Skip to main content

tv   News  Al Jazeera  June 29, 2023 7:00pm-7:30pm AST

7:00 pm
for a week, the look at the world's talk business stories from global markets to economies and small businesses that will be new opportunities. hey, i will bring about new industries, but people are worried about losing that jobs to understand how it affects our daily lives. counting the cost on o g, a 0. the tear gas is fired at a march for a teenager shot dead by police near paris as friends races for another night of interest. the thousands of people, including niles mother and filled the streets and notes and demanding justice, the 0 when you get the had you with this, this is elsa 0 mind from the also coming up today. the us supreme court benz
7:01 pm
consideration of race as a factor in college admissions will be live in washington. and then your case, top court blocks a government plan to the ports asylum seekers to wanda, cooling it unlawful. the prime minister says his government will appeal the beginning of the french capital where tear gas has been fired at a rally held for a teenager who was shot dead by police. thousands of paying tribute to 17 year old nile who was killed during a police traffic stop on tuesday, sparking 2 nights of unrest. thousands of police officers have been deployed as the government calls for com. sarah. hi, ross begins are coverage. is the community gathered to protest against police brutality, thousands of people that by grieving mother,
7:02 pm
the 17 year old who was shot and killed by police on tuesday. police initially said he failed to coal freights when order to stop in the power suburb of montez, family, and friends, pay tribute, and that i left the march of that you have to go. so this is a young man, he's very kind, he's not evil or he can of what the media are saying about him is not true. his mom racing well, his grandmother, we know she around the neighborhood. so she's kind and helpful. she loves everyone . the young men left us for nothing. we not contradicting the state. we are not contradicting the legal or police procedure. yes, you was driving a car without a license like you tried to flee, but he should not be killed. police said the 17 year old drove the car one of the offices, but this video pays to contradict the police version of what's happened. it started and office pointing is weapons through the window and appearing to fire at close range before the call rolls off and crashes to a stop. what he thought is,
7:03 pm
what is it? is it him? what? what are you in view of the state of the investigation? and the details collected the prosecution considers that the legal conditions for the use of the weapon are not met to a single as president emanuel. my crone held the crisis meeting, denouncing both the shooting and the riots that followed as unjustifiable. clearly the emotion that comes with the dates of a young man calls the contemplation and com. and it's what the government has constantly quoted for. i think this is what should continue to guide the mix, dallas and the tribute the never the less is was having stopped thousands of people from protesting. what many say has become a systematic 0 tolerance policy cards out by french police, especially against those from pool and minority communities. officials with deploying tens of thousands of police across from including $5000.00 in the
7:04 pm
capital powers to loan the police officer involved in the shooting has been arrested and charged. 17 year old victim is the 2nd person to be killed and such so consult, says this year, and the 15 in a year in the hall. many all hoping for justice can finally be answered as quickly as possible. so the height of all, just sarah of our correspondent natasha butler was caught up in the unrest earlier and not there. well, this is the neighborhood when i on there and sitting on top of the time is now, oh my gosh. you can see of the, with the pony tail. he is leading tribute to 17 year old son is a member to log. and when you go cause you really go to the motion, sometimes you feel to be very touched. if there were so many people here, sometimes she looks as if she is on the test because everyone is telling me the song that was to between these traffic check no fall from here, just
7:05 pm
a few 100 meters away from what is most taking place. so basically it's important to be human, the situation is last too long, the same things keep happening and choose people are sick of it. it could have been my son's. i'm of no african origin and it's not the 1st i'm, the sort of thing has happened. we are sofa don't. what's happening now is exactly the sort of thing that tends to explain the situation because the police have fired a number of to a guess. how does says right into the middle of this crowd, as they were coming to the end of the people coughing, a lot of children with a lot of families, people are walking away, feeling furious that the police has done this. what the police are trying to do cause is disperse the crowd. but once again, people are saying this just shows out of touch, the police ought to be doing this on a day when people had come to pay tribute to this teenager. natasha butler out. is there a non tax?
7:06 pm
well it tasha can now join us live. natasha. how are things in northland as we speak a lot. so a lot of people milling about so there are lots of police offices as well. i mean, as the main square with that mulch ended, and as you saw that the tech asked to disperse crowns. that's why the police of scientists bought a course, a lot of chaos, and a lot of fear that with families the, with the children who had come to pay tribute to niles, a 17 year old, who was a show that they'd come peacefully. it was a peaceful day for then suddenly she's very pale, succeeds and many people get now all very upset with that the same. why is the police doing not why they continuing to harass off? so those are bad was they feel harassed and what we seeing now is i'm you call see is just on the camera. but there's some young people have been trying to burn some things like that or things to the program as a building that is being smashed. it's a little bit a 10 sale. of course,
7:07 pm
people are wondering whether or not they will be more of on a sniper. certainly they'll be a very heavy police presence. there's been 2 nights of interest so far. the situation could become even more volatile, especially given what we just saw. how is michael handling all of this is really difficult for the french government and the french present. they are not in an easy position. they said they do not want to see a repeat of the sorts of seen so many people as possible. remember from 2005 with 2 teenagers, died off the police chase in the shop as well. then for weeks that was on rest at night. now, the french from one to 40 thoughts and very quickly off to that shooting officer that came out really should every 40. so the french government said those pictures a showcase based searching is unacceptable present. michael said the young person should be done like this in from so they can sam's not very false because they want
7:08 pm
to call them the situation down. but never the less we have seen the sign go. we have seen this on risk, and that is really because so many people fail. so no matter what the government says, they don't mean if they feel that the government doesn't care about their concerns . they feel that the police act with impunity and the government off the government simply don't do anything about this. yeah, and that speaks to your earlier point. the protesters were telling you, they feel the, the police don't listen to them and the government don't care. natasha butler and not fail. thank you very much. the, the us supreme court has ruled the universities and colleges mas stop considering race when admitting new students this fall as accusations that harvard university had been discriminating against asian american applicants in order to increase representation from other minority groups. rosalyn jordan has more for us from
7:09 pm
washington dc rosalyn. how significant is this? let's start there to this is a major decision that affects the status of affirmative action in the united states . this is a practice that had been used in particular on college campuses for the better part of the last 50 years or so. in order to address what had been considered in demick racism, stomach from the period of slavery in the united states and into the post war period after the us civil war, which ended in 18. 65 african americans and their families, found themselves denied access to many public spaces including educational spaces because of their race for no other reason. and so after the passage of the 1964 civil rights act, there was a decision and a move that adopted across most college campuses in this country to try to correct
7:10 pm
for that defect to try to make it so that people who are applying to these institutions could be looked at and could not have the circumstances of their prior educational experience held against them because they went to a majority black high school, for example. now this has been going on for many, many years, as i noted. but there was a challenge to this about 5 years ago by a white man who leads an organization that includes our asian american students who claim that because of the use of race as a determining factor in whether to mid students, they were being a, necessarily penalized and less qualified african american and latino students by contrast, were being admitted. the supreme court has agreed with this groups a challenge, not just do harvard's admissions policies, but also to the admission policies of the university of north carolina at chapel
7:11 pm
hill, which use similar criteria for trying to build an, an incoming freshman class every year. rather than joining reporting from washington dc in front of a supreme court, thank you very much. i. the results of pure electrical court has started voting on whether a former president desirable scenario abused his powers. the trial is examining both scenarios. comments made in 2022 when he cast out on brazil's electronic voting machines ahead of the presidential election if convicted, boston, or could be bored from running for public office for up to 8 years. now both scenario is not at the courts. he spoke down to 0 as monica again, a cube in rio de janeiro. and he addressed concerns that his comments that lead supporters to storm government buildings back in january, lots of amazon in the us there was a january 6 capital uprising that wait a lot against trump, but then there was new information. the same thing here in brazil,
7:12 pm
when the images of a guy wearing a t shirt and toppling over a clock were shown, the world fell on my head. later, we saw someone from presidential security, letting invaders and something suspicious happen. they want to pin and attempted cooling, myself and the right. so we are not to blame what we can speak to monica yanna. care in rio de janeiro, monica the last hour when we spoke 3 of the 7 judges had voted. where are we now? well yes, 3 of the 4 of the 7 judges have voted. i mean, for i have voted 3, have voted in favor of a conviction. one has voted against it. this trial has just been adjourned until tomorrow. now, wilson, i was getting closer and closer to a conviction because a decision must be taken by a majority. and we're pretty sure that a 4th judge will vote for the conviction we spoke to him earlier today. they're
7:13 pm
trying to, he's being investigated in this particular trial. for a meeting that he had with for an investigators in july of last year. and that was like 3 months before the presidential election, where he cast doubts on the voting system, saying that it could be easily ridge. and this has been seen as his abuse of power because this meeting was transmitted was broadcasted on public television. and it also cast doubts among brazilian voters about what was going on and about the results of the election. where he was defeated, narrow the defeated by uh, current president was the last 2 of us, 2 of us. so that's what being discussed now. and some, some of the judges are saying that this has led this uh, this constantly casting doubts on the system led to what was the january uprising here in brazil, monica boston are as a major political force in the country, even though he was loaded out of office, what happens to him if indeed the judges decide that he is guilty of abusing his
7:14 pm
commer well, he will not be able to run for any election until 2030. that means that he will miss to presidential elections in case if he is convicted. he can always appeal to the supreme court. but in the supreme court, he is not very well liked there among judges, because during his presidency he attacked the supreme court court constantly. and some of the judges that are this superior electoral port are also just as the supreme court. what he's going to do is he's going to be a change maker. try to be one, he's going to try and now campaign we liked the greatest number of mayors and results. disappoint elections next year. the right has a pretty strong base in congress. so what he's going to try and do is use his
7:15 pm
political capital to make the right stronger. all right, monica yanna kim, just to make very sure you said the case is adjourned for today, correct? yes, and will we be resumed uh tomorrow on friday? okay. all right, well, so, so far for the 7 judges about it and as monica was just telling us 3 or 3 of those 4 are in favor of convicting him as a your boss in our thank you very much, monica. the still ahead on alpha 03 us cities register the worst air quality in the world. as wind fires in canada, burned out of control. and scientists have detected gravitational waves, according to the universe, will tell you about that. and just the the
7:16 pm
route to you by visit capital. so great to see you hits not only hot st. karachi is also very few minutes. so 37 degrees, but you factor in the human acts. it's going to feel about $47.00, believe it or not, in karachi, on fridays, among soon storms around punjab province from more pond pushing into india. but the worst of it will of course be in india. so we're talking about muscle roster. states goods, right. roger started with the dash, the con, pushing in to be hard in any of these states. i don't think it's the question if we'll see flooding, but just where and how bad it will be. now for the other side of the country, on soon rains have also been intense westbank all state sick and states and in neighboring the pole just to the west of cutting down to here's how this story goes for the philippines still that severe flight advisory in play for lose on island, an intense rain falling between manila and log, and the plumb grains have done quite a number in 61 province in china,
7:17 pm
but those rains moving across the yangtze river valley. and we've got pouring rain in the forecasts for japan from q. sure, the may not linda foncher who pushing into who kind of dark or the blue and the yellow. the more intense that rain is falling but anywhere from cargo she met as a por, oh, it will be a wash out of it. that range move to way from the korean peninsula. those temperatures are on the way. what's the weather brought to you by visit cuts on the printing? the issues of the day we got to stop the intensive farming systems, the climate change protected instructions. otherwise, we wouldn't be able to feed ourselves. everyone has a voice. one of our peers is pipe top immediately and says this is american economic car wash. what would you say about the wash and light targeting the but it's only going to be me is targeting vulnerable, but it's 12. it's important to have this conversation we need to talk about and not about narrative. the street on algae 0 the
7:18 pm
the your headlines on alpha 0. this our tear gas has been fired and a power suburb of march in honor of a teenager who was shot dead by police. 40000 officers are being deployed across the country, off the 2 nights of interest and in the city of cuz i'm off a 3 day curfew as no been announced. the march and knocked at was large. we peaceful it was led by the mother of the victims, 17 year old, and i, and she think the thousands who attended for their supports. also in the us, the supreme court has ruled the universities and colleges mas stop considering race when admitting new students and follows accusations at harvard university had been discriminating against asian american applicants. let's get more in our top story
7:19 pm
now. the interest in paris and the shooting has exposed anger in the suburbs where economic and racial inequality is widespread. unemployment as far above the national average, hitting 16 percent for men, 19 percent for women. 44 percent of the population lives below the poverty line. compared to just 14 percent nationwide, in b is the founder and spokes person for the anti police violence collective. let's disarm them. he says b french police or be on mere reform. it's not the problem of one or 2 cups. who are blank? property metric is the 2nd, the brother in law suspending systemic violence is denique. right? susan? inside the police like also the police is like the police unions and the police in general is like if it's a stage within the states and it's no more than 20 years. so we cannot say that one policeman is responsible for this. we have a huge increase in several years, and especially either under the maximizing we have like as a huge increase of the police murders every year we. we went from $20.00 to $25.00
7:20 pm
murders every year. before my heart and i'll be around $1335.00 murders every every year. the police is acting nicely premium. ok, and we have to dismantle many, many brigades in many stupid because they cannot be any solution without this because we cannot calm down the police. the police are just going more and more to the far right. and you know, by the election that 60 percent, the better they both for the far right. so there is no solution with disabilities. they cannot be that a fair solution or legal solution. and those are given even more power, always more power to the bodies and the bodies is becoming more and more alright. this is the brother larry at the end of these new particular views. a european union leaders a meeting in brussels to discuss the economy, migration, and support for ukraine. several neutral member states though, including austria, ireland, and cyprus, are objecting to security assurances given the you leaders ahead of the summit.
7:21 pm
nato secretary general promised unwavering support for you. great, immediate, then urgent task is to support your claim to ensure that your claim provisions such as of an independent nation in the, in your to because of this that we are able to do that. so there is no membership they should to be discussed. that's old, and it also mentioned that this is also where, where and where we see link it with the you'd opinion name because of course the, the decision to round to ukraine. kind of the status of course, also has an impact on the discussions which are taking place within the need to get to be there to be in union $8.00 have a provider and presented support. and we are stepping off just though for over the last weeks you have see and you announcements of from you. but those of them, they thought it was all additional support. and also the training on the f. 16 partners have started judges and blocked the british. government's plan to the port asylum seekers to rolanda. the court of appeal in london ruled that the ruling
7:22 pm
party is controversial deportation policies unlawful rights groups and asylum seekers had been appealing. and earlier, a court decision which gave the go ahead to send asylum applicants to africa. prime minister wishes to enact says that his government will appeal this latest decision . so that even bother is that the court of justice in london. he says the decision was welcomed by lawyers representing asylum seekers. this holding has been welcomes by the lawyers for 10, a solemn c k. c. brought this appeal alone with charity, assign them a deck, holding it a victory for compassion and reason to purchase government has all alone stress. vice rwanda is a site for the country to which you could send the saw him speakers to apply for asylum very rather than in britain. this ruling has made it clear that that's not the case by 221, judge is here said, but there was a great risk of people being sent to ro wonder and then being sent on to the
7:23 pm
country of origin where they could face mistreatment or persecution. even though they had a strong case for a solid with what is governments hitching back 5 minutes really. so you're not a said that it should be this country and it's government who decides who comes to the u. k. a not in his words, criminal games. they going to appeal to the supreme court. the charge is also going to appeal at the supreme court. in the instance, they will say something. the appeals a quote here, accepted that asylum seekers have time to make. legal representations isn't in fact fast, because sometimes they only have 7 days in which to appeal and give evidence why they shouldn't be the poll to also on the question the government's legislation that is trying to get through parliament, which would potentially mean that anybody arriving by small, but here in britain could be detained, unsupported,
7:24 pm
theoretically to rwanda. to the head of greece is opposition. so reset party plans to resign. following its defeats in sundays, general election, alexis suppress said a new cycle must begin and the reform of the party was necessary suppressed with prime minister from 2015 to 20. 19. and during the debt crisis, he was an outspoken critic of austerity. but he was later criticized for eventually accepting bailout terms for long cause central bank cars outlined measures to restructure it's huge international debt. it's in talks with foreign invest investors to persuade them to take a 30 percent cut in the value of their silver in bonds. that is part of efforts to ease its decades long financial crisis. sherlock and government defaulted on his foreign debt for the 1st time. last year i the floods and land slides have killed at least 7 people in a, some states and ne india. the brother put river burst its banks following heavy monsoon rains or pets. a district was particularly hit hard with homes and crops
7:25 pm
washed away. the government has open dozens of relief camps in the states to how's the homeless stream? the annual monsoon season had of the range, the government set of 83 relief camps and 20 of the states. 31 districts wildfire, smoking canada spreading cells across the border to effect around a 100000000 people in the united states. warnings of potentially hazardous air quality have been issued across north america. the largest canadian city toronto is covered in smoke hayes. nearly 500 fires of burning half of them are out of control . in what is canada is worst wildfire season on record of john henry and has more from chicago. one of 3 us cities, which on thursday, recorded the worst air quality in the world. believe it or not, this is as clear as the chicago skyline has been for 3 days. the air quality here is considered very unhealthy on an air quality scale has been over 200 for about the past 24 hours. now scientist say,
7:26 pm
if you spend most of the day out here at $150.00, that's the equivalent of smoking 7 cigarettes a day. so this has been very unhealthy here and it's all due to the canadian wildfires which are sweeping down from the north on northerly winds. down here to the american midwest and the hot temperatures of summer had been trapping it on the ground. it is hoped that's thunderstorms like change that over the next 24 hours or so. but that is something is being reassessed on a daily basis for the season. canada is experiencing about $500.00 wildfires. now. back in 1989, there were 11000 wildfires in canada. but what has made this season different? and definitely worse. is that the, the wild fires are bigger, one of them is the size of rhode island, and there's no end in sight because this is just the beginning of the canadian wildfire season to the price of sold. and south korea has risen by 27 percent because of fears about radioactive water from japan. more than 1000000 metric tons
7:27 pm
of treated water will be released from the focus stream a nuclear plant in the coming days. the water was used to cool the reactor after damage during the 2011 earthquake. and so now me japanese authorities say the water is safe. but the concern south koreans have stopped up on see sold and other products. you have had a and one party went on you. once you throw this into the ocean, it becomes irreversible. after throwing it away, you can't retrieve it anymore, okay? and if problems arise later on, it will be a belated regression. it would be nice if they could think a little more about the safety of us citizens from the perspective of our country and can see if there are any alternatives and not just it's a noise from far, far away in deep space. and the discovery may reveal more about how our universe was formed. themes of astro physicists have detected a background hum of ultra low frequency gravitational waves. what's causing that remains
7:28 pm
a mystery. calling baker has more. when albert einstein set the speed limit of the universe at the dawn of the new century, he proved that the space around us and the time that we perceive our 2 sides of the same thing. it's called space time and all the stuff in the universe such as planet stars and us sit inside it. but that lead einstein to another big discovery space time itself can vibrate and work the movement of very heavy objects, like 2 massive black holes, crashing into one another. ripple space, time like a rug, sending so called gravitational waves in every direction. they cross the universe carrying information about the events that caused them. they were detected here for the 1st time 7 years ago. as they squeezed and warped the earth itself using this machine called ly go. but astro physicist thought there must be more not just single waves caught by chance, but a background hum from the millions of invisible collisions throughout the history
7:29 pm
of our universe. so they looked to the universe for clues, pulse. ours are dense dying stars that should beams of light from both poles. astronomers know of over 2000 in our own galaxy, and they say there should be a 1000000000 others. these are stars that have run out of fuel and shrunk to just a few kilometers in size, but like a figure skater as they pull their arms inward, they spin at hundreds of times per 2nd to astronomers on earth. they blink, like a steady clock astrophysicist watched 67 of them for 15 years. only then were they able to detect that space time itself was warping the blanks were slowing and speeding up again. the reason long slow gravitational waves the kinds that can't be detected from any single observatory. honors coming from everywhere all at once. it's a study that could only be accomplished globally. this discovery is not come uh, uh, only for one group. it's a several different groups. so it's
7:30 pm
a multinational project to us china, australia, or michael is here in australia, in europe as well. so there is some that's the par, uh, and that's the beauty of the size of the site. it doesn't see a boilers. and that, to me, that is a lot of the most popular messages, the 1st observation of gravitational waves was a signal from deep space. now astrophysicists are looking out through the lens of those very waves to better understand the structure of our universe calling baker alba 0. the your headlines on else a 0 to a gas has been fired at a rally and a power suburb. this was an a march in honor of a teenager who was shot dead by police 40000 officers, a being deployed across the country and a 3 day curfew has been announced.

28 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on