tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera March 29, 2023 12:00am-1:01am AST
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i went to southern parts of wy, at that stage, moving 3 per, we could do some rain here. we'll see some wet weather, grassy started to push its way into south australia as well at rainbow, grassy make his way towards new data, but not too bad for new zealand. over the next couple of days, a good deal of autumn sunshine coming through temperatures into the mid upper teens . here some of the temperature there in to were to pass a little bit of rain is eastern parts of japan, warm and dry for northern parts of china. but to the south is very wet. ah, but there are some of the media stories, a critical look at the global news media spread on al jazeera government shut off access to social media. ah ah,
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hello, i'm the barca. this is the audio here and use our life london coming up. flashes break out at rally. he's across france on the 10th day of action against president microns unpopular pension reforms. at least 40 people die in a fire at a migrant detention center in a mexican border facility said to be caused by a process over d, potations natural police release body can video of officers confronting the shooter who killed 3 children and 3 adults in the latest us school attack and they were only allowed back last year, but tourists are already threatening the marine life of the bay made famous in the film, the beach. and i'm son hamilton. i love the latest sports news, including a major statement by the international olympic committee. have recommended that russian and better russian assay should be allowed to compete as international
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events under neutral flag. ah, welcome to the news. our tens of thousands of people are most across france and another day of strikes and protests over deeply unpopular pension reforms. police have ramped up security and deployed 13000 officers, nearly half of them in paris. these were the scenes earlier than the french capital, where there was violence between for testers and security forces. unions and workers are angry at the president for raising the legal retirement age from $62.00 to $64.00 without a vote in parliament. it's become the biggest crisis of emanuel macros. second term, natasha butler reports from paris. some protesters burned bins and clashed with police in paris during a demonstration that was otherwise peaceful. thousands of students and public sector workers once again in the st. angry with french president emmanuel macros,
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pension reform. it is government's decision to force it through parliament by decree. as critical down among maybe the government is finally starting to hear that many french people are against this reform and against makram for not listening. as the reform raises the retirement age from 62 to 64, which we don't want enforcing it to parliament prince did, there is no more democracy in france. protests as want the government to scrap the reform for my classes. the changes are necessary to sustain the countries pension system for future generations. this nationwide strikes is the beginning of the year until now with the deadline between the trade unions are needed. and the french government will end. when a francis main trade union leaders says it's time to mediation, he form it when they need to suspend raising the retirement age to 60. 0,
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thanks. what angus people most want then over the next month or so, we should appoint mediators, what so everyone can say what they want it to a plan swiftly rejected by the government or post by the director more. we can talk to each other directly. the president has already said is ready to receive the unions once the constitutional courts approved and new lo, mycroft had signed the building to lou within weeks reforming the pension system was one of his campaign pharmacies. but the changes have come at a cost as angry against them is subsiding. natasha butler, don't you sarah harris? thank i will join now via skype by associate professor gabriel latan 0 from the university of paris who's been taking part in the process. welcome to the news hours, so they seem to be to paris is a real tale of 2 cities of the moment, paris by day, where protests have been largely peaceful in paris by nights. where let's say some of the more hall core elements emerge. what's your sense of firstly, who the protest as are and where this is all going?
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i think it's a good idea to have a, you know, a sense of the number of people involved. since january there have been 10 massive, you know, days of strike and, and demonstrations have been a success so far. as you said, tens of thousands earlier, it's closer to hundreds in truth. and we do have a couple 1000 people who are there to disturb, to hope that you know, they'll make the news by, you know, destroy mcdonalds and the like. that is an issue of course. but what, what i think is the real news is that for such a sustainable, a movement to exist, you needs lots and lots of people to demonstrate time and time again as we have yet again today. so yeah, you do have both, you're correct and saying that you do have violence elements and people who are not . but the big news is that a lot of people are, you know, participating in politics. and despite the nature of the process, nevertheless, micron seems to be sticking to his gun. that doesn't mean when it comes to passing changes, though, that would have scarcely raised an eyebrow,
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perhaps in other cities like london or berlin. why these pension reform such a hot topic in france given the fact that the population, the older population continues to grow? yeah, look i, i, i get it balancing budgets is not something that you can just do way magically. it is something you have to, to pay attention to the look we've been demonstrating for so long. and it doesn't feel like such a single issue movement. we care about the pension issue because in truth, in france, we have an unemployment problem for people past their past 60. once or 60, it's really hard to find a job, an employment for a 6 year old and up is $35.00 is 65 percent actually truth. so that's, that's the 1st issue. and also we feel like we've been contributing, we've done our part, inflation is, you know, complicated. 15 percent. politics is all about doing the right thing at the right time. this is, this is a horrible time. and this is yet again, a reform that will distribute wealth in a way that doesn't feel fair to fringe bull. who, as you know,
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we care about the quality, as you say that i mean how much of this is still about pensions and how much of this is about the perceived punt personality of a manual micron. and the way the changes came about choosing a constitutional measure rather than an important photon parliaments. again this through yet having the chance to speak to an international audience. i would like to be helpful in understanding what's happening and not just saying how i feel about my present. of course. look, it's really difficult to manage a country when you have 3 political teams of similar size. the political system is made so that you have a majority, 50 percent plus one. and then you can do something. the current situation in frances that you have nationalists with minute, then you have centrists with him under michael. and then you have, you know, the left wing, oh, you know, social struggles and, and you just cannot find 50 percent. the method that the president has employed over the past few weeks is one of not paying attention to the situation. i myself, i have voted for him during the presidential action because i did not want aches
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and a phobic far right leader to win. but i did so knowing that he would not exactly redistribute wealth in a way that i would see fit. now i don't think he cares. he was supported by many people like i and he just goes on thinking that he's doing the right thing and i think that's a mistake was politics is all about, you know, balancing power. okay, gabriel, it's answer associate professor many thanks for joining us here. thanks for having now. at least 40 people, most of the migrants from guatemala and honduras have been killed after fire swept through a detention center in mexico. the president says the blaze appears to have broken out when migrants and asylum seekers set fire to mattresses after discovering they were being to ported. it happened in the northern city of seo that horace near the border with the united states. john holman reports calling with ambulances. they came to light from in the fire, at
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a migration detention facility in the mexican border city of what is had already claimed dozens, many of them guatemalans, some venezuelans, o desperate relatives had nothing to do but moon. wait for news. okay, your mother said, now you can have a relative die and they don't tell you he's dead. went so nothing. immediately, there were questions. chiefly, how did the 5 star and his early morning press conference, mexico's president, arrived with dances. it was the migrants themselves, he said that a storm to will give it this had to do with a protest that they started. when they found out they will be deported. they put mattresses of the shelters, dorsey, and set fire to them. they didn't think it would cause as terrible tragic protests have happened before in mexico state migration centers. those have stepped through the doors often describe the most over crowded prisons, but this time round,
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there were more questions. how did the authorities allow this to happen to those under their care? dangly? venezuela? migrant says she was outside when it happened. oh no, not that. i've been waiting for their father since one piano told me they were going to hand him over to me. then at 10 pm, we started to see smoke billowing from everywhere. everybody ran away, but they left the men locked in. everybody was removed from the area, but they left the men locked in. they never when the door shoot at what is where the detention center is. located has become a pressure cooker in recent months with large numbers of migrants and asylum seekers staying there before a push to get to the us shelter heads tonight to vis of accused authorities of criminalizing them on monday night, the pressure cooker blew over. now, amid the grief the inquest will begin. john home and i'll just eat a mexico city. there were less than reduce ari soya who's a u. s. board of
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a search for human rights once she joins me now from mexico city. welcome to the news house. so there are reports of venezuela, migraines, colombians on germans among the dead. yes. another example of the dangers awaiting many people hoping to make it to the united states. a vine mexico. yeah, thank you so much for having me. and i don't think danger. need wait. people migrating, i think, and injuries are the direct result of the trends. policy is right carried out by us in mexico. i focus on criminalizing migrants and phone seekers instead of legal process. so we, we, we may know the nationality of some of the people that have died in this incidents . but who are these people? what are their backgrounds? will they, for instance, of officially requested asylum in the us? where was that process pending? is it possible that some of the victims may have eventually been allowed to settle in the united states? yeah,
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i think it's quite likely that the number of those individuals would have been allowed to resettle the united states. and certainly a number of the injured are reported being processed in to the united states. now i think as we speak but, but yeah, folks are being government persecution, torture all kinds of insecurity and violence, sometimes climate change related disasters. you know, it's important to remember that a lot of these circumstances, a lot of the country, a lot of the instability that people are fleeing are related to us involvement in their government and politics over the years. and us emissions re polluting the environment. and so us has a responsibility to broaden this protection system to include these folks. but anyways, the, or at the border right now there's, there's a sort of, there's an application that's not functioning very well and people are being forced to wait in mexico. people are also being expelled to mexico by the united states,
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despite the fact that the u. s. is well aware of the dangers that away. folks on the other side are going to the mexican president, manuel up as overdue, or the fire was started by the markets themselves out. they barricaded themselves into a part of the vicinity. what more do we know about life insides these facilities? yeah, so we have documented at human rights watch, the abusive conditions are going the facilities and we understand that the migrants were protesting. poor conditions there, there were protesting, lack of water, hadn't given any water leak video that i've just seen shows that show appears to show immigration official meeting locked inside of the fireplace on so completely inexcusable. also, those doors are, they don't have an easy release. there's no electronic release that need the key and, and we know that there are physical abuse inside the tension. facilities are often overcrowded. we understand that that particular attention facility is, you know,
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in the mexican government, right? so that they're called shelters, they call them shelters, but they are detention facilities. people are locked up and they were overcrowded in that particular room. and what legal responsibility did to the mexico authorities themselves have over people whose eventually of course, is to get to the united states. yeah, i mean, everyone has the right to seek asylum. everyone has the right to be the country, leave their country. the mexican government has a legal obligation, especially when it's depriving people of their, of their liberty. i mean, 1st of all, they should have been in that detention facility in the 1st place. migrant should not be detained. they had not committed a crime. they had committed an administrative offense and they should never have been deprived of their liberty to begin with. right. and also we know at the border there that immigration authority and mexican immigration authorities have been involved in handing people over to cartels for nothing. so yeah, they have
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a legal authority, i think, to respect their right to life, which they haven't done right. people are not dead. the rights of family reunification, the right to seek asylum, the right to access medic, medical care and education, which, you know, people migrants are often deprived of and are right. and the, you know, the people were about to be deported but, but not actually deported in the fact that they have some kind of legal procedure. no, maxine government routine, the expels people with no legal procedure due process whatsoever. so that's, you know, another relation of their very important, right? yeah. truly desperate situation for so many people already saw from human rights watch. many thanks for joining us. thank you. coming up on this news hour from london. oh, the skepticism in israel over benjamin netanyahu, pulling his judicial overhaul as government and opposition. parties begin talks and a potential compromise. bringing a refugee's question of repatriation plans, mammals, military leaders as a cracked out on opposition in the country,
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intensifies at his school. the spring box might be the kings of rugby, but we hear from a man who believes all the countries in africa can also play a major role. ah, police in the u. s. say the person who opened fire in a school in nashville on monday, legally bought 7 firearms in recent years. 28 year old audrey hale, a former student to the school who was born female, but identified as male, killed, 3 children, and 3 adults in the attack. john henry ripples, audrey hale slowly pulls into the parking lot of covenant school. the shooter fires through a locked glass door to gain entry in combat gear armed with one assault rifle and toting, another hail wanders the halls of the christian school looking for victims. it's a tale of horror told through the surveillance footage released by nashville police
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officers badge cameras capture the response. police get the call it 1013 shots fired. they're learning the lessons of the 2022. you've all the texas school shooting where police wasted, precious minutes is a gunman, fired on children. let go. these officers act fast. ah, no boy, room by room is fire. alarm sound off the officers clear the 1st floor. a. they rush toward the sound of gunfire. and close it was now with the attacker, a former student down soon to be declared dead. it's over at 10, 27 am. 14 minutes after police received the call in that time hail his gun down 39 year old students in 3 staffers in their sixties police. a hail had amassed
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an arsenal. we determine that our grade, bald 7 on from 5 different local gun stores here legally to will result weapons. president joe biden who fought for a federal assault weapons ban that congress passed in 1994, only to watch it expire 10 years later. once again, calls for another ban of the weapons, hail used to kill resonation we all these families were in our prayers. we owe them action. you know, we had to do more to stuff is convolt repeat, two's part ripping apart the soul of this nation. protect our children, so they learn how to read right duck cover class with there is almost no chance of passing another ban. this is the 2021 christmas card picture of the congressmen who represents the nashville district where it all happened. andy ogles, posing with his family bearing assault weapons, a portrait of intransigence,
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and the effort to change gun laws in america. john henderson, l g 0, o, and b. c. news is wendy woolfolk has more from nashville. there's an all too familiar scene as the memorial is growing outside covenant school and presbyterian church campus. it's a small community of about $200.00 students losing 6 of their own, including the pastors daughter and the head of school. over night police releasing theory surveillance video showing the suspect shoot through a glass door to get into the elementary school. and then, walking through the hallways, stalking offices, armed with 2 assault style weapons and a pistol responding officers confronted and killed. audrey hale, just minutes after arriving on scene investigator say, the 28 year old transgender person was
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a former covenant student and resentment for having to attend may have played a role in what she did here. they have found a detailed manifesto and maps as well as other evidence at her home, just a few miles from here. we're hoping to get more details about the motive as the investigation continues to day. that while 6 families plan funerals and an entire community try to cope with what happened here. wendy woolfolk, n b, c, news, nashville. in other news, israel's rival political factions have held a 1st round of talks after the government delight plans to overhaul the judiciary. on monday, prime minister benjamin netanyahu put a pause in the controversial mood following the biggest protests in israel history . smaller demonstrations were held on tuesday, including a march in tel aviv. netanyahu says delay the judicial overhaul will allow for discussions with the opposition to avoid what he called a civil war opponent say,
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the proposed changes will give the governing coalition unchecked authority. we won't stop and tell what we said in the initial discussion until late stop it. not pause, but actually stop the legislation and have conversations under good faith. i don't believe because i with bernard smith in television has more negotiations. so those talks started on tuesday evening, they've ended now and they've said they're going to go sit back around the table tomorrow. you've got the oppositional one side, made up of representatives from the iowa pete's party and ben guns his party. they were the prime minister in defense minister in the gulf before benjamin netanyahu came back into power last year. and then you've got representatives from benjamin netanyahu. le, could party. now how those 2 sides are going to come together and reach some sort
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of compromise is going to be very challenging because they've got such entrenched, entrenched views. one side wants to then to it. one side wants the bill to go through parliament now appeal party. they came out of the meeting on this evening tuesday evening and they said one thing they want is they want the bill to be completely withdrawn from parliament at the moment. it's still making the process through parliament is still being tabled is it can still be debated and it could at the stroke of a pen the next day become law. so they want it out upon withdrawn from parliament completely. there's no indication that he's going to happen, but will be one of the talks in one of the demands in the talks as they continue on wednesday, the united states president joe biden's address the political turmoil and israel. these urge prime minister benjamin netanyahu to compromise like many a that they get this straight can not
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continued on. i go to made that clear hopefully by minister will acting with israel's far right. national security minister mom been given agree to delaying the judicial overhauled in exchange for netanyahu promising to create a new national guard. the last government launched a national guard in june 2022 under the israeli border. police force it's aim was to provide rapid response in emergencies and confront security threats, but been given who's previously been convicted of inciting racism and supporting a terrorist organization. once a new civil national guard directly under his control, he's threatened to vote down the government's budget if he doesn't include funding for it. it's already raised in the west bank by the national guard and other security forces have become increasingly deadly since the start of the year with at
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least $91.00 palestinians killed. let's bring in wrong compasses, journalists for the jewish telegraphic agency joins me now from washington, dc. welcome to the program. so let's start by asking you about this new national god. some of called it a militia for been given. this is quite a compromise. moved by benjamin netanyahu was yeah, it is. he said he's giving it to one of the key demands that ha, that is one of the key fantasies. i think that it may have been we've been fears had for a while up. but they, we don't even know what it looks like yet. all that's been, all that we've seen is a one sentence statement saying that somewhere sometime early next month, i think on april, the 2nd the security cabinet will consider this issue whether it's actually approved by the security cabinet once it's approved. what it looks like because they would write the legislation then it would go to the can asset that has all yet to be determined. and, and antonio has in the past put out carrots to people with in his coalition to
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extremists and then withdrawn them. but on the other hand, more recently he's actually, you know, given them the carrots, so we don't, we don't know yet what it's going to look like. okay, well let's talk more about carrots. so we've got of course netanyahu announcing a delayed as controversial reforms. negotiations apparently already started with the opposition to work out exactly what to do next. yet still, however, process show absolutely no sign of dying down. what's your sense of where these negotiations are going? well, i think, you know, one thing that netanyahu might be looking out for it by agreeing to this delay of a month is a hope that perhaps the, the, the protests will die down. and then they won't pick up steam again after a month that you know, the only people who will be protesting will be people who are further to the left. and there won't be as much into identification with them among israelis. i think that might, unless there is real progress in these negotiations and they do come up with compromises or they, you know, or even come up with a constitution. who knows?
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i don't think that's the case. i think that the sticks are too high for the protesters have come out. and if the, if there's no progress there the, the protests will resume. as you said, they're not even dying down. now you've got that least one faction among the protestors who said they just don't believe the prime minister among the opposition . as your reporter said, yet you're lupita has his conditions for coming into the negotiations as another opposition leader of your lieberman, who's not even ready to negotiate. when it comes to the protest themselves, this crisis has been a real politicizing. let's cool even possibly a radical housing moment for contingent of a really is reading society that have been out on the streets of television to defend israel's liberal democracy. i've just netanyahu possibly put that genie back in the bottle after all this i, he, i say i don't think he can. i think that the, you know, the, the, the, this is a, this has been such a show of force among the opposition. it's like, you know, the effect of coming together and realizing that there are more people who are like you who think this way. but in this case it's like there are hundreds of thousands
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who are like you who think this way. i think he hopes to put it back in the bottle . he's keep keeps on talking as if he can put it back in the bottle. on the one hand, he says there are patriots among the protesters. on the other hand, he said like in the same speech, he, that they're bought and paid for that this is a, you know, somehow grass tops instead of a grassroots movement. if he doesn't see this is a grass roots movement. i don't the key. he's grasping it yet and until he does grasp lee, the breadth of the opposition to his the proposed performs. he's not going to even think about putting the genie back into the bottom. all right, wrong come pass from the jewish telegraphic agency. many thanks for joining us. thank you. ok, there's still lots all to come this our independence and the economy is collins. new 1st minister lays out his priorities recently in quarantine facility to fashion week venue. shanghai shows it's back in business, less than a year after crippling cove lockdown. and it's also stunning pass gives dallas the
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much needed boost basketball action. ah hello, it is looking cold if not so wintry across parts of eastern you have a fair amount of cloud there all the way from to care. pushing up across the black sea right up towards the baltics drying fi, be some pleasant spring sunshine into central parts, and then we got wet and windy weather streaming in from the atlantic. but at least those winds are coming in from a savvy direction, so it will be mild, 14 celsius in london, a 20 there in paris. best in the sunshine, down towards the south. west bit touchy 26 in madrid. on wednesday off, they noticed a little bit of wintry weather just around the alps. could be stabilized the slopes there where to where the coming in, across the low countries,
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germany pushing back down towards austria as we go on through our thursday. that wet weather continuing to just spill him from the atlantic. further east that went to have a starting to push little further east was just 6 celsius there for moscow and also into work. he brought us guys a place to say, come back into that southeast corner with snow slowly but surely pulling away from to care all the parts of africa on the other had lottie far to drive. a cool wind blowing though, across the far north of egypt, northern parts of libya as well. one or 2 shower, scraping, coastal fringes west africa. ah, the around 3 quarters of sub saharan african cultural heritage is on display in western museums. but it didn't happen overnight. we were rob cover time. the 1st episode reveals how european colonization removed tens of thousands of artifacts
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and the appeal struggle to reclaim restitution. africa stolen on episode one blunder. oh, now jazeera, it's a $1000000000.00 money, no drink operation for coal. marsha is bigger than the company with financial institutions, regulators and governments complicit about with it. right. i've described that in a 4 part series. al jazeera investigative unit goes on to cover in southern africa, pittsburgh. we can fill 90 percent of the government once it's refined. it's practically brand new. good part one on al jazeera. ah
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ah, welcome back everyone to the top stories here and al jazeera, there being more clashes as tens of thousands of people marched across france and in another day of strikes and protests of it deeply unpopular pension reforms demonstrate as angry at president minute my chrome for raising the legal retirement age from 62 to 64 without a vote. parliament. a lease of 40 people have been killed in the mexican city of sierra flores after fire swept through a migration detention center. 28 of those killed wood guatemalan. mexico's peasant says the blaze broke out when migrants and asylum seekers set fire to mattresses, discovering they were being depleted and police the united states police party comforted, showing the moment officers confronted a shooter who killed 3 children. and 3 adults in a christian school in nashville on monday, they say the attack a legally bullet 7,
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firearms, recent years. 2 women have been killed in a knife attack on a muslim centre in the portuguese capital. lisbon, at least one other person is being treated for stab wounds. police have shot and arrested. the alleged attack him after he ignored their warnings and advance on officers. local media says he's an afghan national and his victims with stuff at the center. prime minister antonia costa says all evidence indicates it was an isolated act. though a day after being sworn in as scottish national party leader homes, a use f as been formerly elected as scotlands. first minister, he'll lead the semi autonomous parliament following the shot resignation of his predecessor nicholas sturgeon last month. but as the dean barber reports from the parliament's home in edinburgh, the asam piece still appears to have a long way to go to achieve its aim of full independence from the united kingdom. he's got the backing of the scottish parliament, that's the easy part. but as hums,
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a usage settles in his scotlands 1st minister, selling his vision for the nation may be tougher at all. i've always believed that leadership is about running towards and embracing challenges. rather than shying away from them, we might not be able to achieve everything we want all the time and all at once. but every day in office as an opportunity to make things a bit better than they were yesterday, ah, just down the road from parliament, john carlo de soto runs a fudge making business with his brother. the firms been in the family for 3 generations. john carlo would rather scotland stay in the family known as the united kingdom. and he wants the scottish government to focus on countering the hom . done by brick, sits. i'm trying to make it easier for people even just to come over like make it easier for businesses and it should be like life factions on things like turning quote, goods and stuff, other businesses i really suffer from these things. yusef said he's going to
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concentrate on things like improving charles care and public health services. this couple are expecting their 3rd child support is with the scottish national party. they agree, independence can weights hero of a western star scene or their same peek yet about as independence. and you know, they're let another thing slates. i think maybe if we get other things and please fast then mc, emboldened and for independence, step away from picturesque parts of the capital like this. and you'll get an idea of the challenges facing hums the uses. for example, a recent survey showed 4 percent of scottish households use the food bank in the year to march 2022. that's more than anywhere else in britain. apart from northern england. not surprising then that the 1st minister has said the cost of living crisis is his top priority. but even here in working class, leave, some people say independence should not be relegated to the bottom of the pile. i chapter their class chapter, the cur. yes. nicholas urging him,
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i've never done business by retaining again. as i hang on his stops. as yusef says he'll need to convince many more people. independence is a good idea. some may be beyond convincing. i'm happy the any. and then i just professional liason. of course nobody's predicting scotland will break away any time soon, but the government hopes improving the economy could prepare the ground for another go at a referendum. the d barbara al jazeera edinburgh. a danish own oil tanker is missing in the gulf of guinea of the west african coast after being boarded by pirates on saturday. the ship was attacked while at anchor 250 kilometers off point not why in the republic of congo region. the torres for pirate activity, all communication channels with the oil and chemical tank come on just a reformer. our down for the 16 man crew are all reported to have taken refuge in a specially designed safe room on board. m 23 fighters. if we take in
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a town in eastern democratic republic of congo, contradicting early reports that they'd withdrawn, the arm group had agreed to pull out of 4 different towns and villages last week on condition that government forces didn't return to the area. fighting has displaced more than 800000 people in the past year. m. 23 is widely understood to be backed by neighboring bewanda, which denies supporting the grief. malcolm webb has more from soccer and eastern d r. c. we've heard multiple reports has been fighting around town and west, so in the last 24 hours. now this follows a series of withdrawal when 33 said that withdrew from about 4 different towns and villages last week, including some villages just near where we are now. up in the hills around the town of saw k. now this is meant to be part of a peace processes involve regional government. one of $23.00 is condition
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for withdrawing, that they would only hand over to the regional east african forces not to congress . the governor villages run into moved in way and 23 moves out, but the burned into the small in number. they're not well resort. been reported by multiple residents in these areas. the m $23.00 still actually controlled the roadblocks in the area and also the group which occupies the hill much of the time . and congos army is accused of supporting their congress denies it. the fighters from those groups have moved back in to some of these areas now in more so further to the north where they've been fighting within the last 24 hours when i'm 23 pulled out. last week resident told us that the armed groups came back in 23. as for them, re take him to town. in a new report,
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amnesty international as accuse western nations have double standards when it comes to human rights and universal values. the report says that in 2022 countries was swift to condemn russia's invasion of ukraine imposed sanctions on the kremlin. an open board is refugees. the u. s. for example, welcomes ukrainians, but expelled more than $25000.00 haitian refugees and the policies and practices the rights group says are rooted in racism. the report says responses to arm conflicts in ethiopia, yemen, israel and the occupied palestinian territory were inadequate and a field, impunity and instability. amnesty also warms that freedom of expression is under threat as governments crackdown on descent, highlighting china, egypt, iran and saudi arabia for ignoring criticism of their human rights records. it is a robustness of the response to the russian aggression against the ukrainian people that highlight the poverty and weakness of the response to other crises.
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solidarity is owed to the ukrainian people, but it is also owed to the people of palestine to the people of a retreat to the people of me and mom. and that did not happen in 2022. an amnesty also says the crackdown, an opposition to mere mas military rule has intensified. it accuses the army of war crimes for killing hundreds of civilians and, and ground attacks is against this backdrop after the pilot project is aiming to repatriate of thousands of under, sorry, hundreds of thousands overhang of muslims who fled a violent crack down for means army in 2017 or that a 1000000 of them now live in the world's largest refugee camp in bangladesh and is tanveer chandry reports from cox's bazaar talks on repatriation a being met with skepticism still far from their dreams of returning home. more
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than a 1000000 refugees are stuck in the hills of cocks. bizarre mohammed, bella lost everything when he left me and mar, and he doesn't believe it's military leaders are serious about helping people like came to return. who donated as it was, they have no real intention to take us. it's all a show. were appealing to the international community for justice. if justice prevails, only then will we go back to previous attempts to repatriate refugees. since 2017 have failed and talks to attempt another have been suspended since the me on mar, military staged a coup in 2021. many refugees believe the political situation in man mar is too volatile for them to go back. now. la chandeliers, a little under looking we faced many difficulties yet, like limited rations on essential food items, lack of proper medical care, et cetera. so we do want to go back, but only when there is peace ro, yes, in is
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a ro hang a journalist who documents events in this camp. there are so many challenges we office in in the cable, right? no like dal is lack of you guys in there's like off like the old days are no absolute is and president is for that who justice weapon so all of that he would use a want to go back home and with the dignified dumb sippy and security me on martyr attends the sole authority to verify those who can return an issue, identity cards to them, based on evidence of past residence, rowing i do not have citizenship in their home country, me and mar, and also, and recognize as indigenous their only issued with so called national verification cod identifying them as bengali muslims. but most rowing, he left all their possessions behind or their homes were burned down or looted. so that cannot produce such proof of former residents and rights groups say, myanmar has done little to support writing of citizenship to instill confidence in
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those wanting to return home. trying to reach audrey al jazeera, cox's bazaar, the political party, your for me and my leader ng. some sushi has ceased to exist after being dissolved by the election commission. the national league for democracy party won elections in 199020152020, but was removed from power. in february 2021 military coup fell to register and a strict new electoral laws brought in by the ruling jumper. and as to announce the as yet unchangeable election as a sham. so she has been detained since the coo and is serving a 33 year jail sentence. united states aircraft carrier has arrived in south korea a day after north korea, 5 to short range ballistic missiles of his east coast nuclear power. you as us nimitz is one of the world's largest warships. and as part of joint drills with south korea in international waters brought my bride, went on board the ship in bu san in the seas to the south of the korean peninsula.
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the u. s. aircraft carrier nymph, lot choose it. warplanes, enjoy tax the sizes with the south korean navy. it's part of annual drills that are being scaled up again this year following a 6 year love and come that made escalating tensions with north korea. calling in to the south korean port of booth on the show of force is intended to demonstrate america's commitment to its allies. the u. s. and republic of korea alliance as prepared to adapt to new challenges and threats to ensure the security of future generations of koreans and americans. large scale air drills have been held using the latest fighter jets, as well as nuclear capable bombers from the u. s. air force, live fire exercises have been showing off the combined fire power of the allies armor and artillery. such drills in rage, north korea,
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which says they could provide a cover to launch an attack. some people might dabble with the idea of a preemptive attack or a strike against north korea, but it's, it's realistically impossible. and even more so with nuclear weapons, the north has been showing it sango with a range of missile launches from the heaviest and latest intercontinental ballistic missiles capable of reaching the mainland united states to small the short range, ballistic weapons, as well as its most advance cruise missiles and even an underwater drone that it says could produce a nucleus, an army. on tuesday state media released images of li that came junglin inspecting what it says on new tactical nuclear weapons and technology for mounting warheads on ballistic missiles. undeterred,
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the u. s. is due to hold more naval drills with both the south korean and japanese navies. we all want more friends. so it's very important that we integrate and are interoperable with all our allies in the western pacific that seen as important in tackling growing threats both on the korean peninsula. and beyond that, the return of this powerful aircraft carrier group is sending a strong message not only to north korea, but also to china, which has been rapidly building up. its military might, especially its navy. the u. s. seems to be stating in the clear as possible term that it remains a significant presence in the and o pacific. robert bride al jazeera boost on south korea. now my a bay on thailand's west coast was made famous by the hollywood movie the beach. and now it's under threat again. peter paradise became so popular that the authorities were forced to ban tours to stop environmental damage reopened last
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year. but conservation is say, the beaches marine life is already in danger. victoria gates and be reports. for nearly 4 years thailand's, my ebay, with its towering cliffs and calm waters, had no tourists. the government closed it in 2018 because visitors had caused ecological damage and depression from tour operators authorities. we opened the bay last year. the conservation is say, marine life that thrived in the absence of tourists is now under threat again. we have counted the highest amount of activity of shark wood, which is $161.00 shark at a given time. and that is in november of 2021. and after it was re open for a year, we have an average number of around a $20.00 to $40.00 sharks per day. so it, we have seen and decrease in the abundance the replanting corals, the home to nurseries of fish, including juveniles, sharks, strict limits on the number of visitors aim to minimize damage to the marine
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environment and swimming is banned. yeah, they have to save it. if you will let people go, so it we will destroy it. definitely. so i really appreciate the, the way that the close, the beats for the swimming probably does. because to save the meter, the boats that bring visitors to my bay now have to talk on the other side of the island to avoid damaging hallways. and the $375.00 visitors are allowed in per hour . if you can create and come up with that new emit up my yeah, b as a nature reserve as a strict ne terry sofa hot at think that each actually going to bring new ah tourism scheme as well. and are we going to benefit from that over all? conservation is say, efforts to reverse damage have been remarkably successful, but they warn, if not maintained the paradise tourists are coming to find could soon be lost forever. victoria,
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gate and be al jazeera is showing her fashion way in chinese culture is being showcase alongside the wells. top designers and one of ages biggest fashion fairs is being staging. what was once a $50000.00 bed quarantine facility, less than a year after the city was locked down during a covert surge foreign slurry reports. ah, the chinese fashion industry's most glamorous event is back in full sled. the shanghai fashion week is rather who's who of could her come together to showcase the best of the countries design and dressmaking talent? to, sir, you are all the in you, this is the 1st year after the pond army, an economy is recovering and very confident that we find a whole cause here. we used to rely mainly on the overseas morphy below your risk. yes, we made adjustments, and now we focus more on the chinese market. the national exhibition and convention center has been transformed to host a 1600 brands. nearly all of them local. it's hard to imagine that just over
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a year ago, this building was a very different place. construction crews walked round the clock to build isolation woods. in a matter of days, either it was transformed into a quarantine center in hospital with 50000 beds. it was one of more than a 100 quarantine facilities in shanghai last year. when cove at 19 infections searched the whole city was placed under one of the strictest, locked down in the world, which was only lifted after 2 months since then. shanghai has wrought back to life scenic site, such as the bun or waterfront i once again packed with people and so much so now. so young, high experience are so much last year. it's a international cd. tourism is a big industry for shanghai this year. the economy is still on its way to a full recovery, or to be honest, i think it's only about half of what it used to be the 3 day fashion fair. the 1st
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at full capacity since the pandemic is not just a display of shanghai, fashion, industry ambitions. it's a sign. the city is back in business, florence louis algebra. so i had this news, our sport, a big recommendation by the international olympic committee. details coming up on this, how this mammoth meat bowl is bringing back at the taste of the ice age ah with
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was the international olympic committee has recommended that russians and bella russians are be allowed to compete as neutral at international competition. they were banned at due to russia invasion of ukraine last year. the i o. c, who is executive board and met in lawson on tuesday. said it said vice does not concern the participation of athletes. next year's a, piracy games, while russians or bell russians have been competing, as neutrals in some sports. in the most recent series of consultations, the olympic movement stakeholders reiterated the firm restriction of any political interference in the autonomous authority of sports organizations. to decide on participation in their competitions. this clear and strong reaction to political interference was considered necessary. because if
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a government took over the decisions regarding which athletes can take part, in which competitions it would be the end of world sport as we know it today, thomas still has got started than his new job was beim unit coach before my chelsea manager takes over from merchant dan douglas, mo, who was recently dismissed from the very in club to hull, isn't taken over the baron team and catastrophe. the club are 2nd in the blending league at one point behind ortman. they're also into the core to finals of the champions league. and all messy was on hand that as the statue of himself was unveiled at the headquarters of the south american football federation, and paraguay ah, the pi samar forward led argentina to walk up glory and cut our last year. it was
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the country's 1st trial for at the torment since 1986 missy now 35 has scored 99 international goals and it's set to become the 1st argentinian to reach the 100 mark. no, go. yes and yeah, and you've been so long. i had never dreamed or thought about this. my dream was simply to enjoy what i like to the child to be a professional soccer player. and then to do i always love which is to play football and i always try to improve myself and want more. well, obviously i had a very long road. i had many decisions, many defeats, but i always look forward to that of the new president of rugby africa says a mindset change is needed to ensure his content that gets the backing. it requires gun us, her to a mensa, was elected earlier this month on the continent to is home to well champions, south africa. no other african nation has ever won. a game, woke up. i believe that with the right support. more african countries will be able
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to compete at an elite level with the 2nd largest sports in the world. and it is such a wonderful game that provides an opportunity be toll short or whatever else may be changing. the mindset of governance is, is, is a big thing. and then fade changing the mindset. oh, well, right. i think africans always suffer whether it is economically socially of being the place that people disparage. i'm not saying the world rugby does that. i'm not saying that i governing bodies, but we do have to get their focus in their concentration on the fact that for the last 20 something years. this is the way that africa has been looked at. other schools are looking at african differently, the m b, i understand is investing millions of dollars per year in africa to try and encourage and develop the game for football, we've just seen the president infant luanda involved in something with
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a massive program to invest academies that use the development of where it's wrong, and we really need world rugby to do the same. if we can convince them better, i mean stronger rugby stroke. rugby means will people will watch the game of people watch the game is more revenue comes in. ultimately for the governing body, it's a mindset for us here in africa and for the donors outside to really look and say we haven't done. and it's time for us to sit up and do more. if dallas mavericks are still in no, with the chance of clenching a playoff spot in the n b, a western conference luca dante chip finished with 25 points and 6 assists, including this incredible pass across the width of the court to his team mates at jayden hardy or the man went on to seal a much needed when it gets to indiana faces. that you saw him and surveyed
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the landscape. japanese maze more saw shall hale a tiny is expected to earn a records $65000000.00 the season. the highest for any major league player in a single year, he $28.00 or all that signed the $30000000.00 contract extension. who would be el angels at last season? the rest of his earnings will be from endorsements. autonomy is often linked to babe ruth because of his ability to both pitch and head at the same level. he led to pont victor at the world baseball classic last week. that said, for me back in even london, it's a traditional taste. there's been loss for 4000 years now. modern genetic technology has brought back the flavor of woolly mammoth. the mammoth meat ball has been created by australian scientists using laboratory grown cult should meet is made using the genetic information from long deceased mammoths with a bit of elephant and sheep to fill the gaps. the maple has already been dubbed the elephant in the dining room, but so far, nobody has been allowed to take
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a bite. and with new technology, it means that the food that we can have doesn't have to replicate what we've had before. it can be more exciting, it can have better flavor per foss morning to better nutrition protocols. and so we wanted to create something that was totally different from anything you get now. the 2nd reason is that the mammoth has traditionally been a symbol of loss magnets we know now we'll watch out because of climate change. and we wanted to draw attention to a different picture. all right, well i will not be taking a bite without it for me. new fog, for this news, i'll be back with more. the day's news at amone's time. ah ah.
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a landmark cases that says shock waves around the world. it's enormous, it's phenomena, it's historical and paved the way for the potential to penalize climate in action is the will wake up call for the government. this is really something that can make a turning point or thrice, meets the citizens using the law to hold governments and corporations to account if they don't want to do it by asking, then let's go to the court. the case for the client on a jesse. ah, i'm not a dumb person to person you always doing well. i just didn't know how to stop. carolyn spiraled into addiction after falling in love with her boss. i mean to get me to the party. and that's how it got started. soon she was going to pops in casinos to play pokies every day, sometimes playing for up to 15 hours,
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strength drawn to a world that seemed both exciting and soon at work. the grandmother of 6 had access to company funds. she began transferring money into her personal account, starting with small amounts every week. if i didn't steal, i couldn't fly. she only stopped when she was caught by that time she'd stolen more than $260000.00 or $64.00. when i went to prison, it's just crazy and i spend night a month to wash my fame in prison. unflinching question is war with lawanda, imminent rigorous debate? people who are dying because of lack of medical treatment. black labs don't really matter. in the police world. join me, mark them on hill upfront. what out there? mm mm. classes break out at rallies a.
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