tv The Stream Al Jazeera June 28, 2023 10:30pm-11:01pm AST
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date of best, that system will still be used for compulsory military service, the school year and, and determining the legal age for drinking and smoking. so, i was worried that i would be find some drinking, but i'm relieved i can still drink. south korea now joins of the east asian countries who dropped the traditional age counting method decades ago. so one's 3 out to 0. the just a quick look at the main stories. now. united nations security council is divided or the how to and this decade on peacekeeping mission and molly low, scheduled for thursday's, been postponed on the resolution proposed by funds or personnel with withdrawal within 6 months. while these 4 minutes to this month demanded the peacekeepers leave accusing the fuel intentions. francis presents as the faithful shooting of a teenager near paris is unforgivable,
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and go over the shooting sparks protesting several cities of and nights on choose day. police are preparing for fun. the demonstrations on wednesday the governor of ukraine's harkey regions as russian shedding his killed at least 3 people in the town of chance. an alias striking a restaurant in the eastern city of crime, a tourist leaving 10 people dead, including 3 children african leaders of $99.00 go like to discuss the conflict in the eastern democratic republic of congo. political tensions a weak economy out of severe food prices are forced, almost a 1000000 people can leave the homes in the eastern deal, c minus by on gravel groups and mineral, which country is west? it's been thing is full. i mean soldiers have been killed them. the disputed region, i'm not going to car back as a by john and armine are been holding towards mediated by the us to end the decades on conflicts. the on medium prime minister is one that the fund the risk of
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destabilization. if the issue isn't resolved. us and us president joe biden has outlined his new economic policies. he's calling it to bite and all makes the announce this of the speech in chicago. fighting is campaigning for re election in 2024. second, to convince voters that his plan will help cub inflation and boost jump numbers. of course, muslims around the wall, the sound of bracing eat, which started with pres at sunrise and saudi arabia and estimates at $1800000.00 was since i'm performing the hodge, the largest number since the pandemic. a lot of the all the fees of the sacrifice as a major holidays on the calendar. it takes place on the side day on the annual hodge pilgrimage. those are the headlines the south will have the news out that's coming out for you in just about 19 minutes time to stay with us for that mean while the stream is the program coming up next.
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where is the western agenda heading this? the g 7 really even matter anymore? who's more electable, joe biden? or donald trump or jeremy? listen in the media undermining our society. can americans cross their supreme court? is not the critic who look us politics often. line the hi anthony. okay. on today's episode of the stream 3 out to 0 correspondence. take us behind the headlines of stories that they have been covering. joining us today need it for him at correspondence in the occupied westbank for one is our as, as in tina senior correspondent to raise above and right here in the studio white house correspondent, kimberly how can correspond it is so good to see you. thank you so much for being on the stream today. now, if you are watching right now on youtube,
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the comments section is live. they want to speak to any of those costs when that's how are you getting to the comments section awesome, cuz they show he's got to move very quickly. so let's go festival to the occupied at westbank, where the it's raining the tree, reese in the woods and on the thoughts of a city of janine, take a look. this is the 1st time in nearly 20 years that we see is really hook up. there's twice palestinian targets here in the occupied westbank. people here say that seems to date, resemble the bottle that took place in the refuge account in 2002 he asked of these really forces withdrew. palestinians buried their dead among the palestinians. killed is 15 years old. men assaulted. anytime i asked him to something he always said, yes, he was decent with a light respectful problem. is that the moment these radio army rated, he ran towards them. he wanted to die off his friend,
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coma was killed. the death of his friend was very painful for him. need it so he's got to have you on the strange so often when we off a to bill in the stream, you're talking about that you're talking about moses. you're talking about a really distressing part of the world to live and to report from what are we not seeing right now? what are the own reported stories the you want to tell our audience about you know, often when we talk about those operations, we are on a chicken clock. you know, we have to report the news of those who were killed. but sometimes these operations bite each way, the art meeting so many children, traumatized afraid scans. so sometimes so many stories that we want to tell, but we just with the cycle of breaking news happening so often it's so fast that we don't tell those stories or not. um,
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sometimes i want to show that there are happy stories of palestine as well. there's culture, there is music, there are concerts, people who are trying to talk politics worse or fights for social issues, the music. and it's not always the case that we get to highlight the nature, the music that the concepts, the culture, the embroidery that palestinian women's is so often do under present them their cities. and you can tell a lot about old men from dressers wearing. so there are so many of these stories that we don't lose half the time to tell. how do you decide when you're talking to the news room about what you're going to go out to do? you've got news, you've got st. just how do you decide? because i know many of our audience will just think palestine, it's a dangerous total things happen that every single day that is true. but also this culture. yes, and there is always interest from the news desk that i just need to highlight the
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stories behind and, and beyond. sorry, the doom and gloom. it is our priority as a news channel to always bring our audience, the latest and what's happening. but we don't want to fall into making it sound like it's old that, that it's or can, it's bad sometimes, but people you know, pick up the next day and keep moving on with their lives. even during the latest is really, really don't jigging in the killing of 5 people. we with it in our offices, and we could hear the music of a wedding that was taking place next to us. you know, life goes on and people here are resilient and keeping on fighting and going about their daily lives is also part of their struggle. so let me show a little bit of the beautiful part of some of your reporting by via twitter. he have a look here. what can you ramallah? i enjoyed seeing everyone holding flowers for the moms as the hour will celebrate
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some other stay hot moving. and then if i keep scrolling, then we get back to the normal really hot knife of being a palestinian journalist. want us to talk to them is that you have is when you report on children and what happens to children, you have to work out kind of like how this story would make this situation was a 2 only thing. tell the world what is really happening. 16 year old jenna was one story that you told a few months ago. i'm just going to go back and we might not audience how you did that report. that's have a look on monday they went through the spot to where jenna was killed by israeli forces. at home was the one who found his sister's body leads on sunday. so as i walked off to the as riley forces withdrew, i came back time. my uncle told me to call jenna. i found who did and the cat was next to her. i couldn't believe my eyes, the middle of the children managing in
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a situation where they can be the victims. any time. it's hard to ask this question because sometimes i feel like children here go up much faster than as to it in the world where it's like check point soldiers closures more. the file we share from children who are very, very young and shouldn't really be talking about those things. jenna, that wish teachers and the, the district court was not even 16 yet. she was going to celebrate her 16th bridge the, the month after she was killed. she was trying to save her cat who was under to stop with this, with the forces which i didn't get and, and, and, and as you see from me it's sometimes a dilemma. do we ask children what happened and tell the world the story? or are we just can't read traumatizing them by having to re narrate the
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story of the trauma to us again. so it's always how just for us, how to strike a balance between telling the story and respecting the fact that those are children, you know, words on, so to speak. i was trying to think of a way to show the audience what it must be like see you and the stress for you and the crew of telling stories. when people don't want him necessarily to be that tell those stories. i found something on twitter that sums it up, but i want you to, to look for what we're seeing because this is tia, but it's what you're not showing. that is the fear. so this is what need a treated at team is still shaken off to being harass, threatened and taste. weiss really set list one qual, i'm kind of pull it out for kilometers, trying to bump into us. i was too scared to lift the camera up to show how the call almost hits us. we don't really saying anything a because you're not lifting the camera, but what happened, what was going on?
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so we were reporting on the story of a better one community that has left its territory or whether they were living for decades because of the growing attack spies re suckers. and we just turned back to the scene after they flushed, and it was one day or even hours after they left at these really suckers came in with their sheep. and, you know, we thought they were veterans. and then when we realized we said, oh okay, this is a great photo. we need to take our cameras off at film it as we got into the car. they called us and chased us and they tried to sell it to us and it was too scared to lift the camera up. because what if that stuck to those things? but that's another publication. because the reason why at the secretaries were chasing us just because we were showing what they're doing. and then he turned the car in the on the highway and kept following us. and so we had to take another road . we kept talking to our security team at the news desk into hard telling them,
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you know, we're scared. we actually, what do we need to do? so those types of our attacks are becoming watching and much more frequent. and specifically, what it comes to kind of to new jersey is telling the world what those suckers are doing. one more piece of video and that's coming from a recent report. in fact, i believe it's from today's metallic to or if he was around the world to all celebrating a house that has been demolished, a family situation you are telling us up to date was the story that you're telling me. and so often when we go to add port under demolished homes, we go the day off and then we and then we showed one other story with this family, we decided to start filming them when they got a demolition order against their home. because their son is accused of killing in his rate, the soldier in an attack in october and it isn't his regular policy to didn't finish those homes. we talked to the comedy before the house was devoted to it.
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they were taking their belongings up to the house and when it was the most and we returned today after it has been destroyed and they cannot rebuild it or do anything with it. but they were still trying to receive people on a a who are coming to congratulate them, put it in the same house itself. they're like, you know, this is a place that we've made so many memories and, and we're not just gonna keep it even when we move to a new house. we're going to keep going back again and again. so it's basically showing houses, families do with the trauma and the pain of losing the home because it's a new joy. israel says there's something new to abraham, thank you for your service to out sale. we always appreciate the poor thing. it has to bring on the screen today. thank. next, we had to hire a country that out 0 correspondence raise. a bow has spent many years reporting on . most recent visit to puerto prints found civilians trying to avoid gang violence,
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kidnappings, and pool health care. this is the largest hospital in haiti and it has been barely working for the past 5 months. the pediatrics unix has just started to work once again very, very slowly. but when we arrived here with the oldest children that you can see here that have been abandoned then is 12 years old. who is 10. and this baby is 6 months old. teresa, i noted as he was doing your report a little gallon than she had a hand behind you. you go after hand and she smiled broadly. and you didn't miss a beat. it carried on doing will send up that was never going to happen twice. it was just kind of happened once. what was that that you're reporting and then a little lunch can hold that hand to you. what did you try me to bring tears
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to my eyes? i mean, i have to face it with a very emotional day for us because we were ready to cover, you know, a country in crisis with violence with gang. then suddenly we made it to the hospital to talk to tell the stories of those were trying to get some type of assistance of health care in a country that is completely that is in a crisis. and suddenly we found the oldest children in this to be experts unit that they had been left there. and one of them was eating their diet for it because they had no food. for example, this is something that i did not want to tell them to report, but basically because it was so horrible, it was so sad that then we left it out. but that was the condition of those children living and that's all screwed up. and then i started doing a piece of camera which was one, was very fast reporting and what was happening. and then she grab my hand, but i was like and she started mining and, and was very, very emotional for me. so hey, teen, every time you go back to hazy every time
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a report from pages out of 0, it's almost as if well, more could go wrong. what more can civilians have to cope with and this waste more, you spend time with one of the big guns. i don't like cool themselves. look at but the notice g 9 and that was something that makes it very difficult. those guys like if i difficult to report from hating. so why did you learn from actually being almost imbedded with one of the pre k scans in haiti and what were they doing with the population? as well as having you know that you've spent your time in haiti as well and needs every time you go back, if you find a situation that continues to the p rings. and the reason why we decided to go this time is back because we were seeing that the precedent, the entering precedence was asking for help somebody international community because the police is enabled to fight against against 80 percent of eighty's. capital is controlled by guns. the united nations secretary general is also asking
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for international help. and when we spoke to the united nations representatives for hate issues, they truly told us that they know that the country needs assistance. that may be some type of a special force to help the police fight against the gun, but then nobody wants to take the lead, not the united states, not canada, and not friends or, or anybody. so right now it seems like he has been a band that impacts you literally told me that right now the world has other priorities like you crazy. so the situation is, is quite bit dire there. and i met with the leader of the g 9. it was kind of, you know, we were, it's very interesting because when you move across the capital, you suddenly find areas that are a big states. so you're not wearing your security equipment for, you know, we're trying to talk to people to tell people stories. i don't like to be, you know, protecting myself when all the others are so bugging about what is happening. but then you reach an area and it's
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a war zone. it's streets that are completely empty with your so sure thing is ongoing. more gains are trying to take control from what area or the other area. and that's how we met jimmy sherry. so he's also known as barbecue, you know, he took us to the front line of, of the area that they're trying to control. he was there with around 10 or 15 of these fighters. you know, all, if you, if he says that he's not a gang leader that he's actually a politician. he's very, very critical of the current administration of the united states is preston's in hazy in the past. so he suddenly has a discourse of what needs to happen in this country. he basically says that he's a former point in salty search, and he says that's what the police need. this is more help to fight against the other games. but that's the situation on the ground right now. it seems that it is a wars on some parts of poor to print have turns in. sounds good, what was own. and there's nobody there that can help or assist to change the situation right now from out online audience watching on youth. she does lots of
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appreciation and feel what theresa and also the need is as well. they really respect the way that you keep going on, even in very difficult situations. it has not escaped. i notice that you are currently at an at fault with me just point me into your next story, which you're about to head open to tell us more while i'm here right now, the airport on my flight is even got in about an hour, but we're heading to the probing so we'd be more than argentina. that's where one of the largest dc and we served in south america is located between northern argentina, bolivia on tv. and theres uh several indigenous protests ongoing against the local government. and what this is community is they're afraid about what's going to happen in their territory is mostly because they say that left you make struction is going to contaminate their territory. many of the indigenous communities they are depend on on sold, it's happening in souls. that's all around the areas of northern argentina,
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that's where they're work, but that's also where the lift the implants are located. so this is the latest conflict happening, and it's interesting because our agency not right now is a country crisis with over a 12030 percent inflation rate. in the past 2 years, it desperately needs its exports, its exports of a crops, effects which of lift you and other things. and, and it is what happens when a government is trying to put promot tech sports and promote develop and part of the same time to counters with local communities that are affected. and that in many cases have been a boston, and that's where we're heading there to talk to some of them. stories about who is preparing for next assignment at algebra, right at this very moment of play and he's leaving and one of our states, right? if i, we wish you a safe journey and looking forward to seeing your report on out to 0 very soon. take care. finally, right here in washington, d. c,
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our white house correspondent can be how could next to us a quick questions that help keep us informed. he, she is present in the national security council spokesperson, john copy on who grew up at them in stuff in ukraine. let's take a look to come to know conclusions on this we're working with ukrainians will try to get as much information as we can to try to work out where kimberly was 6 rose by 3 seats in and the pink jacket. but even that i could still junk of a bridge like that shit. yeah. i like to ask the question that i call the she might loose or press pass pretty much every day except that, well, that's the question we should all be asking. right. and what i've noticed
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increasingly is that people are afraid to ask hard questions and that's what our job is. and so much has happened in the last few years. one of the things that is great about the united states as the 1st amendment and, and the right to free speech and, and that is something to cherish here. and, uh, unfortunately, more and more journalists are not embracing that and are fearful of losing access. and that is the muscle that so many are being paralyzed by ad, but not losing access is really important. hope on eyesight is for working at different networks. what if you don't say a specific thing? you do not have access to anybody who is in power, who can help you tell that story that isn't done in them? it's an absolute dilemma. what i've tried to get the white house press corps to do,
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but so far, no one has some jumped on board. is that collectively? if we all work to get her to kick you out in a correct but so far. but i, i don't see related shows, right, 3, what was in the, in the it is, it is becoming a little bit more contagious. yeah, it is, it is spreading, but it's been slow because there's here, but it is changing. for example, what we've seen just even in the last week or so with the us president has been a bit more comfort in terms of asking questions about the president's son hunter by that, which used to be a no go even just a couple of months ago. that veil has been lifted. the other big one is the president's mental acuity. that is another big one that has been the elephant in the room for many, many months. and yet people have been afraid to ask it for fear of losing their
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access. you put it very politely, i want to give out is an example of something that happened early on today at the white house. so this is present, joe biden, being asked a question, and then he also has it and see if you can spot was a mistake is let's have a look. let's have a listen to your home. right around the world. the question was to what extent has thought it may appear to be we can by recent events, the closing vladimir putin, the mistake is in losing the war in iraq. i miss that i misspoke how many times does that happen? kimberly, it's happening every day. multiple times. a day, in fact, i did a quick little check in the last 10 days. the president has not just referred
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erroneously to the war and ukraine as the war in iraq. he's also put his hand over his heart. over when the indian net or india is national anthem was happening, not the american national anthem when the prime minister of india was here. he also, when the prime minister was here referred to him as the prime minister of china. he also uh said when a prime minister moody was beside him, he was walking to his table and said, where are we? he was completely lost. he a very recently add an event in hartford, said god save the queen man. well, unfortunately the queen is no longer with us and we don't generally say that in the united states, what do you think that people are not saying out loud or the president is a very experienced, lovely man?
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that is very clear, but he's also 80 years old. he's the oldest serving president and us history. all of us when we get to about 80 in a demanding job, are not going to be our sharpest. and what the white house has done is isolated him from the press. we have not been given access to his doctor. every effort has been made to keep the doctor away from us. we have been asked. the president does not give us access to him in the briefing room. and what are they hiding as a hiding frailty, crack dementia outside as president reagan had alzheimer's in his last ton? that's right. we don't know. we can only speculate with our access. we are able to find out for the american people and that is a problem. and the bigger question becomes, as we are talking about the war and ukraine, we are very, very close to a potential conflict that could erupt into something much larger. very,
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very quickly. we have just had a legislation drawn up in the us senate that basically says if there's something as simple as a radiation leak, article 5 could be that could allow us to get into draw nato into a water conflict. the us could be heading into a large conflict with a president who is old bingo, an isolated and perhaps have some quite see with health issues. so if the president isn't making the national security decisions, the question becomes, who is kimberly how kit just freaked us out? thank you. kimberly. we look forward to asking those or quick questions in the future threads of uh, media abraham, thank you for being on the show today. we really appreciate a good behind the scenes understanding your reporting will. and just finding wayne will of time that we usually get spend, we're here on the news. the news continues on out of here. thanks for watching.
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the, the, investigating the use and abuse of power across the globe. now to sierra, at the time i was placed in solitary, i was $26.00. i was young, immature, this is extreme form of my solution. i think it's designed to break. you feel that there's a tardy tardies part. it's the adjusting to stand alone. there's always the upstairs we losing and fold lines, examines the total of isolation through one man's experience and a texas prism. the books 27 years in solitary confinement on a jersey to a supervisor of a genocide dealer. people who are likely to kill the trend or suffering,
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but it didn't come to hard to do. who's dedicated his life to searching the woods for phones that the victims of the shrubbery needs can masika. even here is the drop in the hope for finally laying the pos to rest, giving peace to the victims, families cause i need to. if i could just find a think about, i could bury him, phone hunter on out his era. the hello amari i'm going lies in london, a quick look at the main stories. now united nations security council is divided into the house and a decade long peacekeeping mission. in molly, a vote schedule for thursday is been postponed on the resolution proposed by fonts or personnel would withdrawal within 6 months. molly's form minister this month demanded the peacekeepers, leave accusing them of fueling tensions. diplomatic editor james,
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