the most supply chain, these options and the letter g crunch, sorting prices. rising interest rates along with inflation and dept levels. bonding vulnerable coaches et to all of that. the lingering effects of the pandemic copied 19 you still straining economies with the world's failure to prepare for future pandemic ex that failure is straining our credibility. somehow, after all we have endured, we have not learned the global public health lessons of the pandemic. we are nowhere near ready for the pen that makes to come. and well, that's another measure. and indeed the existential challenge. we are flirting with climate. these are stopped. every week, but in
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a new climate or story that involves guys, emissions out at record levels and growing the commitment to limit global temperature rise to $1.00 degrees is nearly going up in smoke without further action yet headed to at $2.00 diggity increase and the consequences, as we all know, would be devastating. several parts of our planets would be an inevitable. and for many, it will mean at this sentence. but this is not the surprise. the science has been cleared for decades. and i'm not talking only about the un scientists. i'm talking even about fussing fool scientists. we learned last week that certain foreseen,
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full producers were fully aware in the 70s that their core products was baking our planets. and just like the tobacco industry, they rode rough shod over their own science, some in big oil pedals, the big lie. and like the tobacco industry, those responsible must be held to accounts to day fossil fuel produces. and that enablers are still res, seem to expend production knowing full well that these business small, though is inconsistent with human survival. no dizzy insanity belongs in science fiction. yet we know the eco system meltdown. you scolds hard scientific facts yet to the stocks who blew yet another combustible facts of
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conflict, violence, what? especially the russian invasion of ukraine. not only because of the unthought suffering of new canadian people, but because of its profound global implications on global food and energy prices on trade and supply chains on questions of nuclear safety. and on the very foundations of international law and the united nations chart. we are doing our best making progress where we can particularly and facilitate think exports of 4 than 50 allies, us from ukraine and also from russia. but we had a far cry from peace in line with international law and united nations chucked them . so the friends, oh, this challenge is at interlinked and they are piling up like cars in a chain reaction crash. now let's be clear as it would be difficult to find
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solutions to these globally and that linked problems in the best of times. and in a world that would be united's, but these are far from being the best of times. and the world is far from b united's. instead, we faced the gravest levels of geopolitical division and mistress in generations. and it is and a mining every sing firsts. the east west divides. we risk what i have called the great fractures, the coupling of the world's 2 largest economies and tectonic thrift that will create 2 different sets of tables to dominants currencies, to internet's. and to conflicting set that result of the official intelligence. this is the last thing we need. the m f reported that dividing the global economy
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into $22.00 blocks, who's got global g, d p by a hoping $1400000000.00 us dollars. now, there are many aspects in which the us and china relations really navigate to be thy verb, but equally on questions of human rights and on some areas of regional security. but despite deaths, it is possible and i would say it is essential for the 2 countries to have meaningful engagement on climate trade and technology to avoid the decoupling of economies of even the possibility of future confrontations for the study. and that might be listening. we must avoid that 20 for centuries, sec. well, of the so called to see these traps at the same time. and secondly, the north sauce divide these deepening. i am not convinced in my contacts
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that the wealthy wolds and their leaders duly grasps the degree of foot a station and even anger in the global sauce profession. and then get about the gross inequity of a scene vaccine distribution in the recent busts for the session and bank at about to pandemic recovery. we support overwhelmingly concentrated in well see in countries that good putting money and trillions were printed in the global loss. and of course, developing countries could not put into money because their currencies would go out thought that the right for a session and then can about the clements crisis. if you scripling countries have contributed least to global heating and the lack of the financial resources to respond to the challenge and for a session and, and get over a morally bankrupt financial system in which systemic inequality is that amplifying societal inequality use. a system that is still routinely denying
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depth relief and concessional funding to vulnerable middle income countries that are in desperate need because the rules are not made to allow it's a system in which most of the world supporters countries so that that service payments skyrocketed by 75 percent in the last, the alone. now we need to breach all these divides and we need to restore trusts. how can we do it? first, by reforming and building fairness into the global financial system. developing countries is accessed to finance studios, poverty and hunger, and advanced the sustainable development goals. i have heard the d 22, the on a global estie g seamless plan that will provide support to countries of the global sauce, including the vulnerable middle income once they need the necessary liquidity depth
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to live friendly struck thing as well as long term lending to invest in sustainable development. in short, we need a new depth architectures. the level that is necessary to keep the $1.00 degree angle i would say to keep the 2 degree goal alive. and our climates goals need the full engagement of the private sector. now the truces have more than more businesses are making net 0 commitments. but the benchmarks and criteria are often dubious or murky. and this can be leave consumers, investors and regulators with false narratives. and it feeds the culture of climate busy formation and confusion and leaves the. busy are open to green washing. that's why we create the next, but group on that emissions commitments. recently, the group as issued how to guides for credible accountable net, 0 pledges, and the doubles i call on all corporate leaders to wicked,
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based on these guidelines. to put forward credible and transparent transition plans are now to achieve. net seattle and to submit those plans before the end of the year. now the transition to seattle must be on the, the in really mission scotts and not relying essentially on carbon credits or shadow markets. and finally, what is true about the private sector engagement on climate supplies across a range of challenges? and government action is critical. if it's obviously, it is not enough. we must find avenue still, both the private sector is ability to play full role for goods. and it must be recognised that in many ways the private sector to they use living. but it is to a certain extent in their minds by government action or the lack of government action. governments need to create the air, liquid, regulatory and steamers environments to support the private sector. instead of
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maintaining rules, subsidies and other forms of action that the mine the efforts of the private sector to move forward, the climate section. and business models and practices must be reworked, to advance the sustainable development goals. without creating the conditions for the massive engagement of the private sector. it will be impossible to move from the billions to tiers that is needed to achieve the se, geez, to lead the way to expand the economic opportunity for women to ensure greater engagement and corporation for vaccine equity to achieve global foot security. and for that, we need the corporation of the private sector to keep ukrainian and russian foot and fertilizer exports flowing and affordable. even in the midst of the war. these were the business model is incompatible with human survival. the words there of the secretary general of the united nations. he was touching upon climate change
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challenges when he talked about that, particularly the role played by big oil as he said, big ole was peddling. the big lie about climate change. but he went through quite her a litany of issues, warning the world about the challenges and wanting, particularly those leaders got there and nervous about issues ranging from climate change to the challenge of global debt to the issue of funding follow. and in the middle and low income countries. but you bring you more on the davis of course, in a moment, to talk about economic challenges. well, most is in the united kingdom, their pricing on with their 2nd strike in as many months demanding higher pay as the cost of living saws patient to being warned to expect widespread disruption to services on wednesday and thursday. the u. k. has experienced a wave of industrial action as it battles record, inflation, and a fall in living standards. andrew simmons joins us now live from london. so just
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how destructive are things looking so far to diondra? well, it would seem a pretty year effective in terms of the action of bringing this whole and a chess national health service crisis to the for and also getting support. it would seem from the number of car horns you're hearing in front of this crowd, of nurses in front of their hospital, pleading the government to listen to them of their leader pot cullum. the won't college of nursing. a general secretary said on wednesday of the government hadn't really just turned it back on nurses. i'm turned back on. the patient says, well, the government that steep barclay, the house secretary has said that they're demanding money. that is really meant for
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patients that if they get more money, that going to damage the health service even more now with me here is b, joy, sebastian, your a critical can us right in the front line. tell me, how much do you need more money and what is the level of pressure right now? it's not just about money and pay. it's actually one of the reasons why nasa nevi images at the moment, m off the pandemic. vandenberg actually destroyed novels physical and mental health . so not as i not able to make an a threat as much as they used to do in the process. so they are 40 or partially leaving and it just and some of them leaving the country and some of them leaving for private agencies and private hospitals. so therefore, we are lacky expedients nurses working in and it is as a result, we are working with a less experienced workforce. i'm one of the field analysis and i am seeing resignation letter with the same host of is in crisis mentioned in their soul. and
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people cannot afford to stay in and it just with this level of the. so this is causing delays in care admissions bestowed us in treatment. so this is forcing lies and i'm doing this for my wife, my child, and my community and my friends. and for everyone who is out there today, demanding this from the government, because we love and it was, and we wanted em, this situation to change so em. previously, before the pandemic has to do extra kits to compensate for the lord's reeds as systematically taken away from us over the last 12 years. but now we cannot do that because it simply cannot have that physical and mental ability to do that. so therefore, ab government is asking for more efficiency from us, but we are already doing 20 percent more than what we do. we just not accounted
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which is not in the books which is not accounted anyway. so m e to simply in justice to all snots a school fund for their own pay. but in its us is wasting, been so found on temporary working and through agency staff, sore and old. so the nurses were leaving for other countries and actually via trading, really lovely nozzles for other health care systems in the world. so every single year, every single unit is m. recruiting and training, 5200 nurses. but the same number on leaving from critical care units and other wards is all. yeah. and therefore we are making yen at just a cheap training school for the rest of the day or other veterans or countries. so ma'am, it is sad that that, that, and state of, of this year in will be one government to mr. fisher. sebastian,
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thank you very much for your also had the negotiations into the government and the nursing unions ah, the whole wide now it's hope that they will resume, but it would seem that both sides are really in a position that's very tight. indeed, that doesn't seem to be a lot of hope of a solution. all right, time of town, i guess. thanks so much under simmons there. as return back to davis now are, are diplomatic as the james bays is standing by for us. and james, we're heard a moment to go there. the un secretary general touching upon a wide range of issues also of wide range of people gathered there. how are some of those issues, particularly the warn ukraine must be resonating with people in different ways? well, certainly the war of dawn in ukraine is the top issue in the world at the moment. so clearly it's the top issue of the world economic forum and davis. but there's so
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many other issues here. as you heard from the un secretary general. let's get a view on the sex general speech because i've just dragged him out of the room waves, listening to the secretary general from someone who has a good views, i think on all global issues, because he's the only serving head of state. it also has a nobel peace prize aren't joined by the president of east timor jose ramos horta. first your reaction to the secretary general's words. you were in the whole harp solo glib, but alien eloquent as usual. the identify some of the that emetic problems we face both in terms of a global recession or the disruption of food supplies food chain. they're gonna do new, inner unpreparedness of the world community to deal with and their mixer and the weakening of all the solutions and
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that suppose stewart i said old is a challenge is including a climate change. a he sounded a very very that i met deep wanting about where we are heading to baba. then he had a fair to, well, we forms of visit lucia. learn one is we thought berman lee over the years are all to the form of the security council. i don't think, i don't know whether that is any hope for the security council because no involve in the ukraine conflict, at least for directly russia, united states. you gave round that act involved, trying not, not so involved. my recommendation would be for brazil weighed at thought again with india weed, indonesia, maybe south africa. these are the countries that are not directly involved or
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indirectly involved. and they maintain on the active dialogue with all the duke on that it in conflict and i need to speak with but i did a little low when i was in brazil visibly in no, he wasn't. are 100 percent committed to do anything because he said, modestly humbly said, well i don't know whatever it is, it can have any influence on that. but that an alternative tell me why. i mean that the brazil currently is a member of the security council, but you're not looking to the 5 permanent members of the security council. you're looking to these big regional powers. why do you think they could have an impact on the war and ukraine when other others have not achieved that much older turkey has managed to get that black see great initiative because her, they have been able to maintain certain active dialog. wait, booting with russia, but they're same time they have condemned a invasion of ukraine. and i don't see any other
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global vision on our, but each of them alone began to do it. it has to be a combination of the zeal daughter, good. india, indonesia, glass, china, glass, china, china is not directly involved. they condemned to invasion of ukraine, but they all postal sanctions. and china has leverage on russia. if russia would been, doesn't listen to these global countries. well, it will be for firewood for russia at this time, for russia to consider seriously with it do. but it has to be also cottage on the boss, or where lensky will tell me about liz zalinski. does the lensky have to compromise in any way? does he have to give up crimea, for example, because you know, the basic position of the un charter, which is, you have to respect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of countries and,
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and it's russia that's broken that, not ukraine. yes, absolutely, i am. might lensky is a good man, incredible cottage and we do have to support him. indies are challenging, complex situation. however, if we want to end a softening of ukrainians, if we want to. and dick one, during industry, this fraction of your brain, but also, and the continuing the suffering of the russian because halting is self destruct the russia and the so there has to be a cessation of hostilities in place on location without or more drop movement. but if this is a sation of hostilities, the ukrainians say that means putin keeps his ill gotten gains. yes or no, i understand that would be the interpretation. but what do we need
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a motion right now is improvement of do money that it condition in ukraine and a part of russia forwarded to country rationally upgrade to agree on cessation of hostilities. so that international humanitarian agencies so that that trade can be a human to as normal as possible level without any one reco. my zing rushes illegal gains. mouthwash is not the winning, this war. it is not going to win these war. and about the same time we're lensky is not going to be able to. they fit russia militarily. what do you say to the hawks? there are hawks in western countries who say, give more weapons to ukraine, give more weapons to ukraine, and it will lead eventually to regime change in moscow. god, i it, and here is jim change in moscow is not going to be too early, but all the market,
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se democratically, that is going to be the one. all dra nationalists are russian. so a, let's be realistic about these. it is dying for they to sit down and negotiate indigo seizures of it is in the central stances. we all have to make one session. we're less get a concession. russia has to make one sessions. wall, what they are is subject to negotiation. then i go back to these countries i cited were that i believe were holding would listen to them. they could put together a set of ideas, recommendations for were less, again, building we'll talk, maybe not immediately face to face, but in between. and these countries will go inbetween doors and bill a momentum for negotiation take place here because otherwise we're the wife. we all
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suffer. indeed, less we are softened. it was a glances of food that arises that caused by their big bowers and in feigns of millions. if not, hundreds of millions of people are going to suffer. the consequences of it is gonna be new war. it is up the irresponsibility of the global leaders not to do anything to end these war. i'm going to ask you one final question and it's a big question even after us answer it pretty briefly. because the 2nd general is, is calling for something really radical. in addition to that, to, to, to all of the aspects on ukraine is calling for a complete reform of the financial system. particularly with regard to countries like iran developing countries and the debt burdens they face counseling, debt, be honest. do you think that you're here among all these business leaders do you think there's any chance of that? i believe so the thing is possible because a if we dont door this are right off the dead of the for our jaylish days,
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right. of the dead of did l disease did a high a highland at the countries, andy over individuals across the wall in the ridge countries. well, i would call it to her like all the, like a mutual suicide pack. it is totally irrational. they're not all right off their debt to give a 2nd chance to the wall to recover jose ramos horta, the president of east g more. thank you so much for joining us here on out as here . as i say, the only serving had a state who's won a nobel peace prize, enjoying his liberation struggle. he dealt with the international community, follows he is, i believe, 1st addressing the security council in your twenties. thank you very much for talking to us today. and thanks so much, james or european union delegation is in occupy these jerusalem to visit the alex mos compound. it's in support of jordan's guardianship of the most unholy site.
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there are fears israel's new far right government. tried to take control of the compound and run con is there, like this is been described as a solidarity visit where they are the ones who are in charge of a v alex her most compelled. now the walk for actually jordanian or the status quo . the compound is always been that it has been run by the jordanians. it has been the center of controversy in recent days. the jordanian bassett was actually turned away from a visit here just yesterday. ah, because he hadn't got permission from the israeli police or was some pushing and shoving going on with a delegation that was here. eventually he was allowed into the mosque. he did visit, but they, the jordanians were very clear. they don't need is rarely police permission to go into the companion can to see the police guys all heard that. now the delegation, like i say, they had to pay
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a solidarity visit to the jordanian walks and to discuss the events of recent news, which includes in the last $2.00 weeks, the visit of it, the mar banga. there are a v, a national security minister who's actually effectively ensure the police force who came here. that's what that visit sparked an enormous amount of controversy, including criticism from the european union. india is toys, tova, take china as the world's most populous nation. more than half his people are younger than 29, something in the hopes will boost the economy. but providing opportunities for the new generation could be challenging. since monahan explains nikita paula is welcoming the newest addition to her family. she has no regrets about having a 2nd child. she'd always known that one would never have been enough. i ran a boy yesterday morning. so i feel good about it always wanted to have one of each
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. i have her in the child. she's a good. so i wanted to have an under my boy, and i wanted to, i'd rather sibley doesn't matter, but $91.00 of each, so nothing better than that. it's babies like nikita that will soon propel india to become the world's most populous nation, projected to overtake china sometime this year. and while china's population is getting older, india has one of the youngest in the world. that is good for i think on the new media will young workforce and back to something which is very very and by gauge is july's. but the downside is that, you know, there is going to be the height population upwards of extreme on our food under health. i'm no education indian policy makers are hoping that a young population will propel the economy forward just as it did for china in recent decades. but millions of young indians entering the workforce each year will need millions of jobs as left many apprehensive about the future population get
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here, government government should do something to stop the population growth to didn't. they should bring out some rules and regulations that help control our country's population. when the country's population is under control, only then can we develop further? need any population? ok, it's not good that the population will be like this. in india, the government should do something about it. there's inflation on the population is booming, so the government should provide solutions. the next generation of indians may help drag millions out of poverty like china before it, but it will be up to the current generation to start creating policies that mitigate the problems of an aging population in the future than to mall him al jazeera. all right, time to catch up with all the sports his thought off. sammy, thank you so much. ruffin adel says he's feeling mentally destroyed, but as determined to recover from his latest injuries setback in dallas. beaten in the 2nd round at the australian open and the defending champion was an obvious pain for much of his match against american mackenzie macdonald and richardson reports.
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and given ref are probably doesn't feel times he's in trouble. the sites is roughly on the del, surrounded by his medical team, has become all too familiar in recent months. this was like a hip flexor from the 20 to time grand slam champion pulled up with what appeared to be a hip injury during his 2nd round match. against the american, mackenzie mcdonald, there was a high degree of pain on a scale of one to 10. the defending champion refused to quit, but his discomfort was obvious. more like 3 to now. his pain reflected in the emotions of his wife watching on in the stadium. why you would be surprised. ned l spent much of last year fighting various injuries. he repeatedly dismiss speculation, call that his retirement, his eminence any don't want to believe, but as the match went on, it became clear that would be no miraculous recovery.
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mcdonald winning in straight sets. that can be done. and now it's, it's a tough moment. it's a tough day and you need to to accept that and, and keep blank can say that i am not this right mentally at this time because i will delay sacrifices when you are doing things that you dont want to do, you know, and her as was not my case, but say dad, her of closets their income. frustrating to be a lot of part of my dentist career on recording process at $36.00. no down those the end of his career isn't too far away, but for now. yep. he is determined to come back and compete for more grand slam titles and the richardson al jazeera women's well, number one
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e gush wine tech is through to round 3 in melbourne, but 21 year old polish player, had little trouble against her opponent, the 84th rags camilla soria of columbia. it's the 12. 6 of street 2nd round when at a grand slam for swine tech will will next face. christina muska a spain well, i think it was much tougher than this courses. yeah. it was really has physically an come, you know, i was really, you know, reading through every boasting of up so i should do that, give me months, many points for free. so i needed to really work for every use of them. and it was thought, but i'm hoping that i was close. isn't coco golf course a street says winner against britain's am i read a can it off is aiming for her 1st grand slam title after reaching last year is a french open final, the 18 year old american taking the decisive 2nd sad and it's high break. it on american jessica bigler has also booked her spot in the next round. the well
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number a 3 beats. alexandra sasa, novick in straight sets. butler is looking to better her last to australian, open to parents. so she took what a final liverpool had beaten wolves to reach around at 4 of the english f, a cap. a long range strike from harvey elliot's in the 13th amendment was enough for the holders to make it through to a 3rd round reading. it would be 8 at time winners will face brighten in the next round. right? to liverpool, sway nel and the premier league last saturday. yes. bush was good and i to the boys off to a game that told friends when you play well and when to be, can't remember, read any more when it was the case and what tonight it was the case and that's why we are quite happy. what are the u case? richest men, jim ratcliffe has officially entered the bidding to buy a mattress. united a club is currently owned by the american glazer family. who say they're willing to listen to offers. ratcliffe said, uni oh,
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screw already own so football clubs in france in switzerland. he failed in a bid to buy chelsea last year. united are back in premier league action later this wednesday against crystal palace. the team are in a good form having just beaten raining champions. manchester city are for you when you have to celebrate. ah, that is you work so hot for suits, momentum, and every when that is so create the problem and you can't celebrate. and then i think you kill the energy as well. so we have to celebrate that off it. we have to settle down to off it 24 hours, then move home and go to the next good house. algeria, i've made it. she wins that are 2 at the african nations championship, a single goal scored by a men my hoots decided their match against ethiopia in algiers and also secured them a place and then knock at rounds. this tournament is only for players based in their domestic leaks. and the other group a game, libya suffered, there's
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a 2nd street defeats and had been eliminated. they were beaten 32 by mozambique or 2nd in the standings were 4 points. talk to in this group or progress of the quarter finals a little bit. okay. and that is all use for, for now, sammy back to you. thank you so much for all that said from me for this news. al, but the good news is, melina is back with another full show. so do staying with us here on out to 0. ah, we are all reasonable even people far away are also helping with the environment problems in the amazon because their consumers i teach kids about the oceans are facing today. i've been working in earnest, trying to find ways to get to play with kids. what do we do as why and what are you
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going to do to keep out of the sort of language that keeps the red blood women right? say that they have one back to fight for equality and got married. i was told to think that with women, we made a challenge in the region. i will not being pro life. i want freedom. we don't have read them in study. these about 2 weeks now, 3 days, journey to a shelter west of new grade. so one destroys our country, someone needs to rebuild. hong kong was once celebrated as a beacon for press freedom in asia, but as china tightens its grip on the city journalists fear, they can no longer speak truth to power. journalists and media organizations like, or allies have to respect and comply with the law in 2019 increasing
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fears that china was eroding hong kong autonomy and judicial independence. spots, months of massive, sometimes violent protests. the national security law, which criminalizes terrorism, session, subversion, and collusion with foreign forces was introduced in 2020. it might be a conclusion. talking to you now, accepting your interview. it has become a dangerous depression. that dangerous occupation for people who are still interested in 14. the facts ah.

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