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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  April 6, 2023 12:00am-1:01am AST

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aah! in with the arctic to home to the semi people and natural resources needed for combating climate change. an important part of the battery supply chain for europe. they don't think it is. people have to say, you memorize as other people can nations made wealthy from oil and gas. now balance that green obligations with the rights of indigenous people. you can't choose solutions for us, you know, for future voices from the optic in one it talks, money winds on it just either.
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ah ah hello, i'm sorry. i'm to my the welcome to the news our life from london coming up in the next 60 minutes. tensions once again, flour at the alex on mosque is right. you forces fire rob bullets that palestinian worshippers at least 6 people are injured. historic talks in california, tie one's leader meets the us. how speaker and members of congress defying threats of chinese retaliation? poland, highest civilian honor awarded to ukraine's president and as a promise of fighter jets and with an increasing number of satellites orbiting the earth industry inside is ask if it's high time we adopted
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a highway code the space and i'm sorry, hamilton, i have the latest sports news you caught for majesty united pick up a big winner as a look to secure qualification for next seasons champions league. ah . hello and welcome to the news our a continued coverage of our breaking news story, the south with the israeli forces. having stormed the alex on mosque for a 2nd time on wednesday, firing rob of bullets on palestinian worshippers inside. ah, according to the palestinian red present, at least 6 people have been injured. there are also reports that tis riley forces prevented ambulances from reaching the lions gate of occupied east jerusalem
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earlier on wednesdays. ready forces storm the mosque, and 5 stun grades during ramadan. pres, at least 12 palestinians were injured in that attack. let's go live now to natasha . rename who is in occupied east drew some 1st of all, what have the israeli police said about what took place tonight? while wednesday began with violence inside is slams 3rd holiest site and it is now concluding with the same scenario. the police say that i around the time this evening when muslims were completing their final, it's a special prayer. during ramadan. they say juveniles. some masked, some armed with fireworks and stones, went into the mosque as others were praying and attempted to barricade the mosque. preventing people to leave police say there were riots and that is when the they say that the rot they're referring to them as rioters began to throw fireworks
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and stones at them. they're saying that these quote trouble makers are harming 1st and foremost the muslim public's freedom to pray and that the mosque, ah, it was quote desecrated by vandals. there were reports from witnesses inside that sun grenades were, were used, tear gas was thrown. and as you mentioned at the day began with at least 350 people, arrested, a dozen palestinians, and 2 police officers injured with the very same thing happening. and we've just seen videos out she emerging from the site. we have been seeing images emerging from the sight of troops forcibly emptying the mosque of worship as this is the 2nd time it's happened. but for natasha, for people who are not familiar with the region and the sort of scene that plan plays out every year. we've seen this before during the month of ramadan, tell us about israeli police restrictions on the palestinians and how they feel
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about that, how it affects their right to worship inside the most. but also in the compound around the mosque, how those restrictions work and the sort of reaction it brings about, particularly at this time of year. well, i would say that what we saw happening today was not in any way a surprise for those of us who've covered this issue extensively. on tuesday, there were calls on social media by hamas and others urging palestinians to go to l ox, a mosque, and quote, defend it from the occupiers. and the reason that this call had gone was going out is because a wednesday is pass over for jews and there was expected during visiting hours for non muslims to be a greater number perhaps of jews, a visiting the l ox, a compound in total. there were about 57 people who entered the compound today
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between 7 and 1130 a. m. a, despite the violence earlier hours earlier. that proceeded very calmly. but this is a very hot button issue if you will for palestinians. the jews that tend to go into the compound are nationalist. they possess very conservative ideology. they are prohibited from praying inside the compound. but we do know that that band has been violated on numerous occasions, and that again is a real provocation to not only palestinians, but excuse me, not only muslims, but all palestinians. the l. axa mosque is the 3rd wholly a site in a slam, but it is also a very potent symbol for palestinians. you mentioned restrictions there up a palestinian men if they're below 55 years old and they have a palestinian id and they live in the occupied territories. they are not permitted to enter the compound unless they have a particular permit. so again,
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that is another, a hot button issue, and that is why we're now seeing these perennial scenarios of violence inside a holy place. and i thank you very much from occupied easters than it's asking and bring us up to speed with what is happening on mr. about which he is actually gentle as a policy, a nationalist have a joints, a sly from ramallah by skype. and course the scenes carry, i suppose they have echoes in parallels with 2021 when we saw or israeli restrictions. and a crackdown on the policy are right to worship and use of the public space in around the alex a most triggering and 11 day war between israel and hamas, their fears of there, the possibility of a, a wider escalation. now, of course, and the reason for this is the constant provocations from the side of the israeli government, which keeps lying by the way,
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claiming that it was provoked to attack the most. this is totally incorrect. what we see is the result of the fact that the israeli government is putting that police and forces and the police guard under the control of being who is well known as glass and no movement that was classified as catalyst even. and this fascist, besides bins is more coverage out of control and what's happening and occupy it is today. and there are except size in one location after the other. this is the unprecedented the, the most would be attacked twice in the same day. people would be injured and deadly people would be had the children women and in the morning and now and preventing medical teams even from reaching them in the process in the mornings. as rarely troops even destroyed the medical clinic, which is attached to the most for what, what the reason,
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i think what we see today is a very serious vocation. i will definitely need to solution and maybe this is exactly what this is really government once they want to distract attention from the internal division for them from the demonstrations that are taking place inside israel against this. busy government and they want to grab the whole region into a total total explosion. this is very tedious and it will have a very important consequences all over the palestinian territories because he's spoken about that being persistent violence in occupied east jerusalem and particularly seen daily raids on the, in the west bank as well. and now we have, you know, the muslim and jewish important religious holidays kind, siding with around the down and passover, but just in tongues of this particular area occupied east jerusalem.
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what i know that you are not based there at the moment, but what can you tell us about the sort of particular significance, the kind of emotion around that area and why? events like this have the ability to spark conflict and, and violence that is much greater than what we've seen. now i'm not there now because this is don't allow me like 95 percent of the palestinians that i'm being there at this moment. i was born exactly in that area and i was there as a medical doctor for 15 years as an early government decided to prevent me and like others from entering the years of them. despite all of that, many palestinians as well as new, managed to break through the checkpoints and be in the most ker, 250000 people were there. and i think this is exactly what upset this is really government. this is
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a very important area. the old city of use of them is the heart of the use of them . it's not very big geographically, but it has a huge historical importance. it is the symbol of freedom for palestinians without jerusalem, without alex almost there is no fee, judaism and without use and there is no time. and that's why this place symbolically resembles for all palestinians. their struggle for freedom from the longest occupation and modern history. and from the system of our prototype, that is much worse than any other type in human history. it's a symbol of struggle for freedom. it is, it has a very big religious value, as was mentioned in your program. but also it is an important national symbol for all other students. and also it's a why is it such a significant flash point in a driver of conflict? because we have seen for many years, many decades,
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the sort of status quo religious arrangement around this holy site. with jordan being that the custodian is meant to maintain some semblance of law and order. how has that arrangement been gradually eroded by by the israeli government? because their government and it's not the fundamentalist. and today what we see in israel is a coalition between extreme national is presented by an at the now and extreme jewish religious fundamentalists, the like small tricia, big v as this combination is trying to change the state, the school. they want to impose jewish tear inside the uk. so most of the jewish people have a site where they can trade outside the mosque and nobody at no, no, nobody prevents them from doing so. the intruding into the ox almost trying to
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change the super school and impose jewish religious to actions inside the most which hawks of course everybody. but that is, in this case, this is the government is using religion and for, for, for, for national schools is because their goal is to next to consolidate the annexation of the jews and which is illegal by international law and to dies the city. and now they want to next the whole of the west bank, so they're using the religion for their political, ultra nationalist causes, trying to eliminate any possibility for a ballistic stated or for the freedom of palestinians from this is leo corporation . ok, thank you very much for now. let's have about who to joining us that from ramallah . thank you. well, in terms of some, the international reaction that's been now coming in the policy ambassador to united nations early had said that a israel must be held to account for these raids on alexander. we are having this
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press conference to express our outrage and condemnation over the attack by the israeli forces and the settlers against allah. harem sharif earl mustard little ox saw the we're and and her 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 is wholly 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, almost 24 hours or 5 hours or 10 hours. this is the exclusive right
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of the palestinian muslims and their friends muslims, to practice their, their religious traditions in this place alone. so the arab league is gonna hold emergency meeting now to discuss the violence, how some zach is the assistant director general of the arab league and says that to palestinians are in need of protection from these rights is a very tense situation. and we are 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 just exactly what we are set up to do. we are going to work. but it took leon diplomatically to expose what israel has been doing. it's not that we need another accused from israeli or occupation forces to storm in the are like some mosque that
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they, they never run out of excuses. they always tell you that there would be youth barricading, amassing guns and thorn. that's that said that we've heard it so many times. it, sir, it is almost irrelevant at this point. this is a government that is bent on harming the palestinian population on using all sorts of violence and extreme course in order to make them complied with it. 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
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fascist. i just one other bit of nice to bring you on this turkish present. type of one is condemned. the israeli police right on alex, a mosque he has called it red lines. had such an act means that a red line has been cross solidarity protests been taking place across the country following the violence during a speech in the turkish capital. ankara on call for these rates to come to be halted as soon as possible. he condemned what he called vile acts by israeli security forces and said that on kirkendall remain silent in the face of these attacks. it was the news ally from london much more so to bring you on the program . un security council walk out for nations protest when they are addressed by an accused will criminal scottish national party under investigation, performer 1st ministers, husband is arrested and released. i'm in support. a young south korean play who's
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making a name for himself in major league baseball. ah, taiwan is present site and when has met us, how speak a kevin mccarthy. historic talks in california. this is the 1st meeting of its kind on american soil since the us ended its official relationship with taiwan in 1979. the move is drawn threats of retaliation from china, which sees the meeting as a show of support for taiwan independence. i believe our bond is stronger now than at any time a point in my life. and of course, president sigh is a great champion of that bond. the friendship between the people of taiwan and america as a matter of profound importance to the free world. and it is critical to maintain
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even comic freedom, peace and regional stability. it is no secret that today the peace that we have maintained and that democracy we have worked hard to build up phasing unprecedented challenges. we once again my also in the world where democracy is under threat and the urgency of keeping the beacon of freedom shining can not be under the state it ok, we'll algiers. rosalyn jordan has been reporting on this story and a significance of this meeting taking place year ports just from washington. this meeting is a part of the dance that official washington engages in with bay ging, when it comes to the matter of taiwan. back in 1979, when the u. s. and china,
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normalized relations, part of the requirement on washington's part was to give up diplomatic ties to ty pay. and so the visit of the taiwanese president of high and one is an unofficial transit. as it words, not even a visit in diplomatic terms to the united states. that said, members of the us congress, both republican and democratic have been eager to show their support for. ty wants political independence, as well as showing support for any military support that it may want. now that is something to that the violent ministration has been willing to provide a sub right now. the current proposal is some $10000000000.00. the military support over the next 5 years, and that's probably something that the biden administration will be able to provide with cooperation from congress. shelly rigor is a professor of political science at davidson college and the author of the book why
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taiwan matters. she joins us live from charlotte, north carolina. this trip would have quite a great deal of planning organization and, and careful carl graphy. indeed it did. they always do. yeah. you know, there are lots of moving parts at play it lots of considerations that everyone on, on the us side in the taiwan side have to be cautious about and yet the need to kind of assert the relationship is ever present. and so they worked through all those details to get it done. how might china react to this? they been perhaps the little as the reaction been quite control pops, more calm than you would have expected during this trip. i think the way that this particular visit are transit was arranged was aimed at giving, begging
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a little bit less to be worried about or to complain about than previous episodes have done. so in particular, having residence high meet speaker mccarthy in the us as part of something that's actually pretty routine. she's made 6 of these trips before during her presidency, rather than rip praising the events of last summer when speaker pelosi went to taiwan, which was something that had not been done before. i think that was aimed at reducing beijing's reactivity in this situation. that's not to say they won't react because for the p r c, it's very important to show strength and, and to demonstrate their dislike for this kind of event. but i think the taiwanese, at least we're trying to minimize the provocation in this instance. so as an trip
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by policy, that of a misstep, you think? i certainly thought it was at the time, and i think many taiwan specialists in the u. s. were advising washington, you know, to try something different or advising the policy team to try something different. i think what makes it a misstep is that the amount of military pressure that beijing applied in the wake of that, that visit was truly unprecedented. and it kind of stepped up the level of military tension in the taiwan strait beyond where it had been since, really the 1950s. and it has stayed at a heightened level ever since, which is quite dangerous. how will the antagonism increasing tension between us and china effect taiwan and this question of, of where it belongs, is that going to become more urgent and more pressing?
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i think whenever us china relations are in a downward spiral, i want that situation becomes more dangerous. the p r c tends to punish taiwan for actions. the u. s. takes that it doesn't like because you know, the, you, the p r c has limited leverage over the u. s, but it has a lot of leverage with taiwan and a lot of levers that it can pull to make things more difficult for time when he is leaders. so while it is also a moment of opportunity for the taiwanese leadership to strengthen ties with the u . s, they have to be really careful that in the process of strengthening ties with the u . s, they don't aggravate a bad situation with the jang. all right, thank you very much. profess a shelly rigor ortho of y taiwan masses. it's an important question that leon people want to know about. thank you for joining us on the news out. you're very
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welcome or in other developments their 1st present manual mat on his insisted that china could play an important role in negotiations between russia and ukraine. french leader is on a 3 day visit to beijing for the 1st time in 4 years. it will be joined by that you commission present to us live on the line. mike, one will meet president g on thursday. the blacklight has more dungy, but how many do bob? this is a manual microns 1st visit to china in 4 years. with the aim, he says of engaging beijing towards a shared responsibility for peace and stability. china says it's seeking to play a mediating rule between russia and ukraine. oh, some western powers fear bay. jean may instead be preparing to send arms to moscow motto. but the french president says, he doesn't believe china wants a lasting war in europe. the shoes, the law hope was invalid. the china has proposed a peace plan and we have welcomed it. but do we agree with it in its entirety,
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though? but it is interesting and it shows willingness to commit to resolving the conflict . i hope to be able to participate in initiatives that are useful to the ukrainian population val macaroni and she will also discuss development of bilateral relations. and boosting economic ties. in that to present micron is charting a different course in washington. the talk is increasingly about decoupling from china's economy and the european commission. president ursula vander line set to join micron and beijing spoke last week about di, risking europe's business connections with china while still calling for sustained relations. the trip has been welcomed by china's business community fargo told her martin delane upon the other sunday there. bolton, i think this visit can further promotions strengthened. trade between the 2
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countries are in the air of globalization and interdependence. do not european leaders are not in favor of decoupling ties and want to continue strengthening corporation with china, household mccullor o at a time when the u. s. is taking its toughest stance on baking. every new wants of beast talks will be watched, closely. lean arbor are clear, al jazeera, all nato, as warned china against sending lethal aid to russia, saying such a move would have profound consequences. nato foreign ministers met for a 2nd day in brussels, where they discussed defense spending, the war and ukraine and bay james, right. rising influence in the indo pacific, such region against oldenburg said it would be a historic mistake if china provides weapons and ammunition to russia. representatives from the united states and the u. k. were among for diplomats who walked out of a un security council meeting on wednesday. russia organized the informal meeting
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to discuss the transfer of children from ukraine to moscow, and diplomatic added to james bass as more now from the united nations headquarters in new york. representatives of full western countries walking out of a meeting of un security council members. russia organized the informal meeting to discuss the transfer of children from ukraine to russia, controversially invited russia's children's commissioner, maria leuva, biloba to speak by video link. she was issued an arrest warrant by the international criminal court. at the same time, last month, as the russian president vladimir putin accused of organizing the abduction of children. she though, said they were being rescued, al jazeera is blurred, the faces of children who are now in russia, who appeared in a video that she played to the meeting canada, i told her, i want to stress that unlike the ukranian side, we don't use children for propaganda, when she spoke to reporters,
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the u. s. ambassador to the united nations condemned the participation of miss luther below vanity a woman who has been charge without war crimes. ah, who has been involved in deporting and removal of other children, ah, from their homes add to russia. so control the sea again. and these are only the 1st few days of russia's presidency of the un security council. but there was some hope for ukrainian families when the russian official who the international criminal court consider a war crimes suspect spoke. she said that if you cranium, families requested that children will be transferred back. james bays al jazeera of the united nations al ukrainian president wrote him, his landscape been awarded, poland high, a civilian on edge hearing, his official visit to warsaw. thank the neighbouring nation freight support since the russian invasion. polanski says ukraine wants poland to become
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a critical partner in his country's reconstruction. when the war ends, poland is housing more than a 1000000 ukrainian refugees to it is a great honor to be here today with my wife and to thank the president, his team, to polish government, and every polish person for what you have already done. you 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 historic results, the store exchange between our countries. you denise, our life from london much more still to bring you a demand for and minimum wage and social benefits. farmers and factory workers at the house in protests in india. we look at the climate change baby boom, white global warming is helping these turtles come out of their shells. and in sport, we're here from the 3 time champion. he's out to prove a points and the 1st major golf tournaments via
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ah, hello, we have a slice of fine and try weather into central parts of europe down towards the southwest. but why the thought of that? it does look a little disturbed as we make our way towards the east, the weekend over towards see east. we have this area of low pressure drawing in relatively warm air filter. its way into central parts is the bumps it to the cold where turning to snow. so when she weather here, while most spring like up towards the northwest, where bands of cloud and rain will sweep in particular cross england and wales pushing down to the low countries, easing across france. dry weather coming back in across the republic of odd. and those are rare. we are a slice of fine and dry weather as that winter, whether they're into eastern poland, pushing across into the west, over romania,
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still some rather wet weather there for a time across greece. and turkey that will clear 3 brightest guys coming back in behind. still, wet, dry weather, central parts of europe, side and try therefore give friday up to was a north west and down across the south, madrid getting up to 26 degrees celsius. try to cross the far north of africa, got little circulation, just developing around that western side of algeria. see some wet weather. pushing further east as we go through friday, south that more showers across west africa. ah . from breaking down the headlines to exposing the power attempting to finance reporting, what did you do? what to, to investigate? why didn't you ask the question? there are many drawings that sensor people have, but you didn't get back on public when stories. the listening post doesn't cover the news. it covers the way the news is covered to suppress moderate. and in some
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cases, amplify the content you see on your part of the listening post now to sierra across the globe ecosystems under a mid thread bit later started moving back. it started melting all there is something deeply warm in this drawing stuff. and we cannot create a thrice, explores how the law is beginning to hold multinational to account. we are all connected estimate both by you though with a mission and how the idea of giving nature legal rights is altering our relationship with the planet. this is what it's all about. it's about ensuring that life when i can continue planetary justice on al jazeera lou. ah,
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welcome back you watching the news ally from london. the main stories now is ready forces of storm the of the alex, a mosque for a 2nd time on wednesday, firing rubber bullets on palestinian worshippers inside. according to the palestinian right present, at least 6 people have been injured. in this latest attack, taiwan, president zion, when is met, us house because kevin mccarthy, historic talks in california, the 1st meeting of its kind on american soil. since the u. s. ended its official relationship with taiwan in 1979. newton has drawn threats of retaliation from china. and the french president emanuel mack on is, is that china could play a key role in peace negotiations between russia and ukraine. is on a 3 day state visit to beijing for the 1st time in 4 years. mark one will meet with president she on thursday. now in all the stores have been following farmers in factory workers from across india have been riling in new delhi in protest against
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new and remote is government unions and left leaning political groups demanding a minimum wage in a range of social benefits for low income earners same bas ravi has more on this now the young people in india are struggling to find work, those that have jobs off the stay salary. and that in a nutshell, is the problem facing prime minister, miranda the government ahead of upcoming elections on india's economy is growing, but failing to create enough new jobs agenda. again, you can survive sometime before on this you have to choose between buying gas tang rent or paying for our children's medical treatment. when we work in the field, we don't get any insurance for time on. the indian economy is set to expand this year. it is, in fact, one of the fastest growing of any major country. but most growth is in the
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corporate or private sectors which employ relatively few people in india. the union leaders here blame prime minister mo, the handling of the economy for rise and job. got them got a lot when the baghdad being a little boy, you know, the big movies government has launched an employment drug and you're more millions of dollars in incentives to attract investors hoping to boost production and manufacturing jobs. although i don't know, but protest leaders want the prime minister to put an end to what many described as a runaway privatization inequality is one scene, which is glaring in our economy, particularly during the lockdown. i mean, data tells you that for the corporate take the profits, boom,
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even though the sales dropped. and that happened because there was a lot of attention to work because the, the costs calling for the corporations, which means those they were buying from those gospel falling. so it's this section because last am it's that fiction which has progressed his critics, one more oversight of private companies, a minimum price on agricultural goods at a minimum wage as well as long wavers for the poor's, cost of living and unemployment, or unlikely to be pressure points more, these rivals humans in this new student during the soviet union. now satellite in aerospace companies want national government to adopt a road rule style guide for space in an effort to limit space junk and reduce the number of collisions. these guidelines have been produced by the space safety
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coalition, which is made up of 27 international industry representatives. the european space agency estimates there are $36.00 and a half 1000 objects larger than 10 centimeters floating in space, plus a further $130000000.00 objects smaller than a centimeter. this deborah can travel up to 10000 kilometers an hour, posing a significant risk, their operational satellites, including the international space station. collisions are expected to become more common as the number of satellites in orbit grows. stuart, they'll be about 60000 by the year 2030. they're about 9000 now. dan ultra g e is that the founder of the space safety committee joins me live from washington dc. so it looks as though we've been managed to a cause or a form of pollution in space as well. tell us more about space debris and how it builds up. no, we've thank you and up place to be on the show here we've. we've operated in space
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for nearly 66 years. and for many years there's little or no awareness of space, debris, and how it can be long lived and just stay up there and accumulate. if you're low enough in space, you will re enter from drag, but the rest of stuff that's higher than that will be up there for very long time. most of that debris stems from several collisions. we've had some intentional asap test events. and then a lot of these come from explosions that have happened for a long time. the global space community didn't realize that after a spacecraft or an upper stage has completed its mission. you have a lot of things like propellant tanks and batteries. high pressure vessels, fly wheels, momentum wheels, that all that are off storing energy and this energy can lead to
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a accidental break up, which creates a lot of fragments, right? a lot of stuff up that and as going to be more stuff up there in, in, in years to come. i mean, one would hope that no one sends anything into space and wouldn't for it to deliberately explode. but is that likely to be any accountability for this, or should that be accountability for accountants and organizations that are fueling a sprite of this temporary i think personally, i think there, there should be, there has been, you know, a sat anti satellite tests over the years and i think even for the last decade, we realize just how harmful this is to the environment. it does depend heavily on the altitude you, you control the or conduct the test at. but the most recent one, for example, a russian, a sat test in november of 2021,
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led to 1700 pieces of debris flowing around that. then put other vehicles at risk. and it's quite a big difference. this between the number of satellites an old bit now, and the prediction that's been made for 2030, were about 9000. now they'll be 60000 in space. and in years from now is that why is that? why is that necessary? why is that something that has to happen? yeah, satellites are built for a typically for a mission for a reason. and for example, if you watch sports program or even news and you have a interview or asking the interview, a question. you knew you experienced a long delay between getting the, the sound to them and getting the response back. so one of the things that's been a particular interest to some of these leo, large constellations is low latency communications. where the satellite,
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that's doing the transmission of the sound is much closer. so the response time is, is much quicker. but unfortunately when you move close to the earth, that way you have to have a lot more satellites so that you can have a global coverage. okay? yeah, so i think i think anyone that has experienced one of these delays on television years finds it quite painful and in town would be very much in favor of eliminating that how would, how would a set of safety rules or regulations for space? what is that something that's realistic? would you be able to get enough of a coalition, enough agreement to be able to put some sort of frame like together? well 1st stuff i want to point out, we have kind of 8 spectrum, a whole range of, of instruments that can help address this problem. some of them are industry lead. some of them are at the united nations level where we can have long term
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sustainability guidelines than that the nations are typically left to, to interpret those treaties and guidelines and put their regulations in place that would, would get things addressed. so, you know, i think for the space safety coalition, what we've done is recognize that spacecraft operators already do have some best practices that they've assembled over the years as well as rules of the road they act. they actually have bilateral agreements oftentimes with their neighboring operators regarding who to contact, who has the better, perhaps collision risk information in which operator should move. but we have to look at all this explosion and i, i don't mean that is upon, but all the huge growth in space and that the use of space that humanity is,
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is benefiting from. and so there are many, many more satellites going in space. and many of the companies and countries that are flying, those satellites are not experienced operators. so i think there's, there's a need to do a lot of capacity building to familiarize operators with best practices. both aspirational leave from the commercial side, as well as probably for the regulatory side. ok, thanks very much. don. altering is yaneth from the washington d. c. founder the space safety committee. person is confound plans. told hundreds of asylum seekers and migrants on a barge of its southern coast, part of efforts to reduce the use of costly hotels as temporary accommodation, while asylum claims of being processed. the vessel will accommodate about $500.00 adult males. government says will provide basic and functional accommodation with catering facilities as well as on board security. the plans have been criticized by
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human rights groups. the husband of scotlands, former 1st minister nicholas sturgeon, was arrested on wednesday. be to morrow is detained as part of an investigation into the scottish national parties campaign financing morals, to down as the chief executive of the governing pro independent party last month. police have now released maro while the report will be sent to the prosecutor's office. hold brannon has this report. this is a dramatic development in the 18 month police investigation into s n. 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 and, and of course my reaction as you'd imagine that much later anybody involved in the
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s m p is that this is a difficulty for that party. but again, i just yesterday, and emphasized so important for me not to comment on a life police investigation and c. b seemed to prejudice that in any way, shape or form peter morale and nicholas sturgeon with the ultimate power couple in scottish politics. morale, 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 the real 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
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accountability. to get the any see or to agree to a course of action or own governance or own transparency with some external input. i think external inputs going to be really important because people are, or 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 looks 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. november 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. now growing numbers of loggerhead sea turtles and nesting and laying eggs on western mediterranean beaches signed to say the phenomenon could be a case of climate change causing habitat expansion of a threatened species. marine biologist from france, italy, spain,
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and tunisia of discovered far more ness on the beaches of their respective countries. in the past decade, wells lodges hard shall, turtle is usually found in florida, cape birthday, amman, mozambique, and western australia. still hold, i call off of c turtles along living animals up to 100 years. so we need many years to perform a study on them. what we are seeing as a tiny fragment. but one of the main causes to explain this trend could be global warming. i'm all of you know, isn't booking slide for you on the news out from the stone age to lego, breaks this. an artists i way way puts collecting and collective memory at the heart of his new exhibition in london. and sport had of european football speaks out on the threats facing diesel guy. ah
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ah ah ah
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ah ah welcome back renown chinese artist, i way way has a new show at the design museum in london. it's called making sense and it's his 1st exhibition to focus on design and architecture and excel from his native country. i we're way is now art royalty in the west, but as were a challenge explains, he's still a punk at heart. how are we to make sense of the accumulated weight of human history, all the people, all the cultures, all that time? chinese artist, i way ways answer is through the objects we've made things. he's been obsessively
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collecting for decades here, 5 so called fields are arranged on the gallery floor. they include 4000 stone age tools meticulously laid out in rose a quarter of a 1000000 song. dennis the 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. his eyes about history, about memory, about a collective experience of personal and society. and about our understanding of what happened in the past. the craftsman shape the material, a center piece of the making sense. exhibition is water. lydia 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,
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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 avid collector stuff doesn't actually care that much about the r he creates. 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 why ways method, which is to really understand something he wants to collect all of them. that's a 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 was that name and where the art is
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stops in the distance begins. i'm, i'm, i may be a distant but not as person to korean state. but rather to doesn't. this then, to human unconsciousness on the injustice. you know, a lot is not just happened in one state, but in general condition of 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, recounts out his era london sport now with santa in doha. thank you very much, mary. i'm on manchester, united. newcastle picked up a big window in the premier league as they looked to secure qualification for next seasons. a champions league. eric tan hag, 5 events that there humiliating a foreign l. defeat against brentwood from earlier this season. they be the london
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as one now at old trafford. thanks for a marcus rash. those goal was the result, the lips united into 4th place ahead of tottenham who played one game more on the top for qualify for next season's champions league. you causal bag 3 points hit with an emphatic awareness over west ham. colin wilson and old anson both scoring 2 goals each as they 151 new classes sit and 3rd place level on points with man to see united lot with a better goal difference. and carrying benjamin star tauriel madrid as they beat barcelona to reach the copa del ray final. they'll face was the sooner french forward that followed his hattrick and lady gone sunday with another one last blanco's winning foreign l at the new camp with a lot with the tie ending. fired for one on aggregate. laurie are also still in contention in the champions league, but they are far behind thee this parsa in the race to win the spanish week. the
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head of european football says that these fair to all of a breakaway super league remains at present danger. alexander schiffer in a has been re elected as yoga presidente, with his terms set to run until at least 2027. 12 o europe's top clubs. that signal that their intention to set up a european super league in 2021. the plan collapse within days due to fierce opposition from fans governing bodies players and even some governments tiger was says that he is a realistic hotel contender heading into the 1st major golf tournament of the year . the masters tees off at augusta and the united states on thursday. the 5 time champion, the last one at this form and to in 2019. but since then he's suffered the career threatening car crash that's still affecting his mobility. while woods last competed the at the top level torment in february,
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on that occasion he finished down in 45th abilities. it's not, not where i would like it, but it i, as i said here, i said to you guys before that i'm very lucky to have this leg. yes sir, it has been altered and there are some hardware in there. but it's, it's still mine. and it is, has been tough and it will always be tough to know that the ability and endurance in what my life will do going forward and will never be the same. i understand that some of the reasons why i can't prepare our camp plays may term aside like but you know, that's, that's my future and that, that's okay. i'm, i'm okay with that. as we all know, we never con tiger tiger. i and you know, and he can do incredible things and, but you know, you watch him on the range and you watch him for chips and pots. and, you know, he's got all the aspects of the game that you need to succeed or on this place. that the question is just that you know, the tall that it takes on his body to, to,
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to make her on 72 holes. and i'm not able to compete and play as many tournaments or do things i bill i was, i've been able to do horn over the years, but to build a still share this game and i share some memories and create new memories with my son. and then also pass on some of the things i've learned about a lot of things in this game. so we'll pass that on to him and, and others as has been fantastic. this is master's, is the 1st to take place. his this thought of the live golf tour, the saudi arabian, a bat, competition which launched last year has caused a split at the top of the wild game. my 6 time major champion, phil mickelson, was one of the highest profound names to join the lucrative that tool. and he is hoping one of the 18 live players that take him part can win that this master's title is players that had been banned from competing on the north american pga tour, but are allowed to enter the majors. it'd be nice to,
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to validate the amount of talent that is an over there on our, on, on live. but i think a lot of guys are playing really well heading in sort of, i think it'll be fun to watch. and in major league baseball, i was a memorable night for south korea as a g, one at bay, the pittsburgh pirates at 2nd baseman at taking this cat by the wall. just minutes after scoring his 1st home or on his team beating the boston red sox for one better angle here. and thus we sport from him back to marry him in london. all right, and i thank you very much. that's it for the news, al, but i'll be back in a couple of minutes with more the days news for you. ah
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aah! and the muslim community in diana, living in a vibrant harvey in culture, this country we are blessed. we live in harmony with all the art of an agenda out. is there a well to travel to south america for a guy and he's ramadan is long ago the of late and they enjoy doing yes. we have a rich country and thought of diversity that the something that we can celebrate grammar time in, diana analysis era dealt. we're surrounded by it. we buy and buy as economies push for more and more growth. but consumerism is devastating
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the planet where do those resources come from? where did the impact of that obstruction? alley re reveals that many horses pushing endless economic growth at the cost of vital climate action. the failure to address it, that is not going to fit the truck for leaving all hail the planet. episode 3 on al jazeera drama would be any sin theories at the sky every day in search of signs of rain. he has lost nearly all of his soul. you're being crops is here creeping drought conditions affecting the south american nation. the drought is having an impact on across argentina. this is a field of coordinates. you can see it's try and it's already been lost. producers are telling us that because of the lack of wards, they have started to notice the different types of insects they had never seen before. the big steam weather conditions have also cost shortages of grass, rain and water to view the impacting the captain of many of the farmers india.

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