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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  April 22, 2023 1:00pm-2:01pm AST

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of renowned artist and environmental activists. the climate crisis. a season of special coverage on al jazeera ah, holding the powerful to account as we examined, the u. s. is role in the world on al jazeera. ah ah. hello, i am, sam is a dam. this is the news out live from tao ha, coming up in the next 60 minutes. country star evacuating embassy staff from sedan is fighting persist despite the seas. fire announcements. i want to say to the po, sorry we are the civilians, we are. the price civilians caught in the cross fire thousands of people stuck in
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cartoon too scared to leave an attack targets a military camp in central molly close to way of 500 un peacekeepers a base. the world ma gsa say is the consequences of climate change back up. i'm sorry, faster reporting from the vintage store in berlin about sustainable fashion in response to a pollutant, clothing industry plus voice. that sounds like you buzz isn't to you. we explore the advances an artificial intelligence technology in sport, the data, but nuggets are dog at it for the n b a. playoffs bots, not off those. the premier league leaders drop points again. this story, they need a laugh that did it, equalize it, get to bottom top. ah,
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it's been a week since violence broke out between sedans, army and the rapids support forces. despite the 72 hours sci fi fi thing is still going on and several countries are making arrangements to get their diplomats and citizens out of the sidney's army. so savvy rapiers, if a magic mission has already left flying out from the coastal city of fort sedan, the u. s. u. k. france and china, arranging for their embassy staff, and citizens to be evacuated as soon as possible. both the sudanese army and the power military rapid support forces say they're facilitating the evacuations. victoria gave me, begins, are coverage. the area around the presidential palace and the army headquarters in khartoum is the focus of intense fighting as the army empower military great. the rapid support forces battle for control of sudan. many of the cities,
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6000000 residents are trapped in their homes with power outages, a lack of running water and dwindling food supplies. the angry that is $72.00, our cease fire for the muslim holiday of eat. al fitter hasn't held all up to say to the ball side. we are the civilians. we are paying the price. we're not supposed to live in this situation. we are panic. you. we are currently, we are struggling. this is too much for us. both sides say they're aware of the impact on the sudanese people. the commander of the rapid support forces says he's asked the u. m for help and has spoken to secretary general antonia good terrace, about the humanitarian truce, safe passage of residents who want to leave and the protection of aid workers. oh, it's not easy to get a clear picture of the situation. you only says the are
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a theft attack to prison and release many of the inmates, but the are a theft denies this and accuses soldiers of bombing residential areas. ah, what is clear is that the united states and other countries are preparing for the evacuation of their citizens and embassy staff. we have no higher priority than the safety and security of u. s. government personnel, their dependence, and private us citizens abroad. and we have made very clear to both sides that any attacks. threats are dangerous, posed to our diplomats are totally unacceptable. the right now both sides seem determined to fight on, leaving millions of sued knees, fearing for their lives. victoria gay to be al jazeera. oh, let's go now to him, morgan. she joins us live from call to him. so hippa, 1st of all, diplomatic evacuations, always seeing
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a situation where embassies are pulling out all their citizens and diplomat. yes indeed, there has been a lot of concern about the safety of foreign nationals here and the capital for too many of them who are also caught up and is fighting between the rapid support forces and the sudanese army. now, most of them live and their embassies are around the vicinity of the general command of the army as well as around the presidential palace. so many of them are trapped in this conflict. unable to get out and see safety elsewhere, also cut off from power and, and, and, and running water like the rest of the residence here in the capitol cartoon. it's not clear yet how they will be able to evacuate from these locations. most of them are still the scenes of intense fighting between the 2 sides. the airport has been severely damaged in the fight between the 2 sides. and there is still ongoing heavy artillery strikes in many residential neighborhoods around the capital, despite the fact that this supposed to be a period where there's a ceasefire. so it's still not clear how those citizens will be able to get out of
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their homes to a safe locations. local camico communities in the con, in the capital, are also trying to evacuate to help with the evacuation of the foreign nationals, as well as those who are trapped in the fighting areas. but so far, while embassies say that they are working to clear to, to get to evacuate their citizens. and while the sudanese army says it will help with their vacation, it's not clear, it will be able to leave their homes in the 1st place. as intense fighting continues between the 2 sides and which airport they will be using because the airport has been severely damaged in the fighting. so assume idly huber if they are able. ready if foreign embassies am our foreign powers, are able to now evacuate their people. this means war, but the roaring sides are coordinating alone fighting to let these people get out. well, it doesn't necessarily mean that they're coordinating with each other. they may be coordinating with the sides that are due to it by creating their own nationals. but
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there has been no direct communication between the rapid support force as address for the needs army. and that's, of course, assuming that it will be safe enough and that it will be a period for the nationals can evacuated from their homes to places where a plane can take them. now the countries like the united states, china, and france said they will be sending planes to evacuate their nationals. but then again, it's not clear if there will be a place for them to land in a so player, if this has already been sorted out, they said it's still a work in progress. but again, they're also others who are trapped in the country. the fighting is still going on fiercely in many residential neighborhoods around the vicinity of the presidential palace. heavy artillery fire can be heard as well as airstrikes in the northern parts of the capitol and in the southern and eastern parts of the capitol. so it looks like all these foreign countries and foreign nationals are waiting for a window over a break, a ceasefire or a low and fighting where they can take out their nationals and try to evacuate them
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to safety away from this conflict or, and hipaa, i think there was or has been some lull in the fight thing last night. i mean, is that giving people a chance to brief? well the focus here right now for the people trapped in this conflict, for many of them, at least it's not about being able to stuck up on basic commodities. many of them have been without power for a week now they've not had running water for a week and they have to struggle to be able to get that. and many stores remain closed in other areas. prices of commodities have doubled or even tripled. so people right now are focusing on trying to get cars to leave the capital to places like does either in the central part of the country or river. now, in the northern part of the country, many of the people who spoke to said they focused on getting out of the country completely. they're trying to get to egypt because they feel it safer. foreign nationals or from saudi arabia were able to evacuate. if i other read it as the city of upwards sedan to saudi arabia. so others are looking at that as an option.
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and many, many have started seeking refuge in the neighboring country of chad. so many people in the capital fay, their focus right now is not on stocking up on commodities because there's so many other things that they're lacking, including medical assistance. the focus right now is when it to stay safe to do so to leave the capital because the fighting is still ongoing and they're not sure when it will end. right. thanks so much. have a morgan plenty more still have all the news out, including the bill that's become the flash points in the find over abortion in the u. s. supreme court keeps it on the shelves are now and be a playoff action. as the atlanta hawks closed, the gap in the series against the boston celtics ah, now military camp in central molly has been attacks. it happened in the early hours
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of saturday in the summer i, in the gao region. hundreds of un peacekeepers are stationed in the area. no casualties have been reported. a no group has claimed responsibility comes days off the eiffel affiliates reportedly took control of launch parts of the region because hi joins me now with more on this. so nicholas, 1st of all, what was the target of this tac? this tax i mean took place at 5 a and this morning there were simultaneous attacks. there was a car bomb at a checkpoint at the entrance of safari, which is a major town in the north of the country. and then there were rocket attacks that were targeting the airport, their targeting military bases, but those rockets landed in civilian populated areas. so according to the eye witnesses or people that the algebra has both spoken to. there are
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a large number of casualties. the hospitals are overwhelmed. this was supposed to be a day of celebration, a day where millions of millions were celebrating at the end of the fast and the separation of ead. instead. people are mourning the dead. this. this attack is happening at a time where i sold the i, so affiliate is really taking control of large swath allowed and in some areas of north of the country and also at the bordering areas with in the share. and there are also fighting between al qaeda affiliate and i still try to control these areas of land. and it's at a time where many people had a come to, to, to, to the major towns like save our sieve are in search of shelter. but also in search of food and humanitarian health. now there is a un peacekeeping mission in the town. hundreds of soldiers there. there are molly and soldiers, but also we're told there's also russian fighters from the vac. no groups that are
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there that are there to try to protect it from attacks, but there seems to be no letting of these attacks. we talked about attacks just a few days ago in the region of medic, by the border of news year where the, the city is almost under siege from fighters linked to i so, so there's really an uptake of attacks in molly. there has been no official confirmation of the death toll or no officials. 3 communicate from the 1000000 military june that seems increasingly isolated from the international community. there was a un security council meeting just a few weeks ago, really condemning the human rights violation from the military, june, tepid, also the, the slow move towards a return to democracy. meanwhile, millions of people continue to be displaced at as there are more and more attacks in the north and center of the country. semi. all right, thanks so much. nicholas hawk. people around the world, the mocking earth day,
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holding on politicians to step up the fight against climate change in thought, bio diversity loss, wildlife populations have shrunk by nearly 70 percent since the 1st day in 1970. the world is also warmed by at least $1.00 degrees celsius. mcclark has more already this year we've seen record storms. we've seen rec, hold, drought, and now record heat enveloping swathes of asia from india to southern china, and down to thailand and throw in this week's report on the devastating effects of pollution globally. and there you have it. humanity and the well we live in is in trouble. the founders of earth, they knew that way back in 1970 because walter cronkite on the c b. s. evening news, 53 years ago. got a name, a unique day in american history as and then they set aside for
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a nation wide out flooring of mankind, seeking its own survival. first day. the environmental movement spawned by the energized politics and schooled some big achievements. his phase found dennis have repassed to clean water act and endangered species act of marine mammal protection . acted toxic substances control act. we ban let and gasoline rebound lead in paint . it was just a remarkable period of environmental accomplishment shows what can be done. right. thing is on earth day 1970 c o. 2 levels were at $325.00 parts per 1000000 today there at $424.00 and still rising. and that's more than 50 percent above pre industrial times, a concentration not seen for 3000000 years. and it's wreaking havoc, costing billions, displacing millions. this is earth day messages we must invest in our planet. we ask ourselves, or is the scale of our response to date, meaning the scale,
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the challenges, the answer is clear now. but ah, can we still need those challenges? the answer in my view is a clear yes. and that involves public pressure of elected officials and other leaders. it involves accountability, increased accountability. ah, it involves tremendous creativity. ah, in order to meet these challenges, the founders of earth, they knew very well this fact how humanity treats the world reflects how the world treats humanity. 53 is on. we see evidence of that every single day. now the fashion industry is among the worst polluters, the un says it makes up to 10 percent of the world's carbon emissions. producers have launch several campaigns to make fashion more sustainable. it's not clear how successful they've been set. vasa has this story from one of the world's fashion
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capitals, berlin, if we got this waste from beak fashioned houses that to design us maria an abbey deeds that breaks at a source of this slow fashion brand sustainable clothes that are made to last. and this is one, a genes fabric that we sell from italy, the lining we saw from ma, from germany. when you see europe, there is so much waste, saw so much waste of the industry and we are talking about like one meter, one. you're talking about roles in recent decades, fashion has become an industry that expert described was one of the most polluting and least transparent when it comes to sourcing materials. as environmental awareness include, as many young people have become reluctant to buy, so called fires fashion, and instead shop at vintage or 2nd hand stores fine good from the like. i can help to support the environment. now we're facing climate change and it's great. this jump looks brand new, everything i'm wearing secondhand, my bag, my jacket,
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my jumper, my pants, if your student or something and you have to look where you want to goes. it's also a good way to find cool clothing and it feels a lot better. and to go to like the, the big chains. a recent consumer trends report done by threat up suggest that more than 60 percent of people age between 15 and 35 by pre old clothing. a market, some estimate good outgrowth, fast fashion in 5 years with a value of $64000000000.00 for many wearing a 2nd pan check up like this one we just more than 20 years old. it's perfectly fashionable. the vintage clothing market is big business, but there's also a lot of debate on what sustainable fashion or what green washing fashion consultant, alack leech world, a book called. the world is on fire, but we are still buying shoes as only one piece of advice by fewer clothes is i
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such thing as a sustainable fashion industry right now. the industry itself is quite fundamentally broken, but it's very difficult to say if this product is trudy sustainable and they're all, they're all brand out there that really are doing the work and that really are trustworthy. most of the time it's an illusion. he says, wearing youth clothes is the sustainable. although as prices increase, vintage items aren't available to everyone. the main thing is to, to wear the pieces. you have love them until, you know, maybe they fall apart and, and repair them. and if they don't fit anymore, change them. this will require a change in mindset for those fashion lovers who feel the need to. we have something different. every day. steadfast and al jazeera berlin. alan mcclay is theo of better cotton and n g o. that promotes better standards in cost and farming across $21.00 countries joins us from london. good to have you with us. so if there is a, an industry that can be a fashion industry that is more environmentally friendly,
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what makes it more environmentally friendly? is it the production process? is it the types of fabrics used or simply the longevity of fabrics, so people that need to constantly buying new clothes as all of the above, of course, i can really refer to colton at the beginning of the supply chain. if she looked down here, probably wearing caution, nearly everyone in the world wears or uses casa on a daily basis. and more than 22000000 tons on produce on units. one of the fashion industry is most important materials, but it's also essential to remember that it's actually renewable. it's a natural resource. it grows in very diverse landscapes, and unlike synthetics, cotton is not fossil fuel base. so the sustainability of kaufman is one of the fashion industries most powerful leavers, both environmentally and in terms of decent work and human well being,
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because something like 60000000 farmers are producing cotton around the world today . all right, so you're providing, i guess, kind of a model in which farmers can all the fashion industry can look at how it deals with cotton differently. does that increase? does that bump up the costs and will consumers see prices go up if they adopt the kind of practices you're calling for? we firmly believe that it needn't affect the price at all. in fact, what was found by acting on leavers of importance like pesticides and fertilizers and on better water stewardship, generally on good agricultural practices, ironically, yields go. and so the profitability of the former will increase if, if, if he or she adopts good agricultural practices and this should not affect the price of the supply chain until the actual cost of the cost in itself is marginal.
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busy compared to the final cost of the garment or other fashion, or does it lead to a decrease though in ones need to grow kaufman? and if so, you know, that might have goods agree in fact go where does it leave the cotton farmers if their output is going to demand for their alpha goes down? well cotton farmers typically. ready rely on a variety of crops with very few actually grow costs and all excited. and what we're trying to do with our job is to make sure that when the cost is growing, that it's done so renewable and sustainably. in fact, if that's the case, and then there's no need to reduce the production because it's not actually damaging. of course we're not there yet. this is what we're responding to. and somewhere reduction in overall demand. there's still plenty of sky to make sure that the customer is being produced is produced more sustainably and more reliably
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. i don't see it as necessarily affecting the overall livelihoods of farmers because they're dependent on so many other factors. and there's so many other crops that are generally produced alongside colton. all right, so if it's, if it's a win win all round, while stopping it from catching on is also so friction is a good question also, or source of friction in the supply chain. and even in cotton production itself, a lot of it is just about getting the basics right. when we, when we train the farmers that we work with and we work with something like 2200000 farmers, maybe even closer to 2 and a half 1000000 in 24 countries. and the rules are generally the same across, across the globe. and no matter what kind of territory you're working on, good agricultural practices actually respect the ecosystems that you work with. and so our, our proper stewards of all the natural resources that we're based on that the
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farming is based on. all right, and if it does cat, sean, how does one know if the clothes you're buying are up to this kind of environmentally friendly standards or not? you know other standards, is there anyone enforcing them? does anyone oversee them? is a better cotton is a san liver. of course we are enforcing it and we're improving every every year. but you put your finger on one of the biggest issues which is the traceability of gotten at present cotton is a very fungible can. busy it like christie water, if you don't know which power station is, is providing the electricity and the plug in your. busy and you don't know where the water out of your tap is coming from, because it's all being mixed. cotton is blended like that in the production, but we are launching a traceability program. we've been watching this for several years. we notice that the advances of technology are making trade. i'll bring it takes about traceability
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within reach. and at the same time, the need for businesses to understand better the supply chains and especially to show that they're responsible and accountable for their supply chains. means is a real opportunity. now to bring traceability to the cost of market and that's what we're doing and what we want to do. we're starting our pilots. we had a cup upon his last year in mozambique and in pakistan we're going to repeat honors this year in india. and we're going to be going this slowly step by step. what we're trying to do is not just be able to provide the consumer with the reassurance of where the cost is coming from. we also can. busy with the judicious use of effective and reliable day to ensure that the farmers who are producing the cotton cat demonstrate exactly how sustainable their production is with the reduction of the use of pesticides, the reduction of synthetic fertilizer batch of water stewardship. and all of the above. all right,
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thanks so much for joining us. thank you. are the u. s. supreme court has ruled in favor of protecting access to a widely used abortion pill, at least for now, it's introduced a temporary block on a ruling from a lower court, which had restricted. if prestone, the pill will now be available into next year, while appeals are heard. legal battle over the drug began earlier this month when a federal judge in texas or did a nation wide ban. chavez times he has more from washington d. c. the legal battle over access to him if a prestone will continue oral arguments are scheduled to begin and the 5th circuit court of appeals on may the 17th. but while that legal process plays out of majority of justice is here at the supreme court decided that access to the drug should remain widely available. not 2nd guesses, the food and drug administration,
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the regulatory process before those legal arguments have played out. in fact, there is some expectation in the, in this case will return to the supreme court once the 5th court of appeals has made its decision. but what a precedent it would be if the supreme court had agreed with restrictions or drugs that have been widely available for 23 years with proven efficacy and a lack of health problems. joe biden, very quick to welcome the decision saying that this is another, another sign that the american people india need to vote democrat and create a congress where abortion can be codified once and for all. the democrats know, especially a time when joe biden has very low approval ratings. a democratic party in general, has very low approval ratings. as we saw in the mid terms. this is an issue that swing voters independent basis and the democratic bass can get behind. she ever time see al jazeera washington artificial intelligence can seemingly do anything
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humans can, and maybe even more, it can write computer code, create fake video, and clone voices. can even pretend to be you around reports from silicon valley. where is my script? did i take my pills? artificial intelligence voice cloning can create highly realistic spoof videos and that would be to one or recreate the voice of long dead artist andy warhol. for a television documentary, i went down to the office because they're making a room out of silicon valley start up, resemble a i did the war hole voice cloning and has projects in the works for several global entertainment companies. it's not like of technology that's imitating a voice, but it's using the voice itself to, to, to speak. exactly. it's using the voice data itself, which is what the a i model learns from. and then it uses that data to learn patterns of that voice
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and be able to reproduce and to show us how it works. c, e o z o. have ahmed had me record a few phrases. she told herself that after all, her fear had done no harm. after a few minutes of processing, my cloned voice recited a 19th century poem on the sand, half sunk, a shattered visage lies whose frown? it'll be like extremely realistic to the point that the other person won't be able to recognize. if it's, if it's you or artificial voice resemble a i says it has strict safeguards requires informed consent from speakers and has a digital watermark on its products for verification. rapid advances in voice cloning technology carry with them risks as well as opportunities, and raise questions about the nature of truth itself. road programmers could misuse
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the technology to disastrous effect. so now imagine you're a 14 year old and you've made some tick tock, videos in which you've taught, and somebody goes and grab those videos, calling your voice, and then calls your parent and says, i have your daughter, send me a $100000.00 or we're going to kill her, and this is not hypothetical. in fact, it happened last week. bad actors could target elections, governments or big corporations. take your favorite, c e o. and i'm going to create a fake audio of them saying that their profits are down 20 percent and i'm going to leak on twitter. and twitter is algorithms are going to amplify it. how long before i can move the market to tune of billions of dollars before anybody figures out what's going on. my name is ozy, mandy is king of kings. experts and business leaders are calling on governments to come up with regulations and safeguards and quickly to prevent this form of a technology from getting out of control. look on my works,
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e mighty and despair. rob reynolds, al, jazeera, santa clara, california. all right, to the customers i days director of research at the center for fact, no moral futures at the university of edinburgh joined us now from edinburgh. good . have you with a so 1st of all, how is this technology any different from the one that already exists? that is used to create deep faith videos. yeah. so and kind of like i say most cloning is an extension or an advanced version of the, of producing the fake. basically the fake includes some content just called synthetic data. and the same type of data can we produce in many different ways. we can have video, the fake, or we can have fake, we can have take the face, etc. but technology. oh boy, connie gets a few seconds of some one more sample. and then there are some 3
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platforms, a platform out there. so you can just input this free few seconds, someone samples and then you can produce and, and basically a digital copy of and someone's voice. so the real time is, this is what you're saying. so if i, if i have this technology, i can then i can talk for minutes, 4 hours and everything i say sounds like i'm a 2 so not sammy. yes. so, and it's a very, i like, honest and clear. so you don't. so it's not the case that in a few seconds, we add some of these technologist can produce a, like a copy of your voice where you are giving get very sophisticated kind of speech. and as cameras actually don't want that kind of like and that kind of voice coney
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produce. so what they really want is that they want to produce a voice, a digital copy, voice of someone else, which is which sounds like it is basically that person is producing a couple of sentences and shows that this person is in a complicated situation. so at the moment, the cutting edge technologist can do that in a couple of minutes. and so it's, it's something completely doable. but we can also imagine that with the advantages of technology, when we are getting better and better computational and to take needs and hardware, then you can use this and maybe more sophisticated and digital copies of voices in a, in a short time. so does this become eventually an app that people, for example, might have on the phone? they can just activate it, i'll call someone and i sound like joe biden, or i sound like it on mosque. yeah, exactly. so you can, at the moment you can produce definitely sounds kind of
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a lot of voices from this technology. is that legal? yes, so that problem, right. so there's been like this whole one of interest in 3 innovation, right? innovation is great. innovation, humanity. many people make historical arguments and always innovation has resulted in the progress of mankind. so luckily we got history on rob with the question the issue, then you need to do specific case studies to make sure whether the pacific kind of technology a result in the progress of humanity or not. but at the moment, but because of this, like pro innovation attitude in many best and countries, a number of some numbers and countries as well. then there hasn't been like regulations in play. so the idea has been data regulation. com, wendy's technologist, come out and after technologies are out there, we take some time to, to regulate. otherwise, we won't regular, we don't,
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we won't put regulation like right up front because that kid, this period will 2 to one good comes out of this. i'm so i'm curious to know like who's developing this stuff and for was what good purpose, right? because everything we talked about so far as concerns that it can be used in kidnappings. it can be used to scam people. it can be used to take their money. who's sitting down inventing this for some good use? yeah, so one of them very complicated issue sir, is that you can use those technologies and you can make it produces technologies and you can use them for good purposes. and you can use them for bad purposes. so the technology is a good purpose here. yeah. okay. so one of the, i mean, normally these kind of technologies are targeted as a technology that can prove that can like enhance the way we are and the way entertainment industry works. so for example, you can use and a, i was planning an system in order to produce very good quality, you know,
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all of your books and this all you will see, for example, can this for either the assumable, the present is with a nice voice to we really need the allies to take my job. and so i like to be honest, i mean many, and maybe that's sad or not, but definitely this kind of technology are going to impact ahead the jobs of some of the journalists and, and, and people like you, i'm not saying that they were based you, but i would say some, i mean we are all this is seeing that there are in some, in some domain some, some of that journalist, some of the writers are being fired and it's just a start of it. so we just think that there is definitely the possibility of a huge impact of just technology on traditional ways of or let's say classical ways of doing job. so maybe they won't really replace to you, but maybe you can collaborate with them. like that's i true. one way that is
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technologies are being advertised and many people think that we have to consider and design ways in which humans like people like you can collaborate with his technologist at the end of the day. it's you who is producing such a such a program, but then you can benefit from this technology to do your job better. yeah, please keep me with a job to do it to serve people, develop this. thank you so much for talking us about it. ah, let's go back to our top story now on the ongoing fighting in sudan. the see the sudanese army saying, now he's going to facilitate the evacuations of foreign diplomatic missions, is fighting between the army and the power military. rapid support forces enters its 2nd week. it said the staff of the saudi arabian mission has already left the
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country and it's been one week since fighting between sedans. army, and the rapids support forces broke out, despite the 72 hours seeds by the violence hasn't stopped. there was a brief long though, over night, on saturday mornings, friday morning, rather plumes of smoke was spotted over the capitol come to me. once again. those have been heavy fighting around the presidential palace and the armies general command. foreign missions have started evacuating that diplomatic staff and civilians have been trying to flee the conflict affected areas her i for joining us by phone from southern costume is a resident and activist donna mohammed. i've been one, i'm good to have you with us. so has the fighting left much of an aide spirit on day to know we've never had an aide to celebrate home they want. we knew that
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wouldn't be the work up. we thought there was a quiet night, but we woke up to do the several areas in cartoon being, being with, you know, being hit with crashes and walk at the guns and bullets. so there's no respite as absolutely no respite. that's just one continuous, you know, like a groundhog day every day. there's something somewhere. the fact that it seems now evacuations of foreign citizens getting underway. is that offering any kind of loud as it looked like the parties to the conflict? all quietness down, at least while foreigners are being evacuated. i yeah, it does the whitening down, you know, relatively, just so they can facilitate the evacuation of foreign nationals. but for us as to the needs, the only one thing that they will intensify the classroom and their attacks. and
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once again we, the cities will be the victim because we have a feeling they've been restraints. but what, because of certain areas that all the foreign national you know, they were rest of the day, but now that they're gone, there's nothing to hold them back. there's nothing to, you know, keep them in check until our fear is the fighting will intensify. and that's why overnight i've been getting several reports from people who know people are evacuating, they're leaving the country. those who can are leaving going going either to egypt mostly to egypt or to or, and those who can't or, or have limited means. i fling to other cities with like mahogany or are if and so on. but the fear is that the fighting will spread even to those cookies as well. and then we don't know what's going to happen, but, and how to get some both. well, how do the sydney feel when they see that these warring policies can, as you said,
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quite some things down little bit to facilitate the evacuation of foreign citizens . but at the same time they can't seem to hold it together. for many sudanese, i'm pretty sure who would like to leave cartoon who would like to be able to have a break to get medicine food. i don't think we even have the chance to think about how the mean we just have to deal with what we have at the moment. you know, we're just going minute by minute. we really concerned ahead you just going minute by minute. so if someone is trying to get back to waiting, it'll, as soon as they can, they're out. they know thing, okay, we'll do it tomorrow. we'll do it at this time. you find the mode of transport. you find those who want to go with you. you find the means to pay for this mode of transport and you leave, and we're not, we don't even have the luxury of being able to sit and think and say ok, what does they drill down or, you know, because we know they won't. there's, i mean, they've been hitting residential areas. it all,
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they've been targeting homes and people and people are walking out with literally nothing in the, in just what plastic bag you, because managed to like, put a change of clothes or carry some cash and the people are out. all right, so that we if, if people have nothing now down. yeah. how you guys surviving? what was the situation with food i. how do i read? i know, i mean, don't forget, when the fighting started, it was towards the end of ramadan. you know, people were about to go on holiday, you know, salary to be handed out, but nowadays now the banks are closed. no one has access to cash. food and supplies are running really short. i mean, already have the people not being able to buy back because bakery still have flower or don't have access to our still give it another if this goes on for another week or 10 days, i don't even think about what the situation would be like. it would be catastrophic
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. so many levels. there's no health care infrastructure has been had a lot of houses up until now have no power, no electricity. since the fighting started. you know, some houses don't even have food. some people, some houses don't have even running water. every day i'm seeing post people saying so and so need help. there's an elderly gentleman, there's an elderly couple. there's a family with kids every, every minute actually. every day, every minute, getting post about people needing help. and there's only so much. is anybody able to respond to the social media post? i mean, what does, yeah. well then, you know, it, community has a resistance committees, you know, within the neighborhood. and so they form together and they basically pulling their resources and they're, and they're trying to help as much as they can. like if they can find medication they, they know they know people at the pharmacy, they give them the medic, the medicine to be charged to get it to the, to the person they need. but it's easy because some areas are just you called
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oppose. you can't get the get into these areas like i go too close to me. she's like, i need insulin and i was like, oh my god, this is literally a matter of life. and how can, how could anyone get into the, to her? it's just, it's a disaster. it is really a disaster and i don't know. you tried to help as much as you can, but our hands are tied. our hands are really tight and i don't know what else we can do. and i can only think it's going to get much worse. i. i was optimistic at 1st. it's good and soon, but that optimism just keeps fading. it becomes less and less every day. are you going to reach a point? do you think? where is the situation get so desperate and people have a choice of either dying at home because they can't get insulin and supplies. they're going to say, well, let me just risk it and try and, and get out of the capital. even if there's fighting going on, they still have a chance maybe killed on the way out. but yeah, absolutely. i mean,
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we're not safe in our own homes and we're not trying to escape our homes. so you just have to calculate, you have to think about ok. i have less chance of getting hurt or injured or killed if i take this route. but there is no right or wrong answer. everyone, unfortunately has to think what has to decide into what's best for them, for the people with them, you can't, i can't decide for someone else. and it's like, for me, it is a matter of just, you know, dual doing what you can and is going forward. and knowing that there is a risk, what, whatever choice you make, there's always a risk. but the risks as literally like just as a matter of life or death. and it's found, i guess down to each person to decide which one is the most output or more, the easier one to, to, to take or to swallow, so to speak. so i don't know, it's just it's, i really don't know what to say. it's every i saw it is, it sounds like
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a really terrible choice that people are having to face. that's hope that the warring parties he'll voice and offer some respite and come to the senses for the for the sake of the innocent civilians, court dahlia with 2 more african countries look set to approve a new experimental vaccine for malaria. that's according to the world health organization. ghana and nigeria have already endorsed the use of the all 21 job. but this is yet to get the go ahead from the w h. show. alex bad reports that lack of approval as res, concerns. oh, nearly every minute a child dazed, 5 or younger, dies of malaria. most of them in africa and new vaccine develops by oxford university and manufactured and india hopes to change that. but the speed at which it's been approved in ghana and without world health organization endorsement has
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some worried us out. so oh, but so what is the government up to? i will not allow my children to be vaccinated. we have heard about children dying or left with physical deformities after taking some medicines on vaccine. is the government thinking about the safety of our children at all? i will only use the vaccine after countries have gone through the trials of the w h o approved. scientists that oxford say, research suggests the 21 jab is 75 percent of fictive detailed data from large scale trials is not yet publicly available, but gone. us government has confidence. it's made the right decision. we are talking about 200300400000 children die and of malia every year. and if you can see in half of that number with a vaccine that is not as efficient as you want it to be, that is still good enough. so are just once i approve all i got, this is not so much out of place. although i wish without being we, we've been
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a bit for the w 2 to do the the w h o c regulatory authorities from at least him african countries are considering the vaccine scientists, david jazz can be produced at mass scale and relatively low cost. it's already undergoing trials in the u. k, thailand and several african nations. the year we've always capacity than competencies set in the house, looked at the dos and that was presented to eat. and the, i've no doubt that they base the decision on what was in the dose. yeah. unfortunately, that goes, yeah, that was said with if, if the gunner didn't know if it was not, shall not be shared with half of w h o w h o approves the world's 1st malaria vaccine most grips last year. but the lack of funding has delayed its rollout, and with around 660000 people dying from the mosquito borne disease every year.
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countries a desperate to find an alternative. alex bid al jazeera, the chinese foreign minister is in the philippines. asthma, the staging major military exercises with the united states ching going is meeting his counterparts as well as president further. and marcus junior, the countries have the packet nomic, ties that have rival claims. the territory in the south china sea combat drills involving nearly $800000.00 philippine and american troops is sent to continue until the end of the month period is former president is set to be extradited from the us to face corruption charges of a 100 to later handed himself into authorities in california on friday. he's accused of a pepsi more than $25000000.00 in fraud during his 5 years in office. the 77 year old denies any wrong doing. marianna sanchez has more from lima.
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former president ali handled the little finally turned himself in after fighting his extradition since 2018. last night on thursday night. he said in a telephone interview that he would turn himself in. but that he asks from whose judiciary to take into account that his health is frail, that he has cancer, that he would not flee the country and that he should have the same prerogative as a former president bill to buy local to see who's been under investigation under house arrest and that's exactly what the little also wants to be under house arrest, can face his trial if there is now, he will be it turned in by u. s. marshals to her beatles, interpol, police and prosecutors here say that that will happen in the next few days. marianna, so just i'll just see that lima still had on al jazeera are also giving away the premier league die rolls with holes here with the action from
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a dramatic nice mom. good. ah, ah, steal production is responsible for around 7 percent of global c o. 2 emissions, but a solution for this has been discovered as the say, b is sweet and largest shaped steel. manufacturer. martin pain is leading recipes charged to become the 1st company to bring what's known as possible free steel to market green electricity is used to split tool to into oxygen which is released into the air and hydrogen which is captured to use energy essentially be great hydrant replace coal that we use today in the preferences and with our we get rid of the suit to mission problems in making. this is a huge project shrouded in secrecy. i can see the and the product. so these are
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both is actually cure. i'm holding a well 1st is is a big step for the whole industry. when we make this transition, lou ah. all right, let's catch up and all the sports news with her whole now sunny. thank you very much because all taxes also have dropped more points as i tried to stay ahead of match the city in the choice for the english premier league target with just 2 minutes left. i trial south hampton i needed, i 90th mid equalizer for a 3 or draw catalog as hardy, on, as the action going into this game against modern club,
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south hampton league leaders, arsenal had dropped a ford points into games city just 26 seconds in there. things got worse. aaron, ram sales air just was start the way they by ramsdale alkali o. remarkable. 14 minutes later you woke up once one of warrenson was own, put them to down the gunners. chaotic pushed to say ahead of manchester city in the title race on shaky ground. copy all para guardian martinelli pulled one back. but in the 2nd half south hampton, when 31 up through do j, tell it the car and with 88 minutes gone, arsenals, title chase was running off the real until martin oh, the guard, put them back on track. it shows 2 minutes later, i completed the combat
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and there was even a late chance for the londoners to sleep clear of secondly, city deflects even effort from nelson was deflation for manager mccain and said that the premier empty or was late because he was very emotional again, i am disappointed because we then get the 3 points that i've said, oh, what happened in the game? i still believe that we deserved better yet. we have to look in the mirror. we gave 3 really easy goes away again and when dusty the case is extremely difficult to, to winning this, like these players reactions here. so the now arsenault head to the se, had on when, say a game that will go a long way to deciding who wins the premier league has here. okay, so again on how to 0, they can so that all means also still lead march to city by far a point as you can see, but stay tight to gains more. and if city can beat the colors in their batch or
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wednesday with that remaining fixtures, a title will be back to the i to had once again. okay to the n b a playoffs. now the denver nuggets are closing on a place in the western conference. debbie finals, nicholas york, it's got 20 points. well, the says an 11 re bout as a dog gets beaten minnesota to the world, 120 to 111. we have 3 nothing up and could slightly 7 game series on sunday in minnesota. jayla bronson school 21 pointed out i about from lauren taylors. the new mix neatly cleveland cavaliers anointed i the sanitary fat that 70 nord score is the lowest part entity with the a b. i do see the i tried to hold for the crap to, to one of the boston celtics with a 130 to 132 winds for young score. 32 point did his best playoff performance is 2021 to light scores from him. the key to this victory, the 4 goals and just are the 2 minutes got the new york on it as back into the an h,
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our playoff series, against the carolina hurricanes got my fields, gall, into an untended net. as carolina tried to get back into the match, help them to i 51 way or the hurricane still laid, the series to one. that's the corolla. got minnesota wells fargo goal and a full one victory over the dallas stars the wild and out to one up in their series . i had a guide for in saint paul on sunday. i did go and an assist from tyler hall helped site the boston, bruised to a full to victory. again, 3 against the florida panthers learns leading that series say to one that one of brazil's top football clubs corinthians is leading the way in improving the match. they experience for families with autism, the autistic spectators often have difficulty with social interactions and communication. and it's so up to 10000000 brazilians suffer from the condition. watching football in brazil is one of the most intense sensory experiences in all
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sports. but what if you're a football fan and you suffer from autism? but those diagnosed with the condition which includes social and language difficulties, as well as repetitive behavior. watching a batch canby, i traumatic experience. it prompted this man to set up a group to help though supporters with the condition of the seat us was you other this is what he's of our soccer fan group came from corinthians. we always watched the game that i, late diagnosis of autism and side to crate this movement. joining corinthians and autism given us some of the measures include a sensory room, complete with noise proof glass walls, special lighting and coiled spread on multiple tables of toys and food. it's all designed to have a car big a thanks. the party re work of the south palo base club has led to 31 year old autism. so front lewis booty, they hide by corinthians, as a stadium guide called shockey. about when i got here to work, no one talked about autism might. it wasn't something mean to exclude us. it just
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wasn't a big topic for our society. it was a bubble. and thank god that bubbled his person and now does a topic for everyone. according to the country's health ministry, as many as 10000000000 people are on the autism spectrum in brazil, the work of artists of albany gross play, a vital role. it is showing that everyone here in sock about sal palo, the child who joy that you go to tennis and defending champion, carlos alcaraz is into the semi finals of the bass line open. the 19 year old is also the us open champion. was up against our hydro de vacovich for kena buts. it wasn't but for the great shocks. part of it if it's not enough. alcaraz willingness, game 7664. organizes of the 2024 paris olympics have announced that for the very 1st time the opening ceremony was beheld inside a sidey. instead. it'll take place along here, the river side through the french capital athletes will travel down the iconic
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river in front of it expected 600000 spectators. that is all your fault, sammy betsy, buying so much for a whole bag said from this news i bought. the good news is tommy's back. in a moment, the full shop, ah ah, investigating the use and abuse of power across the globe on al jazeera cities home to millions and debate drive out of the climate crisis. cities have more space and scott, to do the radical things, pledges the made about smart at green,
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a lower carbon cities range if occasion is a growing process of inequality and displacement. what are these promised utopia for every one or just to select feed, all hail the planning looks at where the green cities can also be socially, just episode 5 on al jazeera, the 1st commander of the lebanese army after independence from france, who took over his president at the time of crisis in a deeply divided country 50 years after his death al jazeera whoa tells the story of ed she, her architect of the modern lebanese state. oh, hold your statesman on a jesse, you know, the latest news as it breaks the fight. think i think just been confined to the capital, both sides claim control of major facilities. but so far it's been hard to confirm
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who has the upper hand with detailed coverage. people have come here to demonstrate against roving police violence in the demonstration from around the world. and even when doctors here are able to make an early diagnosis can guarantee the transportation of the 60, still 3 another challenge. ah, countries start evacuating, embassy, staff and citizens from so donna's fighting persist despite a c spar announcement. i want to say to propose, sorry we are the civilian. we are a civilian schools in the cross fire. thousands of people are stuck in khartoum to scares to leave ah.

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