tv News Al Jazeera February 27, 2023 9:00pm-10:00pm AST
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offices, house security is also global health security on an online, at your voice, there is no right to defense. there is no right to protest. we can't just keep relying on aid. there has to be some work toward a sustainable economy. at the end of the day it is ordinary objects that are paying the price. this stream on out is there ah to. ready ready oh, hello there, i'm laura kyle: this is the news our live from doha. coming up in the next 60 minutes. drive by shootings on a highway an occupied west bank one. the israeli is critically injured.
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another earthquake shakes southern tech here. a region already devastated by the sponsor, traumas, u. k, and e. u leaders reach a new brakes. it deal on northern ireland. avoiding land water checks on trade across the region and turning up the heat on trees in american northwest or was it one of the biggest climate change experiments in the world? in sport, by sounds almost superstar to inspire the team to another victory in all missing helium bacteria combined to beat friend to title rivals that must say ah and israeli has been wounded in a shooting near the city of jericho in the occupied west bank. the shooting comes as israel deploys hundreds of additional soldiers to the area after an escalation
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and violence on sunday or higher. it joins us more from the occupied west bank and saw more violence than today. what exactly happened in jericho while in israeli is critically winded, after palestinian carried out a drive by shooting to jericho and occupied with buying consensus, incidents, israeli forces have put charco on the lock down while it tries to find the palestinian that carried out the attack. 6 to make sure that no one is able to move in or out. now, this area is usually a quiet area until a few weeks ago. last month. the is ready for me to put jericho again on the lockdown and such they said, for palestinians. they believed that had carried out to drive by shooting before that on israeli settlers. no one was killed in that incident. and then just a few weeks ago, again, it was under lockdown also. they rested 5 palestinians. they said were part of an
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alms group that is attacking settlers. now we've seen a few of those attacks in the last couple of months during the time that these writing you government has come in to several to israelis have been killed. but also the number of palestinians that have been killed and occupied with my justice, sierra and has gone up to 65 and things are incredibly intense, especially off. what happens on sunday? absolutely. and we all think tensions as wells are in is ready city of tel aviv there was saying, protest is being carried away by is where the security forces are these protested and seeing enough are protesting against attacks by settlers on palestinians. we saw a number of a price low tax on sunday in the village of warren. off the 2 settlers that was shot dead. we saw settlers burning homes of palestinians, shoot one palestinian, and they've been burning tires. what is the situation in who are now today?
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well we were then actually just a few hours ago, we've been that all day covering the situation there. it was the ghost town, the only people we could see and who are these really soldiers that blocks off entrances going in and out as well as john this like how. so i was looking to come to the story. palestinians said in their homes. they said the fear of more settlers turning off out of packing that proceeds at homes that cause the shops on their businesses. because this isn't the 1st time. now since then, since we've left what we see and we've spoken to some of the people that we had met, that's saying that the driving forces have come in with gas has been a bit of clashes between the local, local, palestinian and israeli forces. the policy is still angry because they said when they were being attacked by the settlers, the israeli for the baron didn't really do much about it with that feeling that they've not being protected by anyone. and they're sort of left to themselves to
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protect themselves. are laura has a road that cuts through it connects the north of occupied to a site was central to point with blankets the road that's being used both by settlers living in illegal israeli settlements around hawaii. 2 and in that area, and we've also heard from the israeli government would be a defense minister. a visiting the science where to israeli settlers were killed on sunday by a palestinian, that person is still on the run. no one knows where they are in these railways have now in the last few hours, been going, looking at cc's tv footage, with shops for home businesses in that area. and who are i'm surrounding that area and making a story checking cause stopping, cause and definitely an uptick in the security presence israeli security presence already said that they'll be sending thousands more on the street. so now that's to
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attack sweat to palestinians on the run. the israeli for is, are looking for them. ok, sorry many thanks for bringing the situation that in the occupied westbank. just a reminder that we're also seeing pictures in from israel and the city that was saying many hundreds of protests is coming out onto the street in tel aviv and protest against violence against palestinian that we've been thing in the occupied west by living some classes with security forces, but there's really police that trying to keep those proud to under control. they keep an eye on the situation in television and of course, across the whole region and the occupied west bank. you can see protests as being confronted by the curious and forces who are trying to keep the situation under control. ah,
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in no magnitude. 5.6, adequate cause shaken. the city of malachi in eastern camp. one person has been reported dead and war buildings have been destroyed. the new trauma comes 3 weeks off. the 2 major, great killed, at least 50000 people across southern and northern syria. correspondence re, the boat is in my last year and sent this report. we're here in the province of my lot. yeah, this is just 10 kilometers away from where the latest earthquake, the 5.6 earthquake happens earlier this monday we're here where there search and rescue operations continue to be ongoing. disaster authorities just told us that they believed that 3 people remained underneath the rubble here, but that they're not hearing any voices now, but they continue to check, trying to continue and saving to save people's lives. we've been told that at least
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29 buildings have collapsed or been damaged in this part of the country in this city that at least 32 people have been rescued from under the rubble. this country is still struggling to recover from the earthquakes that happened. 3 weeks ago from a re 6, the city has suffered lots of damage. when you're coming in here, you can see still people that are living in tents, trying in a way to handle what are what happened with their lives. the turkish government has given away 10, and food and water has given away cash handouts to help people cope with what they have gone through. but most of the people we have spoken to worst day when they'll be able to have their lives. the back of the turkish government is also hoping to start the rebuilding process as soon as possible, hoping to build around 200000 homes for people who have lost. there's villages
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among others, but certainly the earthquakes that have been going on here. the aftershock continued the rebuilding efforts. you k and the leaders have finalized a new deal for northern islands, post breaks it, trading arrangements, european commission present as lavonne de lion has met with new k prime minister where she's soon act to discuss the details of the northern item protocol now called the winds or framework disputes about the deal have prevented a government from forming in northern ireland. this afternoon. i welcomed president vonda line to windsor for continue our discussions about the northern ireland protocol. i'm pleased to report that we have now made a decisive break through. together. we have changed the original protocol and our to day announcing the new windsor framework. today's agreement delivers smooth flowing trade within the whole united kingdom protects northern islands place in
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our union and safeguards sovereignty for the people of northern ireland. we knew that for us to be able to make the most of the potential of our partnership solutions where need it for the issue was around the protocol on island and northern island. we knew it was not going to be easy. we knew we needed to listen to each other's concerns very carefully. above all, we had to listen to the concerns of the people of northern ireland. has can on this now from roy chance he joins us from that. belfast, i worry, the deal has been struck. what happens next? me? well, heartily. what happens next scrutiny, very, very close scrutiny because this deal, if it is going to stick, has to satisfy 2 key political constituencies. her one of them is wrecks at
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hard liners within the conservative party, but perhaps more importantly than them. it also has to satisfy the democratic unionist party here in northern ireland. both of these groups have been fiercely critical or of the northern ireland protocol. and so if you listen to what's richie sooner i was saying earlier on today with a 30 on the line who is mostly making a bit to then this does everything they wanted to do. he was saying that it basically addresses what is being called the democratic deficits, where northern islands as a sort of special zone excepts rules from the european union. but as, as it's part of the, you k, which is no longer in the european union, it can't influence those rules. are riches in that. cuz also saying that this smooths over the trade barriers that were put up or between the u. k. ends nor the land and he says that this enshrines northern islands place
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constitutionally within the u. k. something that the democratic union party in his party thought that was being eroded by the protocol. now, do they believe rish units, richie? soon as we're as well, i'm probably not yet. they're gonna have to go through this deal with a very, very fine magnifying glass, looking at all of the lines that got la lawyers who are going to be doing that. and they won't be satisfied until they pass. everything is in there. i worked out whether it satisfies what they call their $710.00. as i said, as the addressing it as a back deficit, that the democratic deficits are the trade things, etc. they are saying non committal at the moment and saying that they are not going to give a verdict on this until they've gone through that process. we can hear jeffrey donaldson, the, the leader at the d p as e put it at iran. i haven't seen it yet, so once we've seen the legal tax will come to view, now do you feel positive?
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well, either positive or negative. i think that we need to take time to look at the deal, what's available, and how does not match our 7? how until the u. p. are satisfied, then the deal is not a go. and until a do you pay a satisfied this building behind me store months is still politically paralyzed. it's the building where northern ireland has its power sharing executives of which the d u. p. a half and which they essentially vetoed, walked away from a year ago in processed over the northern and protocol. so you can see the stakes here. this is what looks after all, the runnings of, of northern ireland, the hell service. it looks after education, all these things, and it safeguards the good friday peace agreement. so a lot riding on whether the d u. p. like the steel enough to come back to power and
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get northern on and working again. certainly is rory, many thanks, rains latest, that from northern ireland. that's all now to david hanning, he's a post bank, said trade expert and director of the u. k. trade policy project. he's in london with his live good to have you with us. what do you think of this dale i think is a real step forward own. on northern ireland, northern i have complex politics which mean it is going to have complex trade relations after breaks it with the you and with the u. k. on a this really takes us a step forward beyond the, you know, the protocol, it was a great in 2019, it's complex. there's a lot of detail in there, but it makes a good effort. i think some crating arrangements mind just work. so all of those involved though, obviously as we just heard, the, the political bodies of northern on particularly i'm going to be looking at this very carefully. i mean that the politics, of course,
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when you look at the sort of the businesses than the actual trading, how is that gonna work? we go to green lane and red lane, doesn't this involve a lot of trust? well, certainly it is going to be open to, to trust to trade is at least at least initially both the u. k. and the you have committed 1st of all, to working more closely with northern ireland businesses in the future. and that is something that they have been crying out for really, for, for some time, the arrangements are going to be phased and we're still reading the, the text to understand in full what the arrangements will be. they are not going to be simple. and in terms of trading arrangements, in terms of what's allowed, what rules have to be followed? there's a lot of complexity going to be there. so i think we'll be looking at the stale for a little bit a little while to work out exactly what it means. but for sure the us saying we
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trust the u. k. a little bit more now, but it may also the u. k. is agreeing to not to diverge too much from a new rules. i wanted to ask you about the negotiations because they've been going on for so long now. who do you think gave more ground in the end, the e u or the u. k. well, be you have some red lines about protecting the single market and not fully reopening the, the protocol text. and actually they will mostly kept you. but actually the u. k. did manage to nibble away at the edges of the, of that the, you can read lines as we, as we have them during the prime minister ships of ours. johnson disappeared and that's what opened up the prospect for a deal bought both. so it's appeared to have genuinely tried to find space where that you could where they could negotiate. so i think the u. k. had to move considerably from the situation under under bars johnson. but in return the you has
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also clearly moved as well. so there is some ground given on both sides. just the christian a drawer, a line now and breaks it, negotiations. no, i certainly, i think the briggs and negotiations on the position, the relationship to the you can the, you continues to a matter of discussion. well, what i think it does is it perhaps through the line under the phase that was started really in 2019 with the withdraw. it provides the possibility of more stability upon which now relations can evolve from the more stable place. and i think that that have, that has a great value is something you businesses as a whole, not just a no, none of were asking for. and i think that does now happen. so expect more u. k. u discussions negotiations, agreements. but i think from a more stable place, if this deal is to hold, and i think it probably will sound positive and david heading it, thanks very much. i think a thank you very much for joining us. that's when people silla had here on this
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news. our including the race for nigeria is highest office, will have the latest from a booge or on some results from one of the closest presidential elections in decades and in sport will hear from this rising star of athletics, as he prepared to defend his world and olympic ty, so ah, the results of nigeria is presidential election are beginning to come in ballots continue to be counted and what's become the tightest race in decades facing was extended into sunday after some areas face delays, some faces in the city of orca. say that concerned about the election process and where it might be heading some of us to be a weak d lithonian. i wouldn't. i wouldn't have to do that. even there was
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a rental shower, wasn't there. so want to speak with what a lot of everything were not good. couple good. we got we got what we have been. i know we are hoping darby. i'm on the chairman on. those people don't seem to be elect source both. when did you buy them every 2 weeks or so? because ring a dissolution will break. it's not that it's my speech, we bring it. but if we progress to mind you, nobody could say officially, this is word diligence it. and this me will cause problem nationwide. not even in my community, my sick or in my journals, it to be a very big problem. i'm a tacit, joins us live now from the nigerian capital and how there's been some more results . what are they or what's been happening? reasons, the last few hours is that several pos she is including
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a parties from their main opposition. pdp walked out of this collation center in protest, saying that they are not happy with the processing. there will not be part of it and their lives at the head of the electoral commission is compromised, but that didn't stop the few results that have been trickling him from being analysed. are we still a long way away before the final result is going to be in as many more states are still live to go. it's a long process because what happens is that the officials announced a few results from a certain area. then the party agent stand up and ask questions and queries some things. and then some will say my, my figures don't touch with what you've announced what's going on. and then the officials have now tell the people in the room how they got to this result. and also what's happening throughout the day that some states have been announcing their results independently. and this has caused some confusion because these results or they've been analysed, have not yet been verified by the electoral commission. and until they verify they are not official. and that's it,
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that's been caused some confusion in the countries today and how patient are people in the capsule. they're being interviewed her well, i couldn't say ceilings a mix. when he talks of ordinary people, those voted. they say they voted on saturday. they expect to buy now they have some indication of who's going to win the selection. that's not yet the case. and the newspapers perhaps give the mood more clearly. for example, this one says anxiety, and that is what a lot of people here seem to be feeling. and then this one says pretty much the same thing and it tries to go live to explain why they've been delays, including technical and logistical glitches. the people who walked out to the collision center think of the process has been compromised. but then those who do support the governing, apc potty came out and defended the commission, saying we support you. we would not want is the process to be stopped. we'll wait until the whole process is complete. so it is divided some think is taking too long of getting impatient are this are saying that the poses
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a fire and people must just wait and see what comes out next. but those did walk out well when went and said that they would not call them, they support has to take to the street. they just say they are walking out and protest. unwilling to support has done what the way forward will be in a few hours or a few days. okay, how many? thanks for the update that from a future. ah, there is actually a say janet yellen has made a surprise visit to cave. she met the ukrainian president for the most lensky and members of his cabinet. they discussed measures aimed at weakening rushes, economy and military including confiscating frozen russian assets yet, and also announced the transfer of the 1st rush of economy, consistence from washington. a
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chris with her, you know, with all the kremlin has said there are no conditions for peace and ukraine at the moment. presidential spokesman, demitra pasco says, however, that moscow is studying china's peace proposal attentively to announce the plan to coincide with the one year anniversary of the invasion earlier this week. and the proposal, beijing is calling for an end to western sanctions on russia and judging moscow and keith to hold peace, talks it once establishment of humanitarian corridors for civilians and step to ensure great can be safely exported from ukraine. it also warns against the use of nuclear weapons and attacks on nuclear power plants. earlier we spoke to konstantin
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cuschek, the deputy speaker of russia. senate, he said russia had always been open dialogue with keith and defended moscow's military campaign. as self defense, repeatedly demonstrated our readiness to review the distort while the president of ukraine. mister vilicki, if you, if special decree, prohibiting himself the president of ukraine and other authorities, ukraine to have any dwarf these russians. so the ball is definitely not on our side . russian troops, s one, now are defending the russian regions done. if the guns hear a song ends up are all here. each had 4 people recommended and each decided to join the russia. they are now integrated parts of russia. and this is where the russian troops are here for now. and if the stalks be ukraine may take
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place only in case they take into account. they are based on the real situation right now on the ground and not on any pre determined preconditions. as it is done by the great site, we want the ukrainian or armed forces to stop bomb being the see different villages of the region, which i now named because the great armed forces, since 2014 seems they could be taught in the great continue to try to restore the territorial integrity of ukraine by using military force. and now we may or may hear declarations from key. the key if, if you're planning military operations in order to, as they call it, de occupied crania, and the stopper, which is absolutely unacceptable, which is
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a direct military threat doors rush us national security and which cannot be accepted. we cannot before that by russia. so our military strike clear self defense, us ambassador to china says, bade jang, we'll have to be more honest about what happened 3 years ago. and we'll hand when the origin of the code 900 crisis. because burn says that's what needs to happen if washington and china are going to work together. if we're going to do something to strengthen the world health organization and we're gonna have to push china to be more active in it. and to, of course, be more honest about what happened 3 years ago, and were hon with the origin of the, of the covered 19 crisis offer on this. rosalind jordan joins us live from washington, d. c. these comments. they come off the back of a report from the us department of energy that they said that the cause of the
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pandemic was most likely to be a leak from a will hon laptop. more about that report? well, the story 1st was published in sunday's edition of the wall street journal, and it says that back in 2021. about half of the agencies that make up the national intelligence community. put together a report trying to figure out where cove it came from. now at the time the f b, i had said that it had moderate confidence that the virus probably came from one of the biological labs in wu han province. now there's been an addition to this report which happens to be classified. the department of energy added its own analysis, saying that it also believes that it was probably a leak from one of these biological labs. but it said it had low confidence. so that's to you as agency saying that it's low competence and medium competence that
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the virus came from a lab. however, they agree that this was not an intentional leak or an act of sabotage or a violent act against any other country. now, several other agencies, including the national intelligence council, stuck with what had been come, a popular notion that this was the result of natural transmission to other agencies that were involved in this classified report. still haven't figured out where cove it came from, but clearly, given that this report was written at the orders of president joe biden, back in 2021. this is something that certainly not just people at the white house are going to care about. but all reading members of congress care about this ongoing assessment of the origins of cove it as well. and we got the u. s. ambassador to china. there. he's been saying that the u. s. must push
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a beijing on this issue. what response have we seen from the chinese sofa? well, the chinese, as you might expect, are not happy. they were not happy with the wall street journal story. the spokesperson for the foreign ministry, mal name, came out on monday and told reporters that the united states was in beijing's view, trying to politicize a crisis that really was not anyone's fault. certainly has tried to cast aspersions on the chinese government's reputation. and she is calling on the u. s. to basically change its ways and except that this is not something that was done in a web, that this was not something done deliberately to harm other countries. and certainly be responsible for millions of deaths world wide. but that's not enough for people, certainly of not for members of congress. they are asking now that the white house
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brief them about this classified report and present whatever evidence that both the f b i and the department of energy have gathered to try to make what are admittedly not iron clad decisions or determinations about cove. its origins lind. jordan means latest that from washington. thanks very much. sarah had hair on out to sarah 20 is on from the sound of the war in del full. we need people who say their lives have only got worse and tackling the met of us just how will companies take advantage of the technology of the future? was old scores from the teenage high fly who's been making history at the civil championships? ah,
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ah. hello, we've got a little band of ray making his way across sarabia potentially. i even saw a few spots of rain here early on monday in doha. i think over the next couple of days can't rule out the possibility of a little bit of wet weather, but the wet weather is on the other side of the gulf, pushing across iran, easing over towards afghanistan, snow on the northern flank of that symbol of pictures he go on through wednesday, but notice cloud could be thick enough to produce some heavier burst of rain into central and western parts of saudi arabia. at that time, warm sunshine indo heart by then 28 degrees celsius and that warmth extends a fair bit further north. actually baghdad of around $29.00 degrees, even on cra at around 18 degrees, is around 10 degrees above the seasonal average. thanks to a southerly wind, which will lift temperatures in cairo to around 31 celsius, that brisk serrato pushing dust and sand into that eastern side of the mediterranean. warm enough in ben garza,
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some showers are just round northern parts of morocco. still few showers, just around coastal fringes of west africa. lagos could see a shower or 2 showers to longest spells of rain. they are lingering there, stuck there across central and southern parts of mozambie from what was tropical cyclone friday. so choose days, a wet day, where does days wet day and so thursday, awe inspiring stories from around the world. i remember we went back to the yeah, because we did not want human life capture. and it's the 1st one, this deal like that presentation of what i want. hope you remember me by groundbreaking food, from award winning filmmakers. witness on a jesse than latest news, as it still biding,
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arriving here. bled june more, her weapons, read more defense, financial support with detailed coverage, more than a decade. the civil war has killed all these many serious millions of bethel at the church here looking for safety from around the world, limiting their powers require amendments to the constitution. i'm the electron law with increasing number of government electric. neither of us will have to wait longer. hold on, lou. ah, again, you're watching out. his era has remind her of our top stories this hour. and israeli has died in the city of jericho and occupied west bank after
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a car after being shot in a car. this comes as israel deployed hundreds of additional soldiers to an area to the area after an escalation of violence on sunday. a magnitude 5.6 quake has shaken the city of malachi in eastern take. here, one person has been reported dead and param, manama, rush, and more buildings have been destroyed. and the u. k and e leaders have finalized a new deal phenomenon has post breaks at trading arrangements. european commission president asked on the line has been meeting you k prime in services to not to discuss the details of the northern on protocol. now called the winds up framework on let's take you live now to westminster wake and see which prime minister wishes to not giving a statement to parliament following that steel as westman in the i received uninsured, the free flow of trade within the u. k. we have secured a key negotiating objective, the introduction of
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a new green lane for goods destined for northern ireland, where they separate redway for those going to the easier within the green lay, burdensome customs bureaucracy will be scrapped and replaced with data sharing of ordinary existing commercial information routing checks and test will also be scrapped. the only tracks we bear is required to stop smugglers and criminals and our new green label. we opened to a broad comprehensive range of businesses across the united kingdom. i'm pleased to say we have also permanently protected terry free movement of all types of steel into northern ida and for goods going the other way from northern allan to great britain. we have scrapped export declarations, delivering finally completely unfettered trade. and mister speaker, the commitment to establish agree lame, is achieved by a legally binding amendment to the text of the treaty itself. this is fundamental
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far reaching change, and it permanently removed the border in the irish say, yes, mr. speak of perhaps the single most important area of trade between great britain and northern ireland is food. 3 quarters of the food in northern on supermarket comes from the rest of the you k. yet the protocol apply the same burdens on shipments from can ruin to long as between holly head and dublin, if it was implemented in full, we would see supermarket lori's bidding hundreds of certificates for every individual item. every single document check, supermarket, staples, like sausages, vandals, together, more delays, more cost, less choice. so today's agreement fixes all this with a new permanent, legally binding approach to food. we will expand the green lane to food retailers and not just supermarket that wholesalers and hospitality che,
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instead of hundreds of certificates. laurie's will make one simple digital declaration to confirm that goods will remain in northern ireland. a visual inspections will be caught from 100 percent now to just 5 percent. physical checks and tests will be scrapped unless we suspect, fraud, smuggling or disease. and so that will be no need for vets in warehouses. of course, to deliver this, we need to reassure you that food imports won't be taken into on. so we went off retailers to mark a small number of particularly high risk food products as not the you with a phase roll out of this requirement to give them the time to adjust. and more fundamentally, we have delivered a form of jewel regulation for food. the single biggest sector by far for east west trade and one of the most important in people's lives under the protocol retail
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food products made to u. k. standards could not be sold in northern on and today's agreement completely changes that this means the ban on british products like sausages entering northern ireland has now been scrapped get if it's available if it's available on supermarket shelves in great britain. if it's available on supermarket shelves in great britain than it will be available in supermarket shelves and northern are we will still need to make sure that goods moved into northern ireland douglas bringing in panama and paul diseases. that's clearly a common sense measure. never opposed by anyone to prevent diseases circulating within the longstanding single epidemiological zone on the island of island. i missed to speak about brings me to the treatment of puzzles. if the protocol was
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fully implemented, every single parcel traveling between great britain and northern autumn will be subject to full international customs. you'd have me today. you came from and sara, she cynic, addressing the you came holl amongst there. on the new northern ireland protocol, the new deal now called the wings of frame let, let me get more on this now from jen how he joins us live from westminster. just sort of like the fast rail test of this dale getting the response from politicians . the in the house of commons, especially from cynex, same party. well, the real test, of course, will come when the deal is put to a vote in parliament, which the government had initially been reluctant to do, but has now agreed will happen. not tonight. clearly they're going to give the parties the interested parties sufficient time to look over the deal to have their lawyers particularly democratic unionists. you know them out to have their lawyers look at the fine detail of what these provisions actually mean that we know of
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course, that the democratic unions are in particular worried about the role of the law as final arbitrary in any disputes. boldenall and being at the same time as a result of briggs in both part of the u. k. and part of the ease single market for goods. but this is the opportunity that the prime minister has to put the deal in its essence and detail to parliament. and to those interested parties, the d p sitting there, of course, also the e r g, the european research group, the group of hard line bricks it's supporting, empties on the right of his party, who say that they will support whatever the d u p. decide. but also worn about the implications of too much interference as part and parcel of this deal. so he's encouraging them, of course, with the details of what has been an enormously optimistic day after his meeting with us on july and the use chief executive,
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all smiles. it's not every day there's optimism and enthusiasm in relations between the u. k. the you, the certainly was today. she was quick to point out that this was a deal in principle. it needs the ascent of parliament now. it needs the ascent of the democratic unionists in northern ireland. richie should not doing his best to talk of the positives to them in parliament, but of course was somewhat days at least from that vote in parliament that will either see this deal through will not play the general leave that the moment many thanks for bringing places that from west now present fresh present, manual mach wrong, says france will close at some military bases in africa. instead, new academies will be set up to provide training and equipment, and will be co run by french and african forces. he made the comments in a speech ahead of a tour of african countries starting on wednesday. me look you say insidious news
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on said we need to start to act with profound humility, to the challenges in the african continent. it is an unprecedented situation in history, where we need to deal with numerous emerging security challenges and climate change challenges and democratic challenges with a young african population for which it is needed to often use solutions as for the future of african states, across bonds and nicholas hoc has lived for us in dot com and san a goal. because how significant is this announcement? well, he announced me that these military bases will change into academies and, and training centers is significant because the presence of french soldiers in certain countries of the region em thing about burkina faso were molly has spared protests on the streets. burkina faso recently we've seen tens of thousands of young people taken to the streets, protesting in front of the french embassy, asking for the french soldiers to leave. so there is a mood in the region,
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specifically in this a hell to see a change of dynamic. let's remember there's a french military base in every single french former colony, and for many young people, that's a problem. now joining me now is jubilee and jay, from the center for diplomatic and strategic studies in a car, senegal. i tell us now when we see these protests on the streets, we've seen protests, as i mentioned, burkina faso, molly, but also here in senegal, where his friendship, businesses have been attacked. why is there so much anti french sentiment and has macro speech appeased the sentiments? well, it's going to sound like a paradox, but as a matter of fact, the d colonization process of africa has never ended. so this old school rhetoric of being anti colonial, be anti french clerk. colonial power is still a rhetoric that is very easy to instrumental eyes any time the situation goes wrong . now what's happening is young people, the young generation,
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do one things to change, but the level of political analysis is rather old school. that's what's happening. so what is it that people want from france, the, the former colonial power, what type of change and relationship are people looking for here? well, it's pretty hard to tell, but i think the president, michael really pinpointed the, the part of the issue, which is they want to feel more respect from france. so in terms of communication style, for example, in terms of the new level of part of the did the new kinds of partnerships with france. this is exactly what prison law macro. hi, i did, i, i guess this is what people need to hear 1st in order to engage in a different type of rhetoric with france. and so in his speech, he talks about more equity and for a more and more humble. this in the approach of france towards many african countries, but is that just lip service? and we see what's happening on the ground. i mean french companies a have a major monopoly in certain areas of economy. we're seeing my current going to gabon am and 2 other former french colonies where there is
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a strong military presence on the ground. right. i mean, he said it very, very plain words. he's there to defend french interests and obviously is not there to solve african issues, but develop new partnerships that could be of mutual benefit. now what we see, what we saw there is a new language, a new communication style, and the d. i think that the overall attitude is really to set a new set, a new agenda between france and, and the african countries. is he forced to do so, given that there are so many new forces on the ground they're trying to step, been as, as french soldiers are stepping out now he alluded to one country without naming them, but he did talk about wagner calling them in a criminal mercenaries out there to protect dysfunctional regimes. when you make of that, i think, i think that he didn't really have a choice. but to mention the fact that their new actors, where the state actors, such as russia such as china and the economic front and the military from the
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united states, israel and other countries, a non state actors as well. so obviously what he expressed there might sound very proactive in terms of present repositioning france in africa. but as a matter of fact, it was more of a reaction towards the global dynamic of change on the international level. so what we heard there as is, is very interesting, but it has to do with responding to the dynamics in a global scale rather than actually taking new proactive steps towards a new type of cooperation with. i'd like to remind you that when prisoner macklin got to power a 2 months after you go to power his then chief of staff jimmy had given resign. and basically, one of the issues that he brought up at the time was that the budget defense of france with regard to, to military involvement in the world. so what we're seeing now might so new, but as a matter of fact, to me, at least it sounds like it's a, it's basically a new dress for all situation. she really enjoyed from the center for diplomatic
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and strategic study into car cycle. thank you very much. now, mccoy is about to embark on a, on a jer on a trip to gabon, where he's going to visit 1st. and then he'll go on to angola. the d r c is going to the central african countries in central africa. he usually comes to west africa, is really trying to set a new tone with people here in africa where you are you. there's a sense special specifically in west africa that the relationship between france and its former colonies needs to change. and that's what he's trying to address here. and back calling coverage of that trap of not chron throughout africa. thanks very much. nick had said i had hair on out his era or was born and a record breaking effort from this new zealand cricketer center is here with that story. ah
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ah ah, this time now for all the sport and his other very much laura well, pine sounds almost super sod. you have inspired their team to another victory in all messy kit, him back, combined to help be to their friendship title, rivals that must say to emily, cosmo. ah, moth the verses parents? benjamin? it's one of the fiestas bribery than club football. and the latest meeting had some extra edge b, with both sides battling for the french league title p. s. gene not been at the best of late, had the worst possible stocks,
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french international personnel can bend, bee had to be taken off the, the defender who missed the woke up due to injury ruptured his achilles tendon and will now require surgery. despite the blow p. s g regrouped, and they did so in style anyway. fighting message 3 against 3 yet. let's say about right. can it about right through the middle killian baptist scoring oper? leon on matthew says to put the league leaders one in the origin a few minutes later in back a returned the favor is cross it. so let our mazda the frenchman's cross, opening the door for missing to school, his 700 club gold, to make it to nil ice. the d. o, however fav their best for la, that's a messy throw. i strike in baptized bullying in a genuine goal of the season contender. he's done to finish off p. s g. 's. old
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rivals are the 3 needle. the final school is the result that puts passenger man 8 point to clear ahead of them off they, at the top of the table, give audio. they face not next. and then by munich, and the champions league type, which they trade $10.00 from the 1st lake, some more messy and back pretty much it would probably be needed to in that one. so home, a league from the zeros and at assess for barcelona have slipped up and they're pushed to win the spanish league title. they were beaten one now bear on marianne. it's lost her coming to stays after barza for enough talk of your police by manchester. united is the 1st time barcelona have ever been beaten by omnia job is that team is still lead the time to waste. the 7 points clear of re i'm into cane williamson that has become new zealand, leading run score and test cricket williams in that past record previously held by ross taylor on his way to a sentry. it gets rid of seems to have a chance of victory on day 5 in the well england need 210 more runs to win with 9
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wickets in hand. well that's how do i. so it is an honor, you know, look at that list and that model all of those players, you know, over the years with watching from a fog growing up for applying alongside number them as well. so yeah, like i say it's not a psych his point, but you're special to to be amongst that company presents cameron neu, have beaten walls, number 2 cars to win the rio open neu, full back up from a sit down to beat the 19 year old, defending champion and the final, the wind comes just days after you ran 12th in the world. so i was kind of in the final of the argentina open. one of the rising saw over the lennox is already looking forward to defending his elliptic title next year. on the plans is
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a has just broken the pull both world record for the 6th time in his career. the swedish athletes will compete at the war championships later this year and then turn his attention the 2024. how this game going into the lympics. i'm going to be the favorite, so you know that it is my title to defend, so i'm going to try to go in there defendant for sure. and it's a, it's a very tough event. it's a very tough and it's very, very technical. and i think that's why you've seen now you've never seen buddy when twice in a row since richard's way back in the fifty's. i know that there's always going to be guys that come and go that are german great that you know, have their have there on time and it is great to have good competition and get pushed in that way. but i'm very self motivated. i think maybe in the beginning when i 1st broken the record, it was a little bit more pressure because then you feel like you have to almost prove it to yourself that you're worthy of being the old record older. and you want to make sure that you prove that, but i think i've proved a lot in the past 2 years to where i don't really have to prove anything to anybody
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else anymore. there's a lot more things that i want to prove to myself. and there's a lot more than i want to do in the sport, but as far as the way everybody else proceeds me as an admin and what they want me to do, it doesn't, it doesn't bother me or where me too much. and some snow avoiding history has been made by british teenager 16 older mia brooks that have become the youngest to ever world champion. she won the women's at southside golden, georgia brooks. it did it by pulling off what's called a 14 full 40 double grab. that's when a snowboard it takes off backwards and rotates 4 times and move that had never been done in competition before i live in so often in my life like i'm like, i can't even speak of it. oh yeah, i was at the top and my coach is just like, you know, like if you want to win those just try the 14, you know,
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i tried 12 and practice and i came round in almost white 14 and i knew as possible in this job i tried it once before an absolute park, but yeah, this is the 1st time i've stopped it, so i'm super happy and that is, but for me, i'll have more for you later on, but for now it's back to laura. thanks so much. she's doing yawn. i'm so good. amazing. all right, one of the largest climate change experiments on the planet is underway in the us state of minnesota. research is that have been simulating global warming and recording the results. the goal is to understand how it will affect the nature and wildlife. john engine has the details. deep in northern minnesota is snow covered chippewa national forest. there is a kind of time machine. stephen sebastian's job is to peer into the future. it really is a world class research facility for understanding the effects of what we expect to
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happen in the future. within the forest lies a plot of government land called the marcell experimental forest, where the us forest service in oregon national laboratories have built 10 silo like structures inside researchers raise the temperature from 0 to 9 degrees celsius to simulate different levels of global warming. half the chambers also add varying levels of carbon monoxide to mimic expected future increases of the greenhouse gas from human activity. then they watch what happens. it's not encouraging. the trees are not doing as well as they're doing in the on woman closures. some of are actually dying from the conditions that are too harsh to harsh for those trees to continue to grow. that's not as bad for the trees. minnesota lies at the southern end of a peat belt that stretches into the arctic its frozen cover trapping 12000 years and plant build ups into the glaciers of melted. p is this like spongy, awesome soil substance. bat can be thousands of years old. slowly,
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slowly decomposing, or as we think about like climate change, basically storing carbon, storing that carbon is an important job, is ground is covered in p plant material that goes down for meters. pete covers about 3 percent of the world's land surface, but it stores a 3rd to half of the soil carbon in the world. so as temperatures go up, it goes from being a store of carbon to release or that just makes the world hotter faster. inside the enclosures, it's already happening. we are seeing essentially the worst case scenario. we're seeing what we expected, but it's real. you do a little bit of warming and it starts to destabilize the system. the experiments suggest that if global temperatures rise just a few degrees more enough to begin melting the world's pete lands decomposing, pete could eventually release more greenhouse gases than they store accelerating
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climate change. in setting off a vicious cycle of global warming. john henderson, al jazeera, the marcell, experimental forest in minnesota. and that's it from me, laura kyle, for this news on the balkan will be with you in just a moment from london. ah. join the debate. we know that the secretary, she was an hour by the government unstained by the government. today they are to government africa. how security is also global. help security on an online at your
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voice. there is no right to defense. there is no right to protest. we can't just keep relying on aid, there has to be some work towards a sustainable economy. at the end of the day, it is ordinary objects that are paying the price. this green anal dedira truck bought the law will. the law win with neither side, willing to negotiate is the ukraine war becoming a forever war? is america's global leadership increasingly fragile? what will us politics look like? as we had to the presidential election of 2024, the quizzical look us politics, the bottom line, march bono jesse of devastation and its aftermath. we have more on our continuing coverage of the earthquake disaster in turkey and syria goes matthew al jazeera investigations goes, undercover infiltrating. criminal met ways to reveal how dirty cache is being turned into pure gold, 20 years on from the start of the iraq war. we examined how the past 2 decades have
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shaped the country and the major challenges in fronting future generations documentary within spot. whitney springs world issues into focus through compelling human stories, stars gather for the 95th oscars, celebrating the best films from hollywood and around the world. march on up to sierra. ah, the brakes and border deal for you. k. any you agree? your new trading arrangements for nolan islands. ah.
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