tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera April 12, 2023 6:00pm-7:01pm AST
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together and stop putting in place the rules allow us to treat this global commons with the attention it deserves inside story on al jazeera. and by for a fraud takes on the big issues. this is not one off. he's talking about a systemic issue here. black labs don't really matter in the police world unflinching questions is war with lawanda, imminent rigorous debate. people who are dying because of lack of medical treatment, challenging conventional wisdom. the fact that people are starting to get angry about this is in itself a sign of progress. join me more from on hill for upright. what al jazeera. ah ah
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no, this is in use. our on al jazeera, fully back to bore live in doha, coming up in the next 60 minutes. ukraine's president accuses russian soldiers of beheading a ukrainian soldier. the kremlin says, video of the allege, incidents needs to be verified. the u. s. president arrives in island after a short visit norland island, as he marked 25 years since the good fight, a peace agreement on port brennan and john door county law, the town italy a once we arrive left president george barb. a little later this evening on so this hour, the un security council meeting to discuss the future of the peacekeeping operation in miley and running low on water. several states in the western us could be forced to cut consumption and on peters terminal fuel schools. chelsea are gearing up to face rail madrid and the champions me quote finals. while manchester city have one
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foot in the 70s of the beaten boy really 3 mill, the 1st leg to take control of their time. ah thank you very much for joining us. we begin this news hour in ukraine where the state security service has launched an investigation. after a video emerged, allegedly showing that the heading of a captured ukrainian soldier by russian soldiers present got him. he zalinski says the act will not be forgotten nor forgiven. the kremlin says the footage needs to be verified. the un and european union have denounced the video and pledge to hold war criminals to account. let's go live to al jazeera john hall was in key force. jonah, what more we learning about this alleged incident. this footage appears to be children. the mobile phone appeared overnight. it is
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extremely gruesome to watch. in no way fit for broadcast. i must ad we cannot independently verify it, although he's getting an enormous amount of traction on social media. here in ukraine and ukrainian government is certainly treating it as though it is genuine to videos. in point of fact, the 1st appears to show the corpses of 2 ukranian soldiers lying on the ground beheaded beside a destroyed military vehicle. the 2nd video, much more graphic than that appears to show russian soldiers torturing a ukrainian prisoner of war and then be heading him at the moment that the beheading begins. using a knife is there are signs that this soldier may in fact have been alive at that point. as i say, no independent means of verifying this video nor its context, nor the units involved, nor where or when it was shocked. although the lush green foliage,
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particularly the 2nd video, indicates that it probably took place well before the beginning of winter. last year. ukrainian reaction is you can probably imagine, has been swift and angry, or ukrainian politicians suggesting that russia be stripped of its presidency of the un security council. another. the foreign minister dmitri could labor likening russia to the stomach state. and, of course, presidency lensky has made a video statement, which he called on every world leader to react. as you pointed out, that he said, don't expect this to be forgotten. we are not going to forget, here's what he had to say. efficient seat. there's something that no one in the world can ignore, how easily these beasts kill this video. the execution of the ukrainian captive, the world must see it. this is a video of russia, as it is the kind of creatures they are. there are no people for them. a son of
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brother, husband, he someone's child. this is video of russia trying to make this a new norm. such a habit of destroying life has also been international reaction. here in ukraine, the un mission says it's a polled by the video, and the european union says if confirmed this, these images are yet another brutal reminder about the inhumane nature of russian aggression. you reiterating its commitment to holding all perpetrators and accomplices of war crimes to account. jonah, thank you very much for that update. john hall live there in he's and he, and now it's door said barry with the reaction from moscow, according to the kremlin spokesperson, dmitri pesca, that is for his does need to be verified, but he did call it appalling and very disturbing. this is the only reaction we've had so far from any of the officials here in moscow. but of course, this is not the 1st time that the russian military has been accused of carrying out
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the legit war crimes during this conflicts. the main one being that the events that took place in the town of boucher last march. there was a lot of evidence. the ukrainian government claimed that the russian military carried out what they believe to be war crimes. and the russians, for their part said that the footage was altered and edited to create the illusion that those crimes were committed by the russian military. but for the time being, during at, for this latest video that surfaced, the officials are waiting to see when it can be verified before the comment any further in other world news us present. joe biden has arrived in dublin, in the republic of ireland. you'll pay a visit to county loud, where he can trace back some of these foods earlier in belfast present biden's that he wants to see. northern island governments restored as soon as possible. it was there to mock the 25th anniversary of the good friday peace agreement. which ended
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30 years of violence effective devolved government reflects the people of northern ireland and is accountable to them. a government that works to find ways to hard problems together, going to draw even greater opportunities this region. so hope the assembly in the executive will. so the restore that's a judgment for you to make, not me. and i hope that happens along with institutions that facilitate north south and east west relations, all of which are vital pieces of the good friday agreement. i'll just here is andra . siemens has this update from belfast. there is a lot of sympathy, what he says here, but the bottom line is that it doesn't move anything on. it would seen. he also said, we know how fragile democracy can be. every generation needs to fight to preserve democracy. now, strong words and they're aimed at the politicians who should be sharing power but
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aren't. and that is primarily the union is the democratic unionist party pulled out of that evolved government more than a year ago in protest that trading rules imposed because of bricks. it rex it is at the center of all of this bricks. it meant that the european union had to have some sort of border har border was proposed at one point which horrified a lot of people because it would have to stabilize the situation. a particularly in relation to the good friday agreement. and of course, what we have now is a different attitude, a different approach to everything, with the windsor framework, which gets a bit more freedom to the trade rules in terms of the they're putting problems in the way of business. people are but know the units party still disagrees with that as a solution. so there is an impasse. it doesn't seem to be going anywhere with who's
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been anything done behind doors is unlikely, but possible of their off 5 blue from ireland parties bite and spoke with them was more greet the meat. he had some work with them and then i'll see university here he risks. we refer to this university saying in 2011, he was in this quarter, the cathedral puerto, there was divisiveness, there was violence, there, lot of security obviously. and of course the situation here now is very different and live not upon brennan was in a county lough. so how does joe biden smooth, paul, plain to politics during his irish, missing a i place into a big way. i mean, listening to andrew that it's clear that the northern ireland parts of president biden's itinerary, it is the politics of its attention now turns now that he's arrived in southern
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island, in the republic of ireland to the diplomatic, into the personal side of his visit. he is, of course, the 2nd catholic, u. s. president. he wears that very much as a badge on his sleeve. he has ancestors here the visit soon. county life where i'm standing now is very much part of a pilgrimage to his family ancestors. the finnegan's from the truly peninsula he's going to go to college, the castle. can john's castle he'll come here to dundalk later on this afternoon, and it's part of joe biden, essentially connecting with it with his irish ancestry. and the reason why politically is because of course, you've got some 31000000 americans who claim irish ancestry. that's one in 10. there are votes in it for joe biden, but there is also a personal i resonance for, for this u. s. president. in particular, ted been, i know he's going to be meeting the
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for magic father, the trip it starts to more morning or late morning when he has an audience with the irish president, michael higgins. and then he speaks with the t shirt lee of veronica. and after that, he will address both houses of the irish parliament in dublin. they been recalled from the east of recess in order to attend that a very important speech by joe biden. i'm the don't expect big political announcements. ringback as i say, it's going to be more over a personal tribute to, to his irishness, and then he will continue to the west of violence, county mayo, or where the blue it outside of the biden ancestry was originally from. and he will have several engagements over there. i'm we spoke about is religious and and catholicism length. see what he will visit to the shrine at, knock a very famous catholic shrine, then. thank you for that. paul paul brennan live for
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a st county. lough ma'am yen. mars gender has admitted that he carried out the air attack said killed more than a 100 people on tuesday. it says those killed in the village of patsy gee, where fighters from the people's defense force and a legitimate military target. but as tony chang reports, evidence from the scene suggests most of those killed were civilians. many of them children and a warning. his report contains to setting images to people shelter in a ditch. the sound of heavy caliber gunfire can be heard in the distance. the sound of an army firing on its own people. go and the frank admission from the spokesman for the military government on state tv, oakland, whereas with their howl, oh good, i'm your butter. yes, of course we launched the attack on them. we were informed that pdf were killed at the event under the attack. they are opposing our government. we met major general zalman turn 3 weeks ago in the capital ne p door and asked him about similar tags
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that of killed scores of civilians. he answered then, as he does now, that these are legitimate military targets and those killed a competence. but new and distressing footage from the aftermath of the attack shows bodies that are clearly those of children. as corpses are removed from the area, the death toll has risen to more than 100 people, the highest number killed in a single event since the cou. a final number of those who died may never be known because of the severity of the attack. al jazeera asked the exiled unity government, whether this is likely to stop armed groups fighting against the gentle general dollar. we started our revolution with basic hunting rifle, so this is an unfair fight in many ways. but the military's weakness is that they don't have the manpower and is no support from the people. targeted sanctions from
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the u. s. and u. k, to try and cut off supplies of fuel from mere mas air force seems to be having little effect. on the military government, it appears cert from a scorched earth policy overall. tony chang l to 0, bangkok. as last more coming up on this al jazeera news hour, including we take a closer look at pakistan's economy as high inflation and the cost of living takes its toll on millions. international community has been absent minded in relation to the grammar of the people of somalia, steers or family in the u. n. cheese please for help us route in somalia forces hundreds of thousands to leave their homes and abroad. james leaves the lakers into the n b a. playoffs will show you how the debates ah, it's often called the u. n deadliest peacekeeping operation. and now the future of
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the mission in molly's being discussed that the security council, germany and britain as well as neighboring ivory coast, or among several nations to announce withdrawal plans, but with violence getting worse marley's military government is increasingly turning to russia's wagner group. nicholas hark reports. strong together in haste. this makeshift camp lies on the outskirts of molly's capital by miko is been built by people who have recently fled violence sweeping the country. among them fed to matter. gwinnett. she says, when 1000000 soldiers marched into her village, she thought she would be safe, but instead they killed her husband. and then she then describes a wave of attacks carried out by fighters linked to al qaeda and government back militias. she says, a un peacekeeping force base not far away, but has never come to protect the people in her village. i came here because it's no longer safe in my village. there is so much in certainty and the un soldiers, they just come after the battle. look at what has happened and then leave again.
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14000 un peacekeeping troops, mostly from african nations or station to molly. after french troops intervene to stop armed groups from invading the country. in 2013, costing nearly $1000000000.00 a year. and with more than 180 soldiers killed, it's the most expensive peacekeeping operation carried out by the u. n. in terms of money and allies of its personnel. un peacekeeping mission, also known as the newsman, says, it has the mandate to protect the population, ensure the peace agreement is respected and assist molly and authorities in building reconciliation in an interview with algae or are molly's prime minister, says the mission is not delivering on its mandate to protect the population in a new shadow as we can easy to pip, we want to make people say to the international community intervened. in molly, following the adoption of the un security council, resolution in 2013 molly ins understood it was to end the war. as soon as a lease agreement was signed, they said they were here to bring pace,
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but there is no place to bring soldiers dying. we want to stop the mass killings of our soldiers and the vast citizens when you get forces from several european countries have left the un mission. after molly's june to hired russian mercenaries from the wagner group to support its own troops, un independent human rights experts accuse fighters from wagner, of carrying out extrajudicial killings and torturing people in molly they are meant to protect. and so the un security council is meeting to discuss the future of the mission. at stake is the fate of a people seemingly alone and vulnerable in the face of mounting violence. nicholas hawk al jazeera and live now to our diplomatic edison jane space at the united nations. james, the meeting on the future of the molly peacekeeping mission is under way. what's been said so far. and what can we expect to come out of this? yeah, the meeting still underway, jeffrey dealer enters who is the one of the us ambassadors here at the you and
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headquarters. speaking right now, but earlier we heard from the secretary general's representative, the man who runs minnes, both the un mission on the ground in marley. l gas and wayne, and he said it was a quite volatile situation still in marley. and he said there were devastating consequences in terms of the humanitarian situation for people in some parts of molly worth taking a step back and reminding you that this mission, this mendoza, my mission set up by the united nations. well, if you go back 10 years, 2 weeks from now is the 10th anniversary. when this was set up, i was actually in by marco at watching the 1st un peacekeepers put on their blue helmets 10 years ago. and certainly this mission has not gone the way that the u. m . would have liked it is the most dangerous mission that the u. n has, and it's had real problems in the last year or so. and that's led to some of the
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countries which have the most sophisticated military is pulling out their troops. you had the french, backed by canada as well, who weren't part of the un mission, but they were there in numbers in marley. they pulled out their troops, them within the un mission. you. you've had of forces from sweden, from u. k. most recently. jordan, who have pulled their, their troops out. so that's the problem. number one, that they are losing the, and most capable of the peacekeepers that are there. the other problem is that this mission is already completely overstretched. they expanded to central marley to trans stabilized central. molly, in 2019 and yet they got no additional resources, no additional tooth numbers to do it. so it is a difficult situation. you have other aspects of this, like the piece deals that supposed to take place. with groups around molly that aren't going anywhere, you're supposed to have a return to constitutional rule that was supposed to be a constitutional of random. that was was take place in march. well we passed march
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calendar still, that's not there as something that's taken place. so real concerns and every once from a work out what to do next. yeah. what to do next. and so what are the possible scenarios here and what would be the ramifications? well, the scenarios are actually laid out on paper by the un secretary general. he came up with this report and he came up this report earlier on in the year. and the security council must now decide what to do. it only has until june to come up with a new mandate for this mission. and although you're seeing the security council meeting an open session right now, and one of us on bass does, is still continuing his speech in that open session. what i think is going to be more important is what happens after that because they'll then go into closed session, a discussions about what to do next. some of the countries that have played a role in marley. oh, certainly we've heard the french ambassador and the u. k ambassador, speaking already, they say something has to change,
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it can't be business as usual. james, thank you very much for the moment. of course, we'll check in with you throughout the afternoon and evening here for the latest on that meeting, jim space and to kinetic editor. let our discuss this further with alex vine. susie, director of the africa program at chatham house is joining us live from london. alex, very good to have you with us on al jazeera. so as we heard from james, there, the, a un mission has not gone the way the when once of course, what are your views here? should this mission in molly's fail go? yeah, so he's got a hot deadline on the 13th of june. so the clock is ticking. and as your reports are just a said the the, the signal from the un secretary general himself is pretty grim. he says, there's a peacekeeping operation listener in molly. but there's no peace the key it's, it's, it's not able to fulfill its mandate. it's not able to encourage advances in the
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political transition. there is no progress in the implementation of the agreement on peace and reconciliation. and molly wade of movement does not exist. and the ability to, to implemented human rights provisions, which is part of the mandate also isn't occurring. why isn't it i was in the u. s. yeah. why, what, why has it been able to deliver on it's mandated? protects manney's population for example. well, you already had a bunch of countries from jordan, egypt, sweden, germany, the u. k. cut the raw, are all eva, have left the peacekeeping operation or leaving, cuz they don't finish thing but can fulfill the mandate. and so there's less and less trips there. and the security situation is, is so dire that i am a peacekeeping operation of the traditional mold that the u. n. has in molly, i'm just con, deliver. it's also dealing with a military jumps of the escapes,
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are threatening it's complaining about men or summer constantly and saying it's under performing right here. it's also constraining its movement. it's also discouraging its activities. and so the molly and jumps don't even really know whether they wanted to stay or wanted to go. but i thought of the problem. and then you have other players like the wagner listen reasonably to the russian federation that we've heard about with me before i at ask you about the fact messner is and whether their presence on the ground has made a difference or not. i wanted to talk to you a bit more about that, the increasingly fraught relationship between the mission and molly's gulf mandate . there is clearly a distrust between the 2 sides. why is that? and is there any way it can be fixed? thank wow, the juncture is struggling. i mean there are been attacks by the insurgents, a link to, to, to i system and ok to within 10 kilometers of the camp. but so i'm
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a co and so scapegoating is really important also now as a, as a, as a defensive mechanism of the jump to, to explain well, why it's not able to provide security. and as you recall before me referenced, there's also increasing human rights abuses of which the u. n. is drawing attention to them and the marty and authorities, whether then malicious and the military had been involved as you've reported. i don't appreciate that. and so this is a horrible, difficult situation. i and it's that, there, there is no easy answer here. it's a, it's a wicked problem with, with no good solutions, right? so as you mentioned, the russian wagner group is present on the ground. they were hired by the government of miley a year ago. has their presence made a difference on the ground? not at all. i'm. i mean, it is the russians and i have
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a 1000. i think i'm operative on the ground with food wagner. and they haven't provided any better security than the french with the canadian support. or indeed even this might have been helped to do. i'm this ready froze a very serious questions. the what's happening in molly at the moment is that you are having a kind of shadow, a state or developing with which the insurgents linked up. i, sis and, and o kinder are creating with checkpoints and their own justice systems and an increasingly ineffective jumper. i'm my conclusion, listening as i was in the un security council to the debate hosted by mozambique last month. i was in the council listening to that physically was that many countries now think the best that i can do in the short term is containment. molly and kind of build around it and, and to ensure there's not contagion into countries like gonna the lupina faster.
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we've always, fragility, doesn't go the way of molly that, that need air is supported. i and then hope the internal processes eventually result in something better in, in, in, in a, in molly, the atmosphere about the future. minous' my last month in the council and the most beacon president's he was very grim and very pessimistic. i like all right, alex, thank you very much for talking to us about this. alex finds director of the africa program at 10 house, joining us from land and we appreciate your time and insight. thank you. thank you very much. still ahead on the news are why some people in columbia refusing to leave their homes, even though i me a vinyl cane or could be about to work is into may, are excited about a new bill passed in congress will explain why and it's advantage into milan. again, spend chica, all the goals, some tuesdays champions,
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the match is coming up. who's wants to say ah, it's been remarkably warming argentina. well throughout the summer and the awesome it's but cool down significantly. this here is the system which is bring. yup. and top to cares, attempts were dropped significantly. they're still not. lo, montevideo is 2018, and what it says is 23. likewise, a little bit above the average, but this is a cold trend. all the same eventually end up to what allegro, which is enjoying the ball at the moment, bringing with it, of course showers though not that many nor so that where we, since a very heavy rain, recently ne, blue brazil with flooding, it's cooling down there, it's drawing up, there are big showers around, but they're not particularly well constructed. you or columbia may be a place to watch, because often we get flooding from big chows here. throughout the caribbean,
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it's quiet. this is the obvious line to watch through the bahamas through florida, where there's been some particularly nasty weather recently. that circulation means heavy rainfall, probably louisiana and maybe mississippi. that's not the major story for the u. s. though. mostly it looks fine. does it not be the winter's coming to the northwest yet it's still around, but really look at these temperatures. let me overlay the colors. temperatures approaching the 30 bucks in reco, breaking me warm in phoenix, arizona. but the northern plain stays there. a flood warnings for rapids snow melt . ah the plastic, it's no secret that it talks to the environment. but do you really know just top safety taste every point of the plastic life cycle into problem for manufacture to the brothers. he are plastic problems are bigger than we're told they are. the peak is in the pudding. the chemical plants are poisoning your williams of these little
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tiny nano particles of plastic. and recently they've just found it in human blood. all hail the planet episode full on al jazeera talk. the law a will. the law when with neither side, willing to negotiate is the ukraine war, becoming a forever war is america's global leadership, increasingly fragile. what will u. s. politics look like, as we had to the presidential election of 2024, the quizzical look us politics, the bottom line, the u. s. is always of interest to people around the world. people pay attention to what was on here, and i'll just, he was very good at bringing the news to the world from here. lou. ah,
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you're watching al jazeera live from doha. reminder of our top stories on this news . our ukrainian states, security services have launched an investigation after a video, a merger lead, leech allegedly showing the be heading of an captured ukrainian soldier by russian troops, president and he says the act will not be forgotten nor forgiven. the gremlins says of footage needs to be verified us present. joe biden has arrived in dublin in the republic of ireland to visit county land where he can trace back some of his fruits earlier in belfast. he says he wants to see normal islands government restored as soon as possible. and myanmar center has admitted to carrying out an air strike on toothache that killed more than a 100 people. the military said the aim of the attack on the village of a c, g was to restore peace in the region. a now the news, international monetary fund says public debt is higher and growing faster than
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projected before the call. the 19 pandemic. the m. f has held a briefing on its fiscal monitor, which provides an overview of public finance developments. it's go live to heidi, so castro in washington, dc for it. so how do you day 2 of the i m f spring meetings? what's on the agenda? well, during, there's much conversation regarding this fiscal monitor, which is, as you said, rather a report card about the health of the global economy and financial systems. and the judgment for now is, is mixed because, while global economies are recovering from the pandemic, there is the problem of growing public debt, which is among the various challenges that the global economy faces. and joining me to discuss, some of those is our guest palo. i'm out of very nice to meet you, your director of fissile services. please let me know just what you know. what is the problem with global debt and help us where this, where the report says,
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while 60 percent of countries are doing a good job bringing down their racial as a whole, the global debt ratio is predicted, right? right. so we are not, we know, moment of normalization of the public finance these 3 years after the start of the funds. they make things that are becoming a little bit more normal at the end of 2020, after the exceptionally interventions from governments around the world. the global public debt ratio was a 100 percent of g d p. and at the end of 2022 global public debt has declined as a result of the recovery and the end of those exceptional measures surprise inflation. and we stood at 92 percent of g d p. but looking at the medium term, looking at the years ahead, what we're projecting is the gradually increased again to a 100 percent to g d p 5 or 6 years from now. and the picture is mixed in the many
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countries we project are going to keep reducing their ratios, but a several large economies. in particular, china, united states, the united kingdom, france, to some extent for those we project the continued increase in the public there to g. d p ratio. in particular, one factor is the slow down in economy growth. part the due to the demographics, the aging of the population in china and the united states. and that's one of the important factors are central message to government around the world. because there are high, they're higher than prior to the funds they make, because inflation is hi. this is the time for fiscal restraint. fiscal restraint reduces demand in the economy, reduces inflation refreshers. and by having these fiscal restraint, this heightening that reduces the need for central banks to jack up interest rate
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as much. and we just saw from the us consumer price index showing inflation has now fall into 5 percent. what can be learned from that for other countries? around the world, right, well 5 percent is still well above the target for the united states, and quarter inflation is still pretty high as well. so what i take away from the inflation is still there with us. it's important for government to help the central banks. and again, if governments around the world exercise this will restrain this will tightening. central banks may still have to raise interest rates a little bit, but not as much as in the absence of this fiscal tightening. and by the way, by allowing central banks not to increase interest rate as much, there are benefits also in terms of reducing potential financial vulnerabilities as we have seen in some episodes. the recently certainly further in systems in the us and as well as what's your lead?
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but i wanted to ask you to about the russian invasion of ukraine as that continues . just how much longer can the energy market with sand or is nor can withstand that indefinitely. or do you think there's a time that's ticket? right, so we've seen a lot of countries have provided support to people and firms in the form of widespread energy subsidies. we are recommending 2 countries to reduce those subsidies, and he said use targeted support that goes to the people who truly need ideally through cash transfers, but only to the people who really need it. because if one provides these generalized subsidies, that's very fiscally costly, but also it fails to provide incentives for people and firms to conserve energy. and perhaps even more importantly, people need to switch away from fossil fuel toward renewables. that's a way of working to mitigate climate change, but it is also,
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particularly in countries in europe. it's a way of ensuring energy secure if you saw a switzer move towards renewables, is a big priority. now, thank you so much for your time and of course climate change helping vulnerable nations that are poorer also combat are the effects of climate change and of course ukraine, they're all high on the agenda to day later there will be a ministerial round table regarding how to continue support of ukraine all on on the agenda here at the spring meetings during. thank you. i think it's fully. thank you very much for that id. id. sure. castro life for a stay at the i'm a fast spring meetings in washington, or pakistan has secured a 2000000000 dollar. no and from saudi arabia as it traces an economic crisis. it's one of the conditions for a bailiff from the i m f that is currently under discussion. the cost of living is rising fast impacts on with inflation at over 30 percent off at bakery ports. hundreds,
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desperately scramble for free flour. it's being handed out by the government to from the struggling with the stolen cost of basic food. the demand has been overwhelmed and people have chewed for hours since the beginning of the muslim holy month of ramadan $23.00 people have been killed is dumb. pizza distribution centers across pakistan. thousands of bags of flour have also been stolen. good, good head along. i accepted difficulties for the people and getting free flower or long queues and over crowder, as the people are desperate for his flow. so debbie has registered her details and gets her freeflow. it takes the whole family to get it into the home. the flower is mixed with water and made into tow. i looked at another another nichoela rock lana, but i knew that i wasn't anything at home to cook my care properly, and that has made me worried how to beat them with elk. but i was lucky to have a few bags of free flour from the government center, which will help for a few days, especially in ramadan. the children worked eagerly for their food,
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but it's only bread and sugar. it's simple, but it's all they can afford with millions across the country are struggling with the rising cost of living. some fruits and vegetables have more than doubled in price. the government is struggling to control the economy and implement economic reforms. lay dark by the i m f. but there's still no guarantee the economy will recover even with a bare large and a countries foreign reserves are at an all time low. whatever comes out of the i'm if meetings in washington the still considerable skepticism hair a partial, i'm a fairlight or whether the. busy refunds, the asking for will actually make things better for normal, boxed ollie's or make them worse. back in some of the poorest parts of the company sergeant farm, you're hoping the flowers enough to get go through the tough months ahead. as i beg, i'll jazeera, the united nations secretary general is wanting a farm in is looming in somalia as it faces its worst drought in decades. antonio
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terrace said the international committee must act to prevent a catastrophe during a visit to somebody about $43000.00 people died from the draught last year, according to the un. half way under the age of 5, catherine sawyer reports some more. reddish un secretary general spent 2 days in somalia to put more pressure on the international community to save millions of people facing violence and drought. 5 rainy season half failed in the horn of africa, somalia is the most affected. more than 40000 people have died in the last one and a half years. many more have been forced to leave their homes. gutierrez, called for much needed humanitarian support. the un needs $2600000000.00, but only 15 percent donor funding has been met. the media challenge is of course to make sure that we avoid phenom again in 2020. so to do so, that is of course,
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the extremely important biology. but we cannot go on and on and on. just providing him is unless we model we must address the roof calls. so we must put the same urgency in the measures needed to build resilience of the communities. the city of by dora is body hate. many somalis are coming here from different areas, but help in the camps is limited. some are also fleeing conflict, as the government carries out an offensive against the armed group. also, bob, president has and shake, muhammad said his government is winning the war. at the moment we working together with other international partners this the blows issued program of the push of shop up or delivery to areas. this will look to the urine to increase critical investment. and this areas us, these people,
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as our citizens has been denied the accessibility of susan's service services for more time the army has taken back important areas held by the group for men. yes. i'll sure bob is still able to carry out a talks and scare people who terrace visit shows a glimpse of how uncertain things are here. mogadishu was partially locked down, major roads were closed and no one was taking chances. security has been beefed up in many parts of this city. we have been speaking to a government forces who said that the aim is to keep people safe, especially now during the holy month of ramadan. and satin t is now part of everyday life. for many somalis, katherine soy, alta 0, a good issue somalia. the biden administration has proposed water caps when several
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american fates to prevent the colorado rivers reservoir from dropping to creek levels. its sources in the rocky mountains and its fans more than 2300 kilometers. 7 us states rely on the river for their water supplies. areas in the north west of mexico would depend on it to rob reynolds 3 fourths after 23 years of severe drought, the colorado river and its reservoirs of dwindled to alarmingly low levels. if they dry up even further, it could cut hydro electric generation and water supplies over a vast area. worst case scenario where everyone boys with, you know, water. busy river, available to flow in the river to serve those yearly $40000000.00 people in the west depend on the colorado for drinking water and electricity together with billions of dollars worth of foreign products. even though we have
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a largely above snow above normal snow pack in the colorado we still, it doesn't mean we're going to have great run off at this point on top of the fact . the drought has been such a long standing drought over the last, you know, 5 years to a decade, plus that it's going to take a number of years to overcome this deeper drought that we have. western states or allocated water under the terms of a 100 year old treaty. but despite protracted negotiations, the states have been unable to agree to changes and cuts needed to address the shrinking water supply. the by did ministration, proposes equal across the board cuts for each of the 7 states in the compact up to 25 percent. if approved, that would certainly cause some pain. perhaps especially for farmers who use 75 percent of the water pipe from reservoirs, but also for city dwellers certainly will transition or
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adapt to less wire base. you know, sure, cuts more additional over here in the western united states. we've seen extreme rainfall over the past several months, but scientists say one wet winter is not enough to make up for 23 years of severe drought. so it seems that one way or another, the people of the west are going to have to get used to using water more sparingly . rob reynolds al jazeera los angeles in columbia. our thought is a warning that the nevada del we saw k no could erupt any time putting hundreds of families at risk, but many people are refusing to leave the surrounding area. smoke has been blowing from the volcanoes crater for days. alexander, i'm p t reports from nevada of lease carrying few belongings. the mothers and children of these families who live in high risk areas close to the nevada,
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the re spokane are, are reluctantly heating the government's call to evacuate. but, but this is obviously you get scared, especially with the kid, but my husband on his own has more ways of saving himself. then if he's all here. so i guess it's better to leave to make sure nothing happens to me. i'm a local authorities are offering transportation and food to convince them to leave, but their husbands say they are staying to put to protect their cattle and crops. no bows, i leave the moment. i can't leave from one day to the other and abandon everything . who milk the cows? what happens to our investment? i understand there's an alert, but we don't really know what will happen. dick is roughly 57000 people live in the shadows. if they, nevada, they have released volcano, this seems to be gearing up for a major eruption since march 31st. so teresa reported a spike in seismic activity within a snow capped peak from 50 tremors. the day when average of $6000.00 or more
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columbia geological service issued an orange alert, meaning and their option could happen in days or weeks. and the government called for the immediate evacuation of 2500 people in a 15 kilometers radius of the volcano. but to me you're one of the surrounding towns tells us it has been difficult. it says here, it's easy to issue an order from the capital, but the reality on the ground is different. we are pressured by the central government to get people out what they don't understand how complicated the reality is. we need more incentives out or it is around the edge. since the volcano was responsible for the country's deadliest natural disaster, 37 years ago. this canyon was the result of the 1985 ration when a gigantic land slide of mud and rocks travelled for more than 50 kilometers, wiping out completely the town of a meadow and killing 25000 people. at the time. no one expected such
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a disastrous explosion, and no one was notified quickly enough, not to play. the colombian government says it's serious about avoiding a repetition of the path, saying it might issue more stringent evacuation measures. master ferry. those leaving now just hope to safely be able to come back to their loved ones and their lives. i listen that i'm a jazzy to move out of their roofs. column chili's congress has passed a proposal to reduce working hours from 45 to 40 a week and overseen by many as a victory for the government and a set forward for workers. weiss, felix no r r a force o a breakthrough in she lays congress for 6 years. politicians, i've been debating whether to reduce the length of the working week. this was the moment many who argued for that change had been waiting for getting more money for
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that. and i get, honestly, we want to express great joy because we've shown that it's possible to advance towards a better quality of life for the workers of our country. here, 127 out of 155 members of congress voted in favor of cutting working hours in chile. it now joins ecuador introducing the working week to 40 hours. 14 voted against c. a shorter work week will damage us more businesses if dorsey lou and i work here more to this is much easier for large companies who can adapt working hours, but is harmful for small medium enterprises. for the struggling to survive and economic crisis. president gabriella burridge came to power last year, promising social and economic reforms ha, but his approval ratings have plummeted. as the economies worsened and inflation has risen to nearly 12 percent a new constitution he championed last year,
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was widely rejected for his administration. the passing of this legislation is a much needed when walkers, in the capital santiago, welcome to the changes that i am going to like in a month. yeah, it's good because people have more time for the family and with to days where just people can find another source of income. so it's not bad. latin america has some of the longest working hours in the world. but chillies government says it's possible to improve productivity and the quality of people's lives on many are watching to see if other nations in the region start to agree. phenix, nora o g 0 still i had on al jazeera, we build up to a huge game in the champions league. as chelsea gets ready to face holders way on the trade in the quarter finals stay with us beat us up next. ah
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ah ah, restore, says peter, thank you very much, magister city manager pip. guardiola city was emotionally destroyed. after watching the sy beat by munich, 3 knolls take control of their champions. lee caught a final time, said he were at home for the 1st leg, an school there opener after 27 minutes. and what a strike it was from robbery on his weaker left foot as well as the spanish midfield. his 1st goal in the competition and at so he side go into half on one mil, up with 20 minutes to go check, greenish stole possession. he's back hill, found early holland. we picked out banana silver to head in cities,
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2nd harlem and got in on the act himself scoring his 44th goal of the season. where he now holds the record for the most golds by a primly player across all competitions in a single campaign. isn't comfortable enough emotionally. i'm destroyed. i have her. i have 2 more years to the sold and you know, it was so demanding game, of course, a good result. really, really good. but to have 9 minutes i've been there many, many times, 3 years there. i know in europe esteem is a special to knock out these type of teams. you have to make sure good games. no, just one think it's not that to serve result. it does not tell the story of this match. we did not get the rewards that we deserve. this does not feel like a 30, but it is a 30. and of course, it's a huge, huge task. now to turn this around, but now we will not give up. we are realistic,
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but we will not give up and football is football and home mentioned germany is the home merchant, germany and like they say, we will, will be, will, an it will not be over until we are in the shower its advantage into milan in a call to final within freq, and he nicolo barella, gave the italian side the lead. early in the 2nd hall was 10 minutes ago. ben feet gave away a penalty for a handful by former pleasure. well, mario, from a little cautious set up at the school, pick to make it to know it was a 1st winning 7 game. well been to suffer their 1st last few competition. which said that it's not easy to play in milan over this result. in the 2nd leg is clear, but yeah, for sure we try our best to come back into this this one of course is not the best requirement for the 2nd leg, but of course we still believe it's a tough task facing this man here. frank lamp odd. if chelsea side or in spain to
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take on defending european champions, rail madrid in the 1st leg of the call to final, it's less than a week since lampa was appointed interim manager. following the sacking of grandpapa, the champions league as chelsea's only remaining hope of soup away the season and go into the game with rail. having failed to win any of the last 4 matches. i think when you get to the stage, wherever the reason is, there'll be pressure and i'll ram if it 5, it's yes and, and now i understand why because of the difficulties of our season and those things . i don't think that's a problem. i think those things are a fine. there's no kara in football then trying to prove people wrong and insensitive pressure. i'm not worried about that football. it's level is pressure. and if he can handle depression and, you know, a big travel, you know, a big pile rails coach, carlo angela is a man lampart knows, well he played under angela. he doing the italians,
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2 years in charge at chelsea. and the madrid boss says he's not enjoyed seeing you for matlab struggled to feed. i'm sad, yes i, i learned from vast majority of this globular of this, of the people that are, are still working doubting. and i am so part of that of january, of course, because i spent 3 hours are really nice there and i be back. no, i figured blood brother, i hoped that lampa is able to do a fantastic job. read them wednesdays. other quarter final isn't all italian clash between ac milan and napoli. napoli are away for the 1st leg and missing their main men up front. victor awesome in who's out injured? natalie of 16 points. clear at the top of the italian league, but they did lose 4. no, let him to milan 10 days ago. the bron james led the la lakers into the n b a playoffs of the dramatic come back. whenever the minnesota december wolves james
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top scored with 30 points as the lakers overturned, a 15 point deficit to take victory. it was an action packed finish to the game dentist. schroeder, at school, a 3 points it with 1.4 seconds left on the clock, give the lakers a 9895, lead anthony davis in foul my conley with 0 point one seconds to play. allowing conley to make 3 free throws to take the game to overtime. but it was the lakers who came out on south 108 to 102. they now faced the memphis grizzlies, and the 1st round of the place were 20 in the analytics. i say we had a 0.3 chance megan opposing saw. i saw you guys for the chance. i guess it was a charter on our season and yours of an opportunity to get people to larry. o'brien shall feed us all. you can actually, this is definitely a playoff game play of atmosphere. playoff intensity rough allowed us to play. i felt like to play off,
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so i was good again to the playoff feel of the game. but honestly, is a different match up there. we have coming this weekend, i with memphis. and this one in the eastern conference, the atlanta hawks set up a playoff series against the boston celtics were the 116105 victory of the miami heat. tre young school, 25 points for the hawk miami. we'll have another chance to advance in the face the winner of the plane game between the chicago bulls and the toronto raptors on friday. this is but john, quote number 5 to neil medford davis through to the monte carlo masters 3rd round off to beating italy's lorenzo. soniega italian managed to give med would ever work out in the 2nd round, but nothing much more than that. the tournament 3rd seed coming out on top in straight st. 6362 med, whatever, meets alexander, very in the last 60 speaking very vio became spain's wrote about, he's a good, the german getting the job done in straight sets, 64, and 64. he'll be happy to have also had an hour and 48 minutes on hold with us only
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his food match back after devastating ankle injury last year's french open. meanwhile, caspar rude has also made his way into the monte carlo masters. 4th round, the norwegian wolf man before took care of bo take from bizarre scope of the netherlands, even though the straight sets when rude, had to work hard to come out on top 75, and 7, that 6. that's all the sports needs will be here again with more later fully. peter, thank you very much for that. that's it for this is alan al jazeera, but to say they started back in just a few minutes with more of the day's needs. thanks so much. ah, ah
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acre analogies era, as the war and ukraine moves in with the 2nd year, we bring you the latest reports from both sides of the conference to people 2 experiences. one conversation with no host studio be unscripted seeks to find the common solutions. thousands of brazil's indigenous population will come out in the capital, brazilian drawing attention to land disputes and local concerns. in the lead up to up day out is they were explored the environmental significance of action and inactivity al jazeera covers. the latest ongoing developments from the her on on efforts to address iran's nuclear developments. april on al jazeera, from the al jazeera london broadcast center to people in thoughtful conversation with no host and no limitations this decade is the most consequential decade in immense, is done for too many companies that are doing bad things in the front. in part 2 of
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human rights activists, q me 19 and environmental. if we know none of the systems that are not working, but the longer that you fight them, the more that things change studio be anne smith, date on al jazeera, a weekly look at the world's top business stores, thousands of people go on strike and pay the high cost of living from global markets and economies and small businesses of the export restrictions really impacted china's economy to understand how it affects our data. counting the cost on al jazeera ah you. ready ukraine's president, the keys is russian soldiers of be heading a ukrainian soldier. the cabinet.
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