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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  April 5, 2023 9:00pm-10:01pm AST

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ah ah. hello, i'm not matheson, this is the news are alive from dough coming up in the next 60 minutes. tie one's president meets the us house speaker in california. despite warnings from china. international condemnation, author is ready. forces storm, all ok, so mosque beating under arresting palestinians during ramadan. prayers. pope o an international police operation shots done one of the biggest online marketing stolen loggins of our sports and a trial in the u. s. to see if an a i can palmer routine hawk test like
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a doctor. we're gonna have the results later, the show. and i'm signed. how much? not the latest news on was a huge night and the race to finish in the premier league top for my 60 united the new castle. both lay aiming to take a step closer to place and next season champion state. ah, taiwan is president sagging one has met with you as how speaker kevin mccarthy in california, despite threats of retaliation from beijing. the rare high level meeting is the most politically sensitive on size week long trip aimed at strengthening ties with the u. s. on central america, china, which claims taiwan has its own territory. as repeatedly warned against the b 2 taken place. we're going to speak to rosalind jordan, who's at the u. s. state department. in washington, d. c. this must just might just be a transit for sighing,
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but it's all being very carefully choreographed, isn't it? ah, well, this has been a very choreographed, of visit by the time when he's president of high ang, one to was simi valley, california. that is the home of the ra, ronald ronald reagan presidential library, which is where is meeting at this hour with the speaker of the house of representatives. kevin mccarthy, as well as a number of other members of the u. s. congress. both republican and democratic, the emphasis on this part, bipartisan a membership is to was send a message, not just to, to the tie when he's people, but to the government in beijing that at least in washington to the u. s. congress affirmatively stands with the taiwanese government and the taiwanese people. now of course, it is understood that there are no official ties between washington and i pay and
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that's because of the normalization agreement that was reached with beijing back in 1979. but certainly, it is already a raising threats of recrimination from the government in beijing. and there are reports even that there may be a built up by chinese naval presence near the taiwanese island. yeah, and rosalind, of course, we remember not that long ago when you us house speaker. she was like nancy pelosi went to taiwan. china's response was to carry out military air drills very close to what taiwan regards as its own, the air space. the u. s. is going to be watching very carefully what it is that china does next. that's right out there is an expectation that there will be some sort of of military, a presence as at ward, they're not expecting anything overtly offensive against taiwanese territory. but certainly us officials expect that there will be some sort of response. the message
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was already coming out on this wednesday, not just from the white house, but from the u. s. secretary of state antony blanket, who is on his way home from of the nato meeting in belgium. mister rob lincoln told reporters and sent a message by default to the chinese government that washington will not welcome any sort of provocation, or any sort of action being taken by the chinese government to low exacerbate tensions. his phrase. this is a situation where the u. s. is very, very keen not to upset the status quo at that they also are very keen to ensure that taiwan is not taken over by beijing, as china has threatened to do so many times. in the past 40 odd years. rosalind jordan washington d. c. ross. thank you very much indeed. ok, the outlet is the assistant director of the atlantic councils global china hub. and he says that meeting between taiwan is president and the us house speaker is
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a show of democracy. i. one has several issues to discuss of substance including on sales, including the debate of said ourselves. the important message here is to illustrate or perhaps to china, perhaps more publicly to the world that on how democracy works essentially on the congress does not actually, does not represent the administration, the immigration does not have a say in our congress attempt to conduct this while most of the time journal likes to pretend that you know, basically late, or they don't understand how congress administration works. this is a good way to actually illustrate that, you know, ideologically speaking, this is a strong lyons and also to basically push, trying to establish for the red lines. and to establish regarding such grip, which they consistently actually tried to push away. because initially, the reason why for the site and i would assume speaking mccarthy used to have this
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meeting in california instead of for a speaker on the coffee company, one would be to avoid any sort of further escalation across anson across the street . and however, you know, as we can see from superficial responses from china, threatened to that for the motor exercises, ah, but, you know, an observation of this will be an interesting way and substantial way to actually gauge on chinese realize trends responses. and whether they are amenable to de escalate the situation, phones presidency, manual mccollugh says china's close ties with russia. i mean, it could play a major role in finding peace. and ukraine. macro is on a 3 day state visit to beijing for the 1st time in 4 years. is also going to be joined by e. u. commission president as the von delane trade and the war in ukraine are expected to be the main topics of discussion. looking for bernice is not when you are benjamin faith, we must not be naive. our european union taking this step of europeans over in tea
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that i defended 5 years ago is establishing trade instruments that are necessary. but the, you must also be voluntary li, committed to continuing to have a trade relationship with china. and so we must, in a way reduce the risk to our economies by never being fully dependent on one country. this is what china once for itself, when dealing with europe and the united states, we must not distance ourselves in a way that suggests that ultimately we are meant to do nothing together any more. the nato secretary general says it will be our historic mistake for china to provide weapons to russia. chance oldenburg said any such move would have profound implications. china's ties with russia who been on the agenda for dave to the nato foreign ministers meeting in brussels. they've also been discussing defense spending. rushes president has blamed the u. s. for what he called the crisis in
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ukraine. vladimir putin was speaking at a ceremony at the kremlin, for new fallen ambassadors, including washington's letters envoy dawson. your body has more from moscow. as saving the very relax russian president vladimir putin received 17 new investors of the kremlin on wednesday, where they will receive their credentials to live and work in this country. among them, the newly appointed us ambassador lin, tracy, and the russian president took the opportunity to express his views about the relationship between the united states and russia and where things stand. that said that americans use of tools such as support for color revolutions, as well as kuda. taos in kiev have led to the current ukrainian crisis, but still russia's in favor of having relationship with the united states. but that's based on the principles of equality. he also talked about where things stand between russia and the european union. let's listen to some of what he had to say in the hope and unions relations with russia have deteriorated
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a lot in recent years. unfortunately, we will do everything in our power to make them work in the right way for russia and for the economies of its member states. we hope that the logic of mutual cooperation will prevail over time report and also went on to say that he's not looking to isolate his country and that there is no hostile intention towards anyone when it comes to russia foreign policy. what was notice if we absent from this 20 minute speech that he delivered that the crumbling on wednesday was any comments about finland session to nato, which took place on tuesday. dorsey of ari al jazeera moscow. meanwhile, ukraine's president let him use it and he's been awarded. poland highest civilian honor during his official visit to war salt is tying the neighboring nation for its support. since the russian invasion, lensky says. ukraine once problem to become a main partner in reconstruction efforts for the war ends. poland is hosting more
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than 1200000 ukrainian refugees contributed to it is a great honor to be here today with my wife and to thank the president, his team, the polish government, and every polish person for what you have already done have not abandoned ukraine. you have stood shoulder to shoulder with us and we are grateful for it. i believe that these i stork relations i historic results store strength between our countries. john hall reports from cave when it's come at the invitation of the polish presidency, a full state occasion pump and pageantry, as you probably seeing in the pictures there. and as president lensky awarded the highest state owner in the company of his wife, alina. so, you know, certainly one aspect of this is that this is a broadening, a deepening of a very close alliance. they weren't always close allies. of course, at between these 2 neighbors, potent has been hugely instrumental in coalescing european support behind ukraine
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taking in all those refugees to ukraine. once all of that, to continue, there is another aspect to it, which is taking the opportunity perhaps to just pay for over a couple of very small cracks beginning to show in the lives before they become any more divisive, notably, the flow of cheap ukrainian grain into the european union into poland in particular, terrace, great. and bringing the price of grain down and upsetting domestic producers. domestic farmers in a number of countries in the pony pharmacist threatened to try and disrupt this visit. they hadn't done so yet. but during the course of the morning, the ponies agriculture minister resigned in protest at the european commission's decision to continue to allow cody ukrainian grading terrorist free all the way through 2024. so it is an issue of concern. it is a small crack, but they will be a deep interest in making sure these divisions don't grow any more had in the news
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are including this fake case was brought only to interfere with the upcoming 2024 election. and it should be dropped immediately. movie donald trump calls for de funding the f b. i am the justice department a day after he was charged with falsifying business records scot on his political funding scandal deepens as the husband of a former 1st minister is arrested. and in sports for young, south korean player who's making an end to himself, major league baseball bud story coming up later in the program. ah, a violent drive by is really forces inside a slams 3rd, holier site. they are like some oscars, joint condemnation and demands for de escalation from countries in the region. israel says it was trying to remove youths who barricaded themselves inside
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overnight, along with stones steaks and fireworks beyond security council. we'll meet to discuss the violence on thursday with our shocker name reports. by your work. light up is lambs. 3rd holy is site, as is really police move in during ramadan. prayers ah, social media video from inside. oh ok. so mosque shows, police officers beating people with baton again, the book that i was on the reading, the quote on that is the eighty's who's tangling it's, and one hits me in the chest. this is really police say dozens of masked juveniles armed with fireworks clubs and stones barricaded themselves inside. they say when attempts to coax them out peacefully failed. the police forced their way in more than a dozen palestinians and police officers were injured. a alex,
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a mosque despite all what is going on is purely for muslims and cannot be shared. everything that is going on and opening by force will never be legitimate. jews visited the compound hours later to observe passover on tuesday, hamas and others urged palestinians on social media to go to alex a mosque referred to by jews as the temple mount to quote defended from the occupiers. in a statement is really police said the attempt to disrupt the holiday in the routine of prayers and visits to the temple mount is the result of increasing incitement on social networks by terrorist organizations. among others, those rioters are 1st and foremost, harming a large population of muslims who wish to celebrate and to pray safely. condemnation on both sides was swift. the arab league and the palestinian
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president's office criticized the violence and the jordanian foreign ministry said israel would be responsible for the dangerous consequences of this confrontation. israel's national security minister urged the cabinet to convene and respond to rockets fired from the gaza strip by sunrise on wednesday, the situation was calm, but with ramadan pass over and easter holidays overlapping this coming weekend. tensions are high in the old city. natasha game l 0, occupied east jerusalem. about a senior ambassador to the hearings it. israel must be held to account for the raid on ok. so we are having this press conference to express our outrage and condemnation of the attack by the israeli forces. and the settlers against allah had m sharif unless did luck saw and and
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there it is the right over the palestinian muslim worshippers to exercise their religious or duties and prayers in this holy month of ramadan. and in any other time, in this sir, wholly, or ox are mosque. and they are, the israeli occupying authorities has no right whatsoever ever to tell people when to pray and when not to pray. whether they want to be inside a lock, some oscar 24 hours, or 5 hours or 10 hours. this is the exclusive right of the palestinian muslims and their friends muslims, to practice, or their religious traditions in this place alone. horsing. saki is the assistant
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secretary general of the arab league, and he says, palestinians needs protection. now is a very tense situation, and we not only of course, condemn it, and we lay the blame totally, and squarely on the israeli government. this is a political organization. we can do political and diplomatic work, and this is exactly what you're set up to do. we are going to work politically and diplomatically to expose what israel has been doing. it's not that we need another excuse from the israeli occupation forces to storm in the i like some mosque that they they never run out of excuses. they always tell you that there would be youth barricading. i'm asking guns and so on. that's. that's that we've heard it so many times. it is almost irrelevant at this point. this is a government that is bent on harming the palestinian population on using all sorts
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of violence and extreme course in order to make them comply with this. and it's not going to happen. we know it's not going to happen. anyone who has this knowledge about the situation would have told you a month ago, 2 months ago that in ramadan things are going to pair up. because in ramadan, they use maximum force and the palestinians who come to the mosque to pray are now going to take this force. all that peacefully. so it's going to be there. we're going to be fashion well to the right. on a locks are rockets we're far towards southern israel from garza as well and carried out air strikes in the gaza strip, which it said targeted. hum us military sites, you know, said reports from gaza. these railey air strikes where on the military sites belonging to hamas in different areas in the gaza strip,
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there was only military. there was only material damage in these military sites. as they were empty, there used to be empty. eda at once said there is any kind of escalation that is predicted or any tension, no casualties or injuries were reported. of course, in retaliation off the air strikes and while they were still going on, a marriages of rockets were launched from because this strip as well. and, and, and that's response in retaliation between the israeli army and the policy infections in godsa. i stayed for a while in the early hours of when is day to day, they were then a strong international in egyptian medications taking place. they seemed to have been a successful to restore the called back to because this strip, we have not witnessed any launching of rockets or air strikes in the past couple of
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hours. a mass on its side or in with many statements it through many of its officials abroad and in garza said and confirmed that this is really aggression is and proceed dented. and it has, it's a serious shift as it has been cold in these really aggression towards it. ok, so mosque and the worshippers, they've cold on the policy and people to resist and to fight back with all their tools. this ease, really aggression and crimes and international police operating has shopped on wants believe to be one of the world's largest online markets, dealing and stolen identities. york's pollution urgency euro poll says more than a 100 people were arrested in the operation which found 17 countries. genesis market offered more than $2000000.00 identities for sale with prices ranging from
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70 euro cents to hundreds of dollars, depending on the nature of the stolen data. d, darden d of tim's when and genesis the data offered on the so called genesis market made its way to the operators of the platform through criminal acts, such as ransomware, attacks and malware on the platform. cyber criminals use the data to commit acts of fraud. they attempted to commit a crime with falsified data to hide their identity. the investigation is far from over. near the boyden is a cybersecurity analyst in joining us from lester in the u. k. very good to have you with us on al jazeera. first of all, do we have any idea how the website and the people behind it was able to get hold of the information in the 1st place? and yesterday, during installed, stay installed, they're more malware on lots of computers around the world using the normal normal channels that malware spread through. so people people clicking on links that they shouldn't have and then things things like that. the normal normal channels. and this dis, malware stole store credentials and all the information about people's computers in
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a way that made it exploitable. and it actually remained residence in those computers also to operate on her and game any new information. i want to come back to that in a 2nd, but what could people do with this information if they bought it from the website? well the, the most, the most sophisticated thing that they can do is they can, they can pretend that they're, these people are, in the old days, we will siber criminals will just steal passwords. but passwords by themselves are in many circumstances aren't enough anymore because there's all sorts of other detection going on to see whether somebody is using a different computer coming from a different place. things like that. and in order to to the next stage in the arms race, if you like, is to not just steal the password, but also to steal the information about the computer that the person's operating from. so also to, to pretend that you are on that computer and they actually build
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a chrome extension that allows people to, to pretend that they're operating from the web browser of the people that still the data from in order to not set of alarms or by coming from a different place, having different phones installed and all those sorts of things that can be used to pinpoint a specific computer that does bring me on to what i wanted to ask you about those. given the fact that they were able to place some sort of access and get some sort of access in the 1st place, how deep into the systems was it possible to go quite well and then they had they had malware installed for the serious time. so got quite deep my, my with my worry is this, this will be a deeply installed in all sorts of individual people's computers. but some of these individual people may have been people working in industry, people, people who have accessed work email from, from,
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from home. and particularly when we were all improvising a computer access to sit to critical systems do during lockdown, we had to do something suddenly and that people will not have f used s stringent security, as, as we would now expect from bring your own device in a foreign foreign device policies in company. so i think, i think there's, there's a potential for, for serious cyber attacks through, through, beyond the individual computers in the story as well. one of the things that it surprised me was that we're used to hearing similar types of stories, a like with companies, websites that are found on the dark web. this one was accessible through what i would call the regular web than the normal web. is that surprising that does that tell us about the confidence that the company perhaps felt that it was able to be accessible in the openness that were well, this does not that much,
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not that much fundamental difference in there. we also know does a lot of a lot of bad stuff on the internet happens enclosed facebook group, for example. so the mechanism that got sold, that is, is some sort of the invitation mechanism. you need to know that it's there. you neat. you need to be let in, and essentially the dark where a functions function much in the same way. everybody can get into the dark where you can't, you can't find you can't find things unless you know where, where to look for them. and if that's, if that's what we're looking for, golden, it might as well be on the, on the open, where to some extent. although the fact that that the home operation has now been successfully stopped. may, may, indicates that that dis, this model will slightly weaker than that than darker model. potentially. we need to hear that we need to hear the details of how they manage to stop it. and i expect it to some extent. we won't get that detail over because it's sensitive and
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useful given, given the fact that that they're obviously that the police have obviously, are very pleased with the fact that they have been able to deal with this particular website. i'm going to guess that that doesn't mean that this puts an end to the problem high wide spread. do you think there says and how difficult a job is it gonna be for the place to deal with this? and if you can just do it very briefly, that will be great. i d 's this particular website wasn't well known since 2018, 2019 to be operating the investigation has lasted that long. i've got some slight hope still that this was, this was an exceptionally sophisticated site and that the runs that many direct competitors to it about. but we need to wait to see the model. the model is available. people know how to operate it. so it may or may well arise again. erica boykin, we appreciate you being with us and i'll dizziness. i thank you very much indeed for your time. thank you. still ahead on al jazeera seeking tourists while
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fighting a civil war. miramar tries to revive a vital industry making sense artisan activists, highways, new london exhibition, examining what we make on what we value. 100 sport will hear from this from time champion who's up to prove a point or the 1st marriage of golf tournament of the year. ah, how low they will start in the middle east and things. the looking slightly more unsettled in the days ahead. we've got a weather system working its way across turkey or bringing more in the way of wet and even some wintry weather as it pulls its way for the east into the caucuses. was the temperature. however, for the south of this pick up for places like bay route, as well as the leper sitting in the mid twenties on friday. now the wind does pick
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up across the region in particular for saudi arabian, and also be rather windy across the north west of africa. we've got a bit of a swirling system. that's what some heavy rain to morocco will, that's going to move into algeria on thursday. stretching its way further east, by the time we get into friday, taking that heavy rain to the likes of tunisia and northern areas of libya for the south of this is the story of extreme heat across places like chad and molly, where temperatures are sitting about 10 degrees above the average, nearly 10 degrees in some places for this time of year. for the south of this, the rain band shifts its way further north, bringing some heavy falls to the likes of uganda and tanzania. and the days ahead we could see some flooding here, but much dryer for the south of this, in particular for south africa, cape town, seeing a lot of sunshine. but as the cold front approaches we, we will see things cool down by friday. ah,
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ah, with those that know, do those that understand? teach a maverick school headmaster in post conflict. belfast determined to change the fortunes of an inner city community, plagued by urban decay, poverty and the legacy of sectarian aggression arms. as students with the knowledge of the ancient greek philosopher, hotmail, in your best. but his van and everybody else is. young. plato, a witness documentary on
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a. jesse eda lou . ah. what are the 0 reminder? i told stories, this are thy one's president saying one has met with us. how speaker kevin mccarthy . in california, despite threats from italy, asian from beijing, the high level meetings, the most sensitive on a trip aimed at strengthening ties with us and central america. is really forces of storm the alex, a mosque and occupied it, used to ru slumped, may enter during ramadan. prayers. finally, stun grenades is palestinians. fireworks hundreds feet arrested. ukraine's president has been awarded, poland highest civilian honor during an official visit to warsaw,
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letting me as lensky says, ukraine wants paulman to become a main partner in reconstruction efforts when the board with russia husband of former scottish national party leader nicholas sturgeon has been arrested by police investigating alleged irregularities in the party finances. peter merrill, whose resigned as i st. piece chief executive last month, was taken into police custody for questioning. while a number of addresses were searched by detectives or brennan reports. this is a dramatic development in the 18 month police investigation into s and p. finances, detectives and forensic offices conducting a full scale search of the family home in glasgow, while more teams executed search warrants at other addresses including the party headquarters. nicholas sturgeon, successor as s n p leader, found his pre planned tour of glasgow medical center, hijacked by the unexpected news. i was told this morning after the event em, and of course my reaction as you'd imagine that much later anybody evolved in the s
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and p is that this is a difficulty for the party. but again, i just yesterday, and emphasized so important for me not to comment on a live police investigation and see, be seen to prejudice that in any way, shape or form peter morale and nicholas sturgeon with the ultimate power. couple in scottish politics. morales, the chief executive of the s and p for more than 20 years until he was forced to resign last month. sturgeon, the leader of the party from 2014 until her surprised resignation. in february, the pressure on them increased by the police probe into the s m. p. 's financial affairs, some $748000.00 of donation to raise for campaigning purposes. with seemingly diverted for day to day expenses. and there are questions about a $134000.00 loan it mr. marell made to the party to help with apparent cash flow problems. just a week into the top job mister use of keen to emphasize his drive to improve party accountability. to get the any c a agree to
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a course of action around governance or own transparency with some external into anything external inputs can be really important because people are, oh, do you have questions about the party, about transparency of our finances? i think we have to reassure our own party membership as well as a broader scores public. the s m p looked in serious difficulty as well as the questions about the parties financial state. it's hopes of a new independence referendum were dashed by a supreme court ruling last november. and latest opinion polls show a clear majority of scotts would actually vote no to independence. the s and p conference on march 19th now takes on even greater significance for brennan al jazeera donaldson's calling on republicans in congress to cut funding for the justice department and the f. b. i until they quote come to their senses. a day after he appeared in court and criminal charges, the former u. s. president denies 34 council falsifying business records in relation to hush
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money paid before the 2016 election from claims he's the victim of a politicized prosecution. designed to haunt his 2024 presidential campaign. back in florida. on tuesday, he called the district attorney who brought the case a criminal and said the judge and his family were trump haters. they attacked me with an onslaught of fraudulent investigations, russia, russia, russia, ukraine, ukraine, ukraine, impeachment hoax, number one, impeachment hoax number to the illegal and unconstitutional raid on maro logo right here. but now they have really stepped up their efforts by indicting the 45th president of the united states who received ah 75000000 votes, which is more than any sitting president in the history of our character. deborah
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elizondo has more now from new york on how the us media accompanying the tom case. people in the united states are waking up to blaring headlines from the historic day at this court house behind me. when donald trump surrendered here and had his arraignment. i want to show you some of the headlines. this is the new york times the headline trumpet, charged with $34.00 felonies underneath that. it says district attorneys sites payoffs to a porn star, a playboy model, and a doorman. and of course, that now a famous photograph of trump sitting in the court room surrounded by his lawyers. want to give you another perspective as well. this is from a conservative new york tabloid called the new york post. this is a different take on the situation. this says trumped up, is that it brags historic case versus don, falls flat and there you see of course,
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another photo of donald trump in the court room. this is a conservative tabloid. it's owned by rupert murdoch, also owns fox news. it has a tendency to be much more supportive of donald trump. there's another tabloid here in new york that's more liberal. it's the daily news. and it had a photo of donald trump and just do the words underneath the headline. we're trump arrested. but that paper has been sold out at all the newspaper kiosks, all over town. i couldn't find it anywhere, but we are near the china town neighborhood in new york city. and i was walking through there this morning. and this is a taiwanese chinese language paper. it's sold here in the united states, and you can see as well the main story. you don't even have to read chinese to know this. donald trump, of course, the same photo of him sitting in the courtroom. yes, pharmaceutical james johnson and johnson has offered to pay nearly $9000000000.00 to settle claims that it's talcum, powder products,
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cause cancer. may companies face long standing lawsuits over the safety of its baby poto, which has been alleged to contain cancer causing compounds. johnson and johnson has said that the settlement offer is not an admission that its products pose a health risk. researchers in the u. s. have tested the capability of artificial intelligence and diagnosing heart function may compare the performance of an e. i algorithm with human cardiologists on a routine diagnosis and their findings published in the journal nature. sure, the a i did surprisingly well. column baker has more. it takes years to learn to read the human heart. one test cardiologists use called left ventricular ejection fraction, or l v e f shows how well a person's heart is functioning. it shows how well blood is pumping through the left ventricle and whether a patient has had a heart attack or heart failure. it's typically performed by a human snog refer and reviewed by a cardiologist,
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but researchers at cedars sinai hospital and los angeles had been training an artificial intelligence system to interpret the results. this is a deep learning convolution of neural network that's video based as opposed to image based. it's been fat the oregon of 6 to 8 years worth of eco credit grounds from a large hospital. so about a $150.00 k 1000 images. and this allows the model to be very precise and accredited, assessing our function to test the system. researchers took around $3500.00 scans and assigned half to an a i, reader, and half to humans. the results were assessed by cardiologists for more than half of the set. they were unable to tell the difference between the analysis produced by ai and what humans had done. and when looking at the diagnoses that a i generated, they needed less correction, less often as the scans analyzed by humans. in many ways, a,
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i leverages the expertise out great clinicians, but it doesn't take away the, the art of the inside of the actual diagnosis and putting the whole picture together. it's very complementary and very helpful for the clinical workflow. radiologists are also beginning to use a to detection tools for breast and lung cancer is very good. a finding fine detail and a human would have a lot of time looking for another aspect that might be very helpful for he's following on something over time with good a piece or good at measuring stuff or seen humor gets bigger or smaller. the treatment of patients responding to metric fire change of treatments. doctors say these tools will compliment humans in the clinic, not replace them. because at the end of the day, they're all tools and they will make what they currently are not perfect, they make mistakes. so you do need that expert radiologists who to make that final
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decision. and that means doctors could potentially work faster and identify risks more accurately, to improve health outcomes for patients. just as a, as an associate professor of library and information science at work the university is joining us now from new jersey. thank you very much. indeed for being with us the, the subject that the column was talking about in his report, there was always a to analyze a very specific instance and very not all region of analysis, but a, i do need vast amounts of data. what happens if very small amounts of data are either missing or roll? yes, thank you. and it's wonderful to be here. that can cause bias that can result in imprecise or imperfect or perhaps more importantly. we don't know where some of those errors may cause may, may be causing issues and what's particularly problematic about that is that this,
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these errors can occur in various high risk situations in terms of diagnostics as well as treatment plans. so there, while i'm certainly a supporter of a recent buying a i in health care applications, we should be careful about errors and bias that may be embedded in some of the systems that we are using and relying upon to make clinical decisions. so how would you see a system like this working then if it still requires a backup check for want of a better phase of our human against. and a, in a sense that almost seems that your one is duplicating the work. although i appreciate the speed at which the i could operate was be much greater. how does that, how do you see this interaction working? well, there are a couple of things that we can do to help enhance the tools that we use in the such critical applications. first, diversifying the research community itself. and there are important initiatives
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here in the states to diversify stem research, all the way down to middle schools and high schools, as well as undergraduate and graduate programs to help bring in different perspectives and different orientations around what data we should be collecting and how to interpret that data. another thing we can do, number 2 is to diversify the health and health adjacent data sets. if the data that we're collecting itself is not representative of the communities that we're, we're making decisions with, with this data, then it follows that some of these decisions may be sub optimal or maybe resulting and harm. one example of that is with social determinants of health data. so we know that social determinants help to influence health behavior and health outcomes. for example, financial strain is
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a social determinant that's well known. this is over decades, 2 or 3 decades of research that supports the notion which we can probably imagine in our own lives, where a financial barrier are not having enough money to pay safe, for example, or a co pay or an office visit or, or a medication may drive or may influence our medication behavior. we know that that is the case for a certain populations. however, our systems currently don't do a very good job of understanding where and which social determinants may be impacting health behaviors. so our systems do a pretty good job of knowing when we fill the script, a prescription, but we really don't know why if we haven't filled it. let me just briefly, medical professionals obviously developed a develop a sense of certain things during their work because of the level of experience that they've got in the amount of patients. they see that the circumstances under which
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they work, they can never sometimes put their finger on fly. they know something is different . they just know something is different. is there a risk you think that we are going to get to the point where we rely too much on a i and that sense of this being something different gets lost. we may, i mean, there are a lot of into intuition of course, with medical decisions in clinical decisions. and we can't account or every particular patient circumstance. and this notion of individualized care is just that. and that relationship between the provider, in this case, the physician and the patient, it's so important to understanding what nuances and where are some of those senses come from. and that's an important part of delivering care. and those of us work in health informatics try to support both physicians practitioners and patients in that interaction to make that sort of a data or information informed decision. however,
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there are bias that in that occur in the patient doctor interaction that have occurred long before a i became a part of our health care decision making. and in some of the work that i do in talks that i give, i say that sometimes the machine may start acting like the humans in that they can reflect some of the same biases as well. so while that sense and intuition is very important in the process of providing care, we know that there are disconnects and there are bias that result from them. both in a i informed applications as well as in patient doctor interactions for which is not a factor chosen center. we appreciate your being with us and i'll just do so. thank you very much indeed for your time. thank you. wonderful. the beer, the military government and mere myers trying to encourage visitors to return despite ongoing fighting mud as to enchant was discovered in the ancient city by hand in central miramar. the violence isn't far away. the sleepy stupors began
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ancient pagoda is some more than a 1000 years old. this was once the capital of what would become a unified myanmar even here, people protested against the military coup and 2021. and even here, the military showed no mercy in the crackdown as one resident told us anonymously were gar unit gucia even though began. is he unesco heritage site, the military shot massively. during the protests, i saw 2 people die right in front of me. 2 years on, some locals are coming back, keen to soak up the spirituality of a place. many people from myanmar consider sacred, but they don't spend like the foreign tourists. things have gone from bad to worse for tour guides. first, the curve at 19 pandemic. then the qu, when business really dried up doris guerrero, dan b dot, the economy of began,
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relies entirely on tourism. the rate of this it between international tourists and local gas is different and also their demands. the area is also home to some of mere mas, ancient crafts. in a nearby village they make lacquer where the old way twisting finally cut bamboo. before applying the dark reson once hardened the finished products carved and colored a skill that takes years to master. but this workshop has already lost 85 percent of its customers. and 2 thirds of its craftsman, if dare tourist know come to begun. so we wear loose were loose. ah generation like a way to nourishing and your businesses were? yes, yes. oh, and well, life is returned to normal here. the fighting isn't far away. the military has told us, we can go no further than this. here what a river has become
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a dividing line and central myanmar. on this side, the tranquillity of began on the other. what appears to be a full blown civil war, and they say at night, if you listen carefully, you can hear the shooting on the other side of the river. the day before, there were reports that 50000 people had fled the fighting in nearby meal. some of whom are now seeking shelter in the historic temples and monasteries of this ancient town. tourney chang al jazeera, begun central miramar. still ahead on al jazeera bein sports. the head of european football speaks out on the threats facing the beautiful game details coming up. ah
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with a whole ah
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ah, we're not in chinese artists, i way way has a new show at the design museum in london. it's called making sense that it's an exploration of different forms of making through the ages and exile from his native country. i way way is now arch wild he in the west, but his rory challenge explains, is still a punk at heart. how are we to make sense of the accumulated weight of human history, all the people, all the cultures hold that time. chinese artist, i way way's answer, is through the objects we've made things he's been obsessively collecting for decades here. 5 so called fields are arranged on the gallery floor. they include 4000 stone age tools meticulously laid out in rows a quarter of
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a 1000000 song. dennis t teapot spouts discarded a 1000 years ago for not being perfect enough. and the remains of i way ways. porcelain sculptures destroyed when chinese authorities demolished his bathing studio in 2018. because i is about history about murray, about a collective experience of personal and society, and about our understanding of what happened in the past. the craftsman shaped the material, the centerpiece of the making sense. exhibition is water ladies. number one, it's an enormous recreation of claude monet's. famous impressionist painting, but rendered in lego bricks. highway is often speaking of us, 3 scale, the sheer number of things, ancient, teapot, spouse, cannibals. so lego pieces tells us about the scope of human history and endeavor. but it's interesting that this,
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avid collector staff doesn't actually care that much about the r he create. he said he doesn't even look at the final product. it's in the process rather than the thing where he finds life. i think that there's something about ways method which is to really understand something he wants to collect. all of them that kind of comprehensiveness and that kind of massive vision at work that since he fled china in 2015 after his anti authoritarian arts, landed him in jail. i way way has made his home in europe. but his punk ethos makes him a perpetual outsider. you're often described as a, as a dissidence artist. i wonder how you feel about with that name and where the artist stops in the distance begins. i'm, i'm, i may be a distant but not as this and to korean state, but rather to doesn't dis, then cool human unconsciousness on the injustice. you know,
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a lot is not just happened in one state, but in general condition up the road. as proof of that, another way ways works here is called middle finger a colorful series of obscene gestures, exuberantly indiscriminate in they're targeting re talents out his era, london. now from the rough environment of high art to the all was polite, wireless sport. thank you very much, rob. well, it's a big night in the race to finish and the premier league top 4 and book a spot in next season's champion. see, i just say neither one of the teams and action, the red devils are currently in 5th and face a tricky task against a team that thrash them for now, earlier this season, branford or united have not been in the best of form of late and half failed to win their last really games. currently 3 teams that sits on 50 points, united,
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that new castle and who played 2 games more than both fights is every game we want to dictate control the game. and if you play against a good opponent or we are, well, it had a, they have a great she should active with design manager, with our way of play as it is really a team, it's hard to beat, but we're looking forward for the challenge. and as we had already many challenges this season, and we have shown so the evidence that we can be done at aaa, newcastle, i enjoying a really impressive run of form and face west ham away, eddy houses, team at cit, fed after 3 straight went, including a win over manchester, united a few days ago. we want to achieve whatever we can we want to push as hard as we can the sally, no part of us this trying to keep anything down because i think this that goes
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against my internal beliefs. so when i were going for everything, and ultimately the lead table will tell us where we getting a huge amount of work ahead for us on, on every level. because football never stands still the teams competing with us, various aspects. we'll all try and do the same thing, so we need to be smart with what we do. the head of european football says the threat of a break away super league remains a present danger. alexander schiffer, and there has been reelected the usaa president with his tam set to run until at least 2027. 12 of europe's top clubs that know that their intention to set up a european super league in 2021. the plan collapsed within days due to a fierce opposition from fans governing bodies players and even some governments that have been dep dishes and even attempts to create new models. but they conflict with the european model that we know so well and cherish still deal our model is
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based on sporting met. it's always where we come from. met. it doesn't have a thrice, we must explode. the miss dead, the privatization of football is an unstoppable process. it's the present danger as we have seen, but together we can and we will inevitably turn the tide of history. this is at moss is the 1st to take place. it says the start of the live golfer tour. the saudi arabian back competition, which launched last year has caused a spilt at the top of a world game some 6 time. major champion. phil mickelson was one of the highest profile named to join the lucrative tour. and he's hoping one of the 18 live plays taken part can win this master's title. if players that have been banned from competing on the north america pga tour, but are allowed to enter the majors. it'd be nice to, to validate the amount of talent that is an over there on our, on,
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on live. but i think a lot of guys playing really well heading in sort of, i think it would be fun to watch and a major league baseball, it was a memorable night for south korea's at g juan bay, the pittsburgh pirates, his 2nd basement, taken his cat to buy the war, just minutes after scoring his 1st home run. this is only the 2nd major league is he's in the 23 year olds efforts helping his team got it to a full one. when over the boston red sox, holy cow, they lose. and also a sport for me on hand you back to? well, so thank you very much. indeed. larry is going to be here in a couple of minutes with more on all the stories over to the website. i'll gina dot com. i'm robinson speak with us. ah
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mm hm. and a 25 years after the good friday agreement and did decades of violence in northern ireland. u. s. president joe biden is to mount the anniversary with a visit to ireland. al jazeera examined the agreements legacy from the impact on people's everyday lives to political power sharing and stormont mancow, brick cities foraging new realities. the arctic home to the semi people and natural resources needed for combat climate change. an important part of the battery supply, china for europe, a don't think it is people's at the same humorist as other people can. nations made wealthy from oil and gas now balanced that green obligations with the rights of
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indigenous people. you can choose solutions that for us, give us know for future voices from the optic. the money talks, money winds on it just either across the globe ecosystems under immense threat this later moving back it started melting. all there is something deeply warm in the stall is happening. we cannot create authorized explorers how the law is beginning to hold multinational to account. we are all connected neighbor by, you know, with a mission and how the idea of giving nature legal rights is also in our relationship with the planet. this is what it's all about. it's about ensuring that like when actually continue planetary justice on al jazeera, we don't complete focus on the politics of the conflict. it's the consequence of board the human suffering that we the 4th time. it is one of the most serious about the violence in recent years. we brave bullet bomb because we give voice to those demanding freedom the rule of law. and we always include the views.

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