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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  June 29, 2023 9:00pm-10:01pm AST

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a, c, r is years and someone told us that they have never seen it this bad. many people say that even when they are about to prophecies neighboring tad, they are being talked that there was an incredibly tragic day seeing refugees streaming in this turned into a violent night. they seemed terrible things experienced unimaginable hardships to come this far. what happens now? the, [000:00:00;00] the low and 0 then yeah, it's great to have you with this. this is the news our lives from the coming up in the next 16 minutes to a gas fired at a march for a teenager shot dead by police near paris as france braces for another night of interest. thousands, including his mother filled the streets and not fail,
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demanding justice of the us supreme court benz consideration of race as a factor in college admissions will live in washington dc on that. and the leaders need for talks with the head of naperville developments and ukraine and russia of the agenda. i'm chief of service with all the sports means england state of the chip away the law just straight in 1st meetings total monday to the 2nd. that makes up the so we begin, this is our in paris where a tear gas has been fired and a march held for a teenager who was shot dead by police. demonstrators were paying tribute to 17 year old in iowa and they're demanding justice. thousands of police officers have been deployed as the government calls for com. several high rock reports as
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the community gather to protest against police brutality. thousands of people led by grieving mother of a 17 year old, who was shots and killed by police on tuesday, bought the luxury peaceful march. to finance the sun, protested budding calls and police attempting to discuss the crowds by firing guns . police basically said not allowed to fail to cooperate with order to stop in the power suburbs known to somebody in friends pay tribute, not 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 who do you can? what the media or saying about him is not true. his mom raced and 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're not contradicting the state. we are not
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contradicting the legal or police procedure. yes, you was driving a call without a license like you tried to sleep, 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 happened. it started and office, the pointing is weapon through the window and appearing to fire at close range before the call rolls off and crashes to a stop. what do you thought is, what is it? is it what are you in view of the state of the investigation in 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 comes of me quoted for i think this is what should continue to guide the mix, dallas, and attributes. nevertheless,
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this was how this stopped. thousands of people from protesting, many say has become a systematic 0 tolerance policy, carried out by french police, especially against those from full and minority community officials with deploying tens of thousands of police across fronts, including 5000 in the capital parish, the loan, the police officer involved in the shooting has been arrested and charged. 17 year old victim is the 2nd person to be killed in such circumstances this year on the 15th in a year in a hall. many all hoping for justice can finally be answered as quickly as possible . so the height of all just sarah us and our correspondent natasha butler was caught up in the unrest earlier and not that well, this is the neighborhood when i on lives and sitting on top of the side is nile model with the pony,
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he is leading tribute to 17 year old son is the name or 2 months. when you go cause you really go to the motion, sometimes you feel to be very touched and there were so many people here. sometimes you look for the cheese or just is because everyone is telling me. yeah. so that was to take these traffic checks not far from here, just a few 100 meters away from what is most taking place. so basically it's important to be here in the situations next to long the same things keep happening and choose people, a sick of a it could have been my son's. i'm of north african origin and it smelled 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 guess how that says right into the middle of this crowd as they were
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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 causes disperse the crowd, but once again, people say this just shows out of touch the police all to be doing this on a day when people had come to pay tribute to this teenager. natasha butler. how does era non task? now let's go live then i'll tell now, else is yours pull. brennan is standing by. what's it like? what's this power suburb like as we speak, as well as i can talk to you about the that sense of tension that say i mean were standing outside one of the buildings that was badly damaged and the trouble of followed the end of that mater and the police stopped as far into a gas that the family, i'm the around $6000.00 demonstrations has come out. and you can see, uh, niles name has been graffiti on the side of the building that that's a c, a b, a cab which is an acronym involving a swell relates. and so the police, you can tell from that that,
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that very angry at the way the police acted unhappy and acting in recent months. and yes, i hear the toner. well, the car, which not with driving at the time when he died is just over that. and the been in front of us is still smoldering. it really is on the edge here. there's police wheeling around is quite a fluid situation quite unpredictable. there's a supermarket at the top of that says that we're going to get some provisions, some water. and when we arrive minutes into a group of loose at the, the supermarket essentially. so there was a big group of those motorcycle cops that, that arrested about 2 or 3 people. i know several of us have managed to escape, and it appears that the demonstrate has on the troublemakers are gonna play a kind of hit wrong kind of game with the police throughout the evening. and there's a sizable increase in police numbers here. as natasha said in the sar setting her reports, it's gone from 9000 last night up 240000 or all across france, with around 5000 concentrated here in paris on. but whether that will be enough to
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stand up for the trouble given the hot fix, it seems that the trouble makers are not convinced. i think we're in for a class, an edgy an edge evening here in nonsense. absolutely. they've already been 2 consecutive nights of violence. are we in for a 3rd? it feels likely, of course we hope that's not the case for brandon reporting live from not there. thank you very much. and the shooting has inflamed long simmering anger in the suburbs where economic and racial inequality is widespread. now the number of unemployed people is far, but of the national average. recent figure to show that 16 percent of men or without work for women, that figure is even higher. it stands at 19 percent. the national average 7 percent 44 percent of all people living in the parisian suburbs are living below the poverty line that compares to 14 percent nationally. ibrahim bush marie is a researcher and city university of new york. his work includes investigating as nama phobia and policing in france. he joined us from paris today, but him,
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thank you for being with us. what stands out to you most about everything that's happened over the last 48 hours. i'll see, do we reach the video now? so like, you know, the political class has been trying to get rid of that story of basically portraying the house. and so some sort of like, you know, criminal and trying to justify food use if i to was killed. and there is no reason to individual for a, for the police are, you know, there was no reason to kill. now the video is pretty clear when it comes to die. and i think the most uh and surprising not surprising, he's enjoying a raging thing and say, when i think of the last 48 hours, the policeman who opened fire on ned has been placed on the formal investigation. that's one. the president says, this is unjustifiable. that's to the prime minister says that the policeman doesn't appear to follow the rules of engagement with all of this have happened this
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mobilization of the political class. if there wasn't the video of the event, a not searching, not, i think the bicycle glass of the system usually like of the way of doing thing is to immediately like, you know, uh dismiss. uh, the victim uh, portray to be too much ready to be to miser. uh and to portray the police. i was always like, you know, uh, being right. i think what is happening right now is that my cool uh, the president of friends and joe no one on the minister of the interior was in charge of the police are trying to save the police and they might give them away or give up on the police, man, that's 50, always nice, but they want to save the institution on any criticism as a way to reduce costs is a way, but it's like, you know, somebody outlaws an incident or something like that. but the police itself doesn't have a problem. i think that many things in the last year, including like, you know, the yellow, there's protest to protest against the retirement,
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but also constant like, you know, uh it comes to the rise of like police, kennings and friends showing that there is an issue with the police as an institution, and i think that's uh once they want to obscure i hear what specific is there anything specific or unique about policing in france because we seem to get these stories. certainly if you compare european countries, we seem to get these stories out of france a lot more than we do them, then we get them out of say, germany or spain. yeah, i think there are some specificities to the boys and friends. i don't want to talk about the german context, the spanish context, because i don't know enough about them. but the policing itself, the institution, to police institution itself, what rights there in the united states, in the u. k. in spain and france is at the beginning of the day and institution, but needs to be question. that being said, the police of impress ease uh highly racist when you look at the way in which, uh,
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how do we notice uh, well, we have like, you know, numbers that show. but i always gives a bubble. are actually how students are actually uh, 90 percent of the time directed i people of color silverstein also, if we can people and like people. ready in france, but not only, and we also have like, you know, close that you like, you know, research what has been done by a journalist that has been done by research as well for the police and sometimes until treated the police. and we show that like, you know, the police like police man on a regular basis like, you know, use races these course and also engage in racist and church. and when the peep. ready but they should be, uh, actually serving a boat that varies a mass of this to where he's from people being brutalized by the police oliver to the french. but specifically in the volume in the neighborhood saying we should
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have more people come from the grant of background and like that it has been nice, nice to bring a personal like, you know, example that has to be like, you know, my experience during my childhood. i wrote the wrong, you really like it on charging with the police and these interactions usually were not of all likes to say the least. alright. it very much for me. thank you so much for joining us today on the program. thank you. fine. as the us supreme court has ruled, the universities and colleges must stop considering race when admitting new students . this false accusations at harvard university had been discriminating against asian american applicants in order to increase representation from other minority groups. we have to report is following this story, a white house correspondent, kimberly how kit is in washington dc. so is rosalyn jordan outside the us supreme court rosalyn. let's go to you 1st. explain the ruling to us and why it is so
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consequential. and this is consequential because for the better part of 45 years colleges and universities in the united states have used rates as a deciding factor when trying to build an admissions class for incoming freshman or for incoming graduate student classes. this is something that comes out of trying to deal with the legacy of slavery in the united states. after the end of the us civil war and $1865.00. there were provisions in place for african americans to take their place in society. but just as quickly, laws were passed to deny them access to public spaces, including educational institutions. after the passage of the 14th amendment, and then the enactment of the 1964 civil rights act, it became incumbent upon the educational institutions to find a way to admit students from different backgrounds, including from different racial and ethnic background. now what this means is,
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is that even though institutions such as harvard and the university of north carolina, which was also sued by the same group of asian american students, what they had been doing was once they had an initial group of students that they were considering for admission and they had to window down the lot. they started looking at a number of deciding factors that could possibly enhance the overall diversity and complexity of the student body race was one of those positive factors. however, the supreme court ruled on thursday that doing so violated both the 1964 civil rights act, as well as a violation of the 14th amendment. so now colleges and universities have to do something else if they want to promote a diverse student body, they cannot look at race. so a hi, rosalyn jordan outside the us supreme court. thank you so much. i wanna bring in houses here as white house correspondent, kimberly hallett. good. kimberly. the president joe biden reacted to this quickly
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and strongly. what did you say? yeah, the us president had some advice for college admissions and terms of how to really consider applicants moving forward. not only did he say that this really shouldn't be the last word of the supreme court, but he offered his own guidance for making decisions moving forward. he recommended that hardship as well as adversity should be taken into account. the court has effectively ended affirmative action and college admissions. and i strongly, strongly disagree with the course decision because of formative action is so misunderstood. i want to be clear and make sure everybody's clear about what the law has been and what it has not been until today. many people wrongly believes that affirmative action allows fun, qualified students, and qualify students to be admitted, had a qualifies twos. this is not,
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this is not how college admissions work. and kimberly, a really important part of this whole conversation is the make up of the supreme court, right. it's no secret. this court has moved to the right in recent years. yeah, that's right, and it has a lot to do with the previous president. donald trump had the opportunity to fill 3 positions on the us supreme court. and as a result, what we seen is largely a shift to the ideological right if you will. and that was reflected in this decision in a 6 to 3 decision, a large, a long ideological lines. but what we've seen overall isn't about 62 percent of cases in recent years. and they've gone sort of leading to the conservative right. but what concerns would argue in this country is this pendulum shift is really on doing what was a swing to the left and the last 50 years. what we've also seen is that president
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biden has had the opportunity to make one appointment, but really this was just to maintaining of status quote was the removal of justice kennedy for an equally moderate judge. i noticed just as could time to brown jackson, so it didn't change the make up of the course in any way. so what we've seen is not only the striking down of affirmative action, but another big ship that we've also seen in the united states has been the striking down of another court precedent. and that has been re weighed or a woman's right to an abortion that was a court precedent for about 50 years in the united states. so again, this is something that liberals in the united states are particularly unhappy about . this is not sitting well. this latest court ruling, in fact, not all of we heard from the president, but we've also heard from the attorney general who has said that what the justice department will be doing as well as the department of education, is that they will be putting together resources in order to try and help colleges
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make sure that future classes will be diverse. right. kimberly. how can at the white house, rosalind jordan at the supreme court? thank you both very much. joining us live now from washington dc is emission across your assistant director of higher education communications and education. trust me sure. your reaction to the supreme court ruling and quite frankly, i was upset and still upset, but i wasn't surprised. it'd be education for us. we knew when i had um, created commentary for and have been designing strategy around a world without a permit of action. now for probably months, this was again, no surprise, this booley hyde. it has a rating effect, obviously. but considering the make up of the court, considering that a primitive action has literally been challenged multiple times since its inception . and looking at where the united states has been going an anti b r t critical race period in anti di i've ever so the equity and inclusion and a lot of culture worth a conservative tab, literally brought into the echo chamber for the past few years. this was of no
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surprise at all. you said you are preparing for a world without affirmative action, but the notion, the principle of formative action still stands and in many spears of, of society. this is a fairly narrow ruling. the concern is college admissions. this will, it stands um its thing and then other areas for now. and i think that because just as the, just as we saw in the dogs decision which overturn robi way it did not alleviate or eliminate or you know, guide states into trying to get rid of things like the, like the abortion deal or things. but um, or to advance criminal penalties for providers themselves. what we feed is that highly conservative states will expand buildings and will basically design policies around those things. even though they do not meet the law of the land when it comes to what the supreme court has actually issue. these being precedent about, in many cases across the country and for primitive action in terms of colors, decisions, the colors emission, i don't think they were going to see this,
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this change. i think it can be parallel to what we see in other decisions as well. with that being said, you're already watching state move towards the eradication of diversity and equity and inclusion on their campuses. florida being one in addition to texas and we're watching louisiana and other states take that same. i'll take that same type of stance. so i do think that we're going to see the if i um, the anti affirmative action piece be expanded. that's one of the greater fear of not only all college campuses, but also as, as we look for the women in employment access as well. but the bigger thing here for students, students, and those what appearing students for college is that they have to recognize, not only do see what this really means, but also that irrespective into a lot of the argument we see from the right that affirmative action was never just a bout rate. there is this barry persevering, an annoying commentary around affirmative action, essentially being something where a black or brown speed would be able to enter into college. even though they didn't have the grades that were,
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that met the muster or test scores and that is absolutely incorrect. these are students who largely came from under represented background, but they are highly achieving their students. so for me, 5 gps percentile has test scores in the highest percentile, it was never solely about right, right. so i don't wanna run out of time without asking you this, then the, the us president joe biden was saying, well, what we should consider then for admission. if it's not going to be raise should be hardship and adversity. how do you feel about that? i feel like it is helpful, quite frankly, those same students who had racial backgrounds that were not represented on campus or also students from or person ration students who were low income students who were students who in addition to being highly achieving students in their high schools, in pursuit of college, they're also doing so many things at home, helping to take care of their elderly parents. their students were working 2 and 3 jobs. their students who are often times only there are students who have so many other birds in factors. in addition to being high performing students, but those are absolutely the things that you'll be taking into consideration. i
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mean for across the assistant director of higher education uh, communications at education trust. thank you so much for joining us. thanks for having. there's plenty more ahead on this news. our judges deliver verdicts in each wireless, former brazilian president show you are both scenarios also rebuilding now are you paula rusher? redesigns, the eastern ukrainian city. a year after taking over and frances highest court upholds a band and football is wearing the huge job on the fiche. that's coming up with speed of stomach later and support the european union leaders. a meeting in brussels to discuss everything from the economy, migration, and support for ukraine. but some member states, including austria, island and cyprus, or pose to security assurances that the
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e u has given keith dump. mccain reports from brussels, a small, but vocal increases. ukrainian activist demonstrates that side of the european council demanding the country is admitted to the you all there is little chance of vice any time soon. what it is inside the council have given them is another demonstration of support. and the critical view of the vox, in the museum last weekend, showed deep cracks and 14 system, this mutiny of last week. and we'll also have after shots that we will see, the more it is important that we double down on the support for you. frame b, it's uh, military capability or financial support. already this week the e u has increased the, the amount of money it makes available to kids with some officials saying this support may need to be made permanent. but if that is a unity of purpose regarding ukraine, one issue where that isn't, is migration a deal, agreed by e u interior ministers in looks. and the 3 weeks ago was suddenly passed by
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a qualified majority votes. one nation with objections to it was poland. here in brussels, it's prime minister. spell that a different vision moment. how's the plan plan does we have an alternative plan, a plan of securing your supporters and i will present it here and it will be about reinforcements. context, which is also signaling that illegal immigration in directly supported smuggling groups can that it supports defacto terrorism in europe. it is enough to look at what font takes, right in its report. this stuff is about put on the other side of the arguments of the countries like easily. you see that you may see a deal agreed with the youth as a blueprint for the future. elsewhere, relations with one of the country have loomed launch over this summit. china seen by the, the symbol tenuously as a partner, a competitor, and the systemic rivals the mood music. nasa, just these ministers all trying to downplay divisions with a jing, with the hopes,
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the government that might use its influence in moscow to end the war and ukraine. someone okay, how does their process ahead of the meetings in brussels, nato secretary general insisted that support for ukraine will continue. immediate and urgent task is to support ukraine to ensure that ukraine prevails, such as of an independent nation in the, in europe. because of this, we are able to do that, there's no membership issue to be discussed at all. and it also mentioned that this is also where, where and where we see link it, whether you'd opinion because of course, the, the decision to ground to ukraine. the candid status of course, also has an impact on the discussions which are taking place within the need to get with you to be in union. may dollars have a provider, unprecedented support and we are stepping off just though for over the last weeks you have seen and you announcements of from you. but those of them,
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they thought was all the additional support and also the training all the f. 16 partners have started a how are you this alco is senior director of geo politics at rest most in global. and he joins us from brussels. henry, i want to pick up on something. and from what mr. stoughton bird were saying, and what our corresponding dominic came were saying, do you say ukraine ever becoming a member of the european union? that's one or a member of nato. absolutely. i think both european union and nato membership are definitely something that 1st of all, the ukraine is aspiring to do. and it's and finding its constitution. and i think that's given the current context. it is something that we can see going forward, of course, is not going to be something that's going to happen over night. but it's definitely more of a prospect now than it was before this war. and i think it sends a strong message to put in that whilst you want it, and she may have wanted to keep your frame in the way from its european past. the keys are cheating the opposite. you really think you would bring in ukraine?
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i'm not talking now, but say a medium term. you're really thing that you would bring in ukraine. you really think nato would bring in ukraine at this. not right. you know, get not right now, medium term. absolutely, i think 1st of all you see already assigning the fact that you're trained as a candidates to a has a candidate status with the you something that happens. elizabeth r t a also had canada had a a membership id at some point. then that went nowhere. this it was nowhere for now . let's see. yes, but i thinking ukraine's case, we have a definite momentum building up. and again, i'm not saying it's gonna happen overnight, but definitely it's something and, and, and that, you know, has the chance of happening within, you know, let's see how long it's going to take. when it comes to natal, i think the same the same, the same thing is true and we're gonna look to the billing assignment to see what the language will be along the allies. and again, i don't think we're going to see an invite. necessarily have the nato summit, but i think we're going to definitely see some language that will point to uh,
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to ukraine's past towards nato. at some point. and european union countries are discussing it this summit, their support for ukraine, the nature, the amount, the quantity of the support for ukraine. do you think that they're going to reach a higher level of support? they're already providing weapons, not all the weapons that ukraine ones, but a fair few of them and ammunition. absolutely. i think you're seeing a definitely more money being discussed more a higher level of ambition, but on the table. and at the same time, well, we are talking about as some language on, on need a membership and, and some type of, of, and it's a bad forward for you find on, you know, memberships. i think you're also seeing discussions on security guarantees while you're going in the interim period, not to replace natal membership, but to, to serve as an interim solution. while your claim is seeking made on membership. and i think there's a very strong role for the you in that on hiring the delco senior director of geo
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politics at rest most in global. thank you. thank you. the cost of those prime minister has also a new elections, and the $4.00 serv. majority municipalities of the self declared republic. albin cortez move follows violence. breaking out last month after the installation of ethnic albanian mayers in those areas. the prime minister says he is also willing to reduce the police presence in these places to following consultation with the you find policy chief joseph burrell. the last municipal election was boycotted by most serbs and violence broke out last month after the installation of ethnic albanian may or is in certain majority areas. as a result of superior electro court has started voting on whether a former present or desirable scenario abused his powers. 3 of 7 judges voted for a conviction before the hearing was adjourned. the trial is examining both scenarios, comments in 2022. when he counts doubts on brazil's electronic voting machines ahead of the presidential election, whole scenario was not at the courts. however,
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he did speak to an officer as monica yan, a cabin rio de janeiro. and he address concerns that his comments 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, 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 rights of we are not to blame. but monica yanna cube has more on this from rio de janeiro. well, even though the trial has been adjourned and will resume on friday, it is pretty certain that former present valuable sonata will be convicted. the decision has to be taken by a majority of 7 judges. 4 have voted already 3 in favor of
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a conviction. and one against it, so it just takes one more vote for both in order to be convicted. if he is convicted, what will happen is that he will be ineligible for the next 8 years. that means he will not be participating in any elections as a candidates until 2030, so he would miss 2 presidential elections. some of the supporters in congress are drafting a bill to grant him amnesty. this was unlikely to pass in senate because it would overturn a court decision, but it still is is enough to make a lot of noise. they're trying now to use a former presidential able so now to and his cap political capital to try and elect as many, many years as they can in next years, municipal elections has still has a lot of political support,
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especially in congress. so now he's already planning his future's future steps in case he cannot run for any election in the next 8 years. monica, not you. of all just 0 re edition ero. still ahead on else 0, the commercial space res heats up with virgin galactic hoping for break through the former world. number one. tennis blair, who's coming out of retirements after 3 years away from the 4th that is in sports with peter stem cell. the hello from the al jazeera headquarters in doha, where it is becoming less few minutes and had solved because those winds have turned around, were now drawing down a hot and dry wind from iraq. so we go in for a closer look here is pushing away some of that humidity but sit means those
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temperatures will start to lift over the next few days. so it's got your pencil, the in for us here in the add $43.00 degrees, soft to boxed on an update on the monsoon range or seen it through punjab, probably. and since pushing into india, temperatures on the high side for a minute. stones capital ask about 41 for you. there could be some flooding in turkey is ne, black sea coast, once again with this band of rain is that energy also pushes into the caucus is on friday, back into the sun. no 4 is stumble. you'll max out at $26.00 degrees for advertising . the worst of the rain will actually be around molly, not too far away from the bomb the co. and it's, we check on central africa. it's really this western side of the democratic republic of congo, where we've got the bigger down port stuck in the blue. the more intense the rain is, and it has turned much quieter and south africa after that possible tornado. because we were going to tell providence we had some snow as well, but pretty much full on sunshine, right across the country on friday. sounds good. that's all for me.
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the the the
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watching else is 0. a reminder of our headline, this hour to your gas has been fire. they named power suburb that in march and owner of a teenager, of with shot dead by police. 40000 officers are being deployed across the country is a bring forth in the us has ruled that universities and colleges must stop considering race when admitting use students follow as accusations that harvard university had been discriminating against asian american africans. brazil superior electro of course, has started voting on whether former president shareable scenario abused his powers . 3 of 7 judges voted for conviction before the hearing was a year after taking control of the ukrainian city of mary paul russel wants to change the face of the city. several residential projects are replacing thousands of destroyed units. and officials say the ship city should be rebuilt by 2025 of the house, rent reports from murray, and you flocked for maria and had a family. it's been more of
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a need. yeah. since they were the space. she says the field is full. i think embody, destroyed, the national effect was damaged in the fighting, but we have already been given new housing. we submitted the paperwork and waited for 6 months, 2 days ago, got a call from the husband department saying that the papers are ready and they give us the keys. we're moving in with our remaining furniture. we will buy what we don't have and move on. as she joins hundreds of time and leaves in the city who received a new fax work as a copy of the cost, the city damage building the mandate is to change the face. so for washing control money for this isn't an easy task. the russian government estimates the total cost of the building to exceed $2000000000.00 over 3 years. with the amount of destruction and the slow pace of reconstruction, it would probably take much longer. with the law of molten $1600.00 flats
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would be initiated. we expect the same number of apartments this year, the work being done there, which is not enough lucas for us to accept the number of applications to process quickly and in a timely manner. some who prefer not to talk on canada, complained about serious delays and the need to pay bribes to get the paper work done. so, so the little book them to put them into. there's a problem, but these are isolated cases because unfortunately we're working with documents. many people, we've had the documents destroyed to doing come back to operations. it took a psychological toe and many financial expenses to store the documents only. but then can you know, just the documents on the queue for a flat or maybe most of the new projects sort of built that on the city. and the heart of my you for several old buildings has been done including this famous drama theater that's being driven in march last year, the seattle was hit during the wash and bush to take the city,
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the red hundreds of depth and injuries. ukraine says it was caused by a russian aerial attack unless the international has also like use the shelf targeting the theater, knowing civilians where it shows everything inside rush or the noise, these allegations, or show long story bills. my, you pull as a city of it. so this time, what that would mean, replacing or revamping somebody clinic, landmark does or thought that was the last few green and full of dogs in the city. the russian plan is to transform it into a vast business box with 3 in spaces audiology. when jesse at all muddy opal, the police in saudi arabia or investigating a shooting at a u. s. consulate, which left 2 people did the security guard of the american consulate. and jetta died along with a gunman who initially opened fire on wednesday. a saturday police spokesman said investigations into the motive and other circumstances are underway. in the us
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state department has condemned the burning of the koran and sweden, the incidents committed by a protest or under police protection as cause outrage around the world. iraq has recalled it's in bassett, or and so in sweden, in response to testers, in baghdad. trying to break into the swedish embassy turkey a guitar. jordan have also condemned the act. the incident happened outside of most in stockholm, on the 1st day of either of at least 2 people were shot and killed on the outskirts of and fall in india. as many poor states. police say there were confrontations between members of the majority mates, a and minority cookie community. more than a 150 people have been killed in tribal violence in the past 2 months. hold on bill, how many it has this reports? it's a long way from home, but at least here, irene gunter is safe. so you have to leave your home down in pause when violence broke out between the majority hidden to meet tea and the cookie communities living
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in this part of india. a nurse back home, she's putting her skills in good use. in this relief center situation will have to cut out that the situation is serious and both communities gravely divided. non try both have left the tribal areas. so the non try both of come to the impulse valley and the tribals have gone to the hills. they did it for their safety. they give us easy. at least a 115 people have been killed and 50000 others this place. since the ethnic strive started at the beginning of may, the cookies are my noisy tribe in many poor states in northeast india. they are officially designated as scheduled tribe, which gives them preferential access to jobs and education. dividing started after many poor as high court recommended that the may, the majority be awarded the same visiting nation and benefits. many and the made
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the community had law was in the privileges awarded to the cookies of homes, churches, temples, and government institutions were attacked. the cookies say they have paid the highest price so far. we cannot be with them, it is anymore. the process field is going to have another that gets the will that plus between the 2 communities. the minority cookies accuse this they've government of siding with the may some 40000 security forces have been deployed, but pensions remain high. as efforts to this, um vigilante groups from both sides have proven difficult and normal life has been thrown out of here says no make up on may t. he runs a service point, but with daily curfews and the internet shut down for weeks now, it's difficult to run the business and then $1.00 to $91.00 if it was no god. this is the time for new admissions. for students,
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they need internet access results or to apply to college just outside. they needed to submit their fees. those looking for jobs have to submit the forms and they're also facing problems. one of the cookies and now demanding for separate administration. the visits of the opposition lead to a rep who was gundy is part of his 5 months loan units in march across india appear in money poor. you need to is more inclusive than ever without them. how many of these are alexis that price will resign? is head of greece is all positions the reason part, the following is defeat and sundays. general election, subarus said a new cycle must begin and that reform of the party was necessary. suppressed was prime minister from 2015 to 20. 19. during the debt crisis, he was an outspoken critic of austerity, but he was criticized later for accepting bailout terms. the british court has ruled the government plans to port the asylum seekers to rolanda rather than assess
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their claims is unlawful. court of appeal judges rule. the rwanda had not provided enough safeguards to prove that it is a safe 3rd country the dean, but has more on this from london by a majority. this quote allows the appeal on the issue of whether rwanda is a safe country. it's a ruling that human rights groups of welcome to starting the british governments entire scheme for deporting asylum seekers to run down into doubts. they just appeal was brought by the charity of sorry to my intent asylum seekers all arrived in the u. k. by crossing english channel from phones from the key issue was whether rwanda was a safe food country to send them to the quotes on so was not is reversed. the majority of 221 judge is a rule that if people were deported 01 to they could best be sent on to the country of origin where they faced persecution or other in humane treatment. even though they had a good case for a solemn, much of the evidence in the appeal hearing came from the united nations refugee
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agency. you and hcr was absolutely clear that the solemn system rolanda nathan, their own material deficiencies this under resource, the soft have not had adequate training on their systemic bias. prime minister wishes to not because made stopping the boats, one of his priorities is currently trying to post the registration, legal for teeth to detain, into port anyone making the dangerous c journey apart from unaccompanied children. opposition. politicians say the government should concentrate on causing a huge decide im claims backlog, which has left thousands of valuable people in limbo. the government standing firm . we are currently spending, as i say, 6000000 pounds a day on hotel accommodation. 3000000000 pounds a year on servicing our asylum costs. those costs are unsustainable, the prime minister, and i've made it clear that we will do whatever it takes to stop the votes and fix this problem. the u. k. government's hoping to appeal to like his ruling at the supreme court. more delays and done so it's insane. and for those asylum seekers
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affected more distress compounding that trauma that happens to y yes. in some cases, over a year with nothing happening on that cases and not even starting the process of having this item claims completed. and that comes on the boxes or from by trauma to johnny's to the u. k. i'm saying we'll see, persecution was recently to be ongoing legal fees, which is already spent almost a $180000000.00 on the rewind escape scheme that shows no signs, opinion implemented in the near future. the dean, bob, i was just 0. not sure long cuz central bank has outlined measures to restructure its international debt. it is in thoughts with foreign investors to persuade them to take a 30 percent cutting the value of their self in bonds. that is part of f. it's the ease it's decades long. financial crisis, the for lock and government defaulted on as far as the debt for the 1st time. last year i the floods the land slides have killed at least 7 people in some states in
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ne india. b brown. the portrait river burst its banks following heavy monsoon, rain bar pets. the district was particularly hit hard with homes and crops washed away. the government has opened dozens of relief camps in the states to how's the homeless during the annual monsoon season wildfire smoke and canada is spreading south 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 case, nearly $500.00 fires of burning, half of them out of control. and what is canada's worst wildfire season on record? it's being seen as the latest milestone in the commercial space race. virgin galactic has sent its 1st pain customers into orbits. competition is hunting up into space tours and sector. it's still out of reach for most, but some companies are now offering flight packages for hundreds of thousands of dollars, rather than millions. printing on
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a hand has more. and most of us have seen rocket launch is but virgin glass, it gets passenger to space a little differently. it flies towards stuff using a space plane. it takes off from a runaway much like an ordinary jess. once it reaches the altitude of around 15000 meters, it releases the 2nd smaller vehicle that then takes them up the rest of the way. passengers experience a few minutes of weightlessness before returning home. virgin galactic is charging $450000.00 for a seat. that's a lot of money, but companies have charged billions for space trips. blue origin uses conditional rockets to offer a similar service to virgin galactic. a spot on this 1st flight was auction for $28000000.00. space x is taking civilians, the international space station charging tens of millions for multi day trip. but the could be a downside. the space tours and boom, long whole plane flights can generate around 3 tons of carpet emissions for each passenger or flight like the one version offers corporate use as much as
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a 100 tons. more space for you. teams of astra physicists have detected continuous ultra low frequency gravitational waves rippling through the universe like a background hum. astronomers suspect that it may be coming from super massive black hole spiraling together before merging. the discovery may reveal more about how our universe was formed. 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,
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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 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
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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 only for a while ago because of several different groups. so it's a multi national project to us china, australia and michael is here in australia, in europe as well. so that is something that's the par, uh, and that's the beauty of the site. the site doesn't see a whole this. and that, to me, this is a, one 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,
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0. 1 last thing before the sports news. turkmenistan has inaugurated its 1st smart city named down for to its former presidents, a group of gorb ungodly, brooding move. it's called the architect, which means protect are in a truck when language, the city is designed for a $70000.00 people and includes solar power, electric buses, and smart houses. the $3000000000.00 development is meant to be a model for other treatments cities, as right as promised, or sports needs with peter stem it fittest. so thank you so much in limbo in a sitting position of to straight out the close of play on day 2 of the 2nd, the ashes face that loads at the start of the day the a strategy is the 339 for 5. steve smith, which the century because eventually off for 100 and same thing, them had a good morning session. they picked up the remaining 5 week. it says the australians were dismissed for $416.00. in response, england school briskly been duckett, phoning from 98. agonizingly close to
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a century at the close captain. ben stokes and harry brooke were at the wicked england, 278 for 128 runs behind. manchester united have reportedly agreed a deal to signing the midfield of mason mount from chelsea mountain scene. here on the left, we'll join on a 5 year contract for $75000000.00. here we ericsson hawkins, 1st signing all of the tron. so when the off the qualifying for next season is champions league the defending champions, the usa laid down a big mock up. the contract of gold kept firing. 6 goals, posts and kits and leave it faces. feta was still a man for the filaments, hosts in saint louis to him. the 2nd, the international patrick of his career. and the 6 little dropping was rounded off when georgie, my height of which for the 2nd of the night, fairly new to draw when they last group matched to progress, to the council files. hey, this calls will remain banned for football isn't from. so for ruling was upheld by
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the country's highest quote, a group of female muslim players known as lizzy, job bows to legal action against the decision taken by french football. last year, the court ruled that's both iterations can mandate mutual testing to prevent classes or confrontation, adding it considers the been appropriate and propulsion is. this reading is at odds to fee for recommendations, which allows players to compete at international level with head scolds from a low level in tennis, the catalog was the actually as announced, geez, coming out of retirement, 3 years off to quitting the sports. there's when he 18 australian open champion, hung up a racket at the beginning of 2020 aged 29 because she wanted to start a family with her husband. she since had 2 children and is now ready to return to the colt in august at the w. t. a event in montreal before heading to new york for the us open was me actually spend 71 weeks up the top of the world rankings. and as
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150 singles titles or the current will number one eagles, fiance continues to break new ground on gross. he's just one of the 10 straight match to reach of 1st semi final. i'm a surface at the above the home, but open in june, many threes on friendship, and champion is the post and the blink of a 6362 and will face if it needs a new chapter on the safety makes and spain feliciano lopez hes into these 26 seasons long career on the ac. with a loss estimate yoga championships. the 41 year old went down $6.00 to $6.00 full to get a come from on the console finder. the 1st live series events since the announcement of golds proposed merger begins on friday in spain. the lack of clarity around the future of live gulf hasn't stopped to the, to assigning a new multi you deal to play the event to develop the rama for ma mazda is tramping . sergio garcia thinks the new d o shows live will definitely continue the span it also reveal these into these rift. with right,
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a cup teammate will re mcelroy the pay fell out when garcia joined the saudi arabia back in the series. the us open um a week and a half ago it was, it was a great uh, 2 weeks ago was a great event for me. uh, not obviously you would say why i mean you can just 27. know only because of that. i feel like i play at a well, but uh more than anything because i, i gain a frame back, you know, a friend that i, that i kind of felt like i lost uh, in the last, uh, year or so. um, you know, we, uh, we talked and, and we had a great conversation and, and i feel like i have that friend back in that means a lot for me to one returns to the rolling hills of illustrious rainbow, ring this weekend. we're next for stuff and they can make more f one history when we're taken to 40 to race victories, one more than the late to a some center. but before practice gets underway, the total cause being about the lp in teams. new code is among them. act to ryan
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reynolds, whose company as well, the 24 percent stake in the team at the helping drive a p, a ghastly called weeks to get some the new boss personally, a fan of him and, and his work i think is definitely one of my favorite actor and yeah, definitely super excited to uh, to meet him at some point during the season. it's a perfect night for new york yankees domingo had months as he pitched a re perfect game in major league baseball. you achieve the feat so you may remember nothing when the oakland athletics on wednesday is baker home and it's stuffing over the age basses from reaching any space. history was made in the mind sitting when grounded out as to any movies, to school big celebrations with the yankees team. it's only the $24.00 perfect game in the history of the b service since $1212.00 came on is just the full yankees picture to enjoy this. moving along with don lawson, david wells,
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and david coast. okay, we'll leave it there for now. i'll be here again. in a few hours with most sports news, several great stuff. we look forward to it. thank you very much, peter stem. it. that's it from me. sort of any for this news, our up next mariana minimize the from london. during the, the issues of the day we've got to start the intensive song systems, the climate change, protect destruction. otherwise we won't be able to feed ourselves. everyone has a voice, one of up here says pipe top and major a and says this is american economic car wash. what would you say about the wash and light target either,
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but it's only going to meet me is targeting bone or those. and it's 12, it's important to have this conversation we need to talk about and not about narrative, the street on algae 0, a survivor of a genocide dealer or people who are likely to kill the trend or suffering. but it didn't come to hard to do. who's dedicated his life to searching the woods, the bones of the victims of the shrubbery. skim? mastercard, even here is the drove in the hope for finally laying the past to rest, giving peace to the victims, families, cousin nature. if i could just find to think about, i could bury him, phone hunter on out his era. the things i pushing
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the want to blow, but the perspectives the front spaces for another nice and violent protest of the police shooting of a teenager imposing coffee use and stopping boston tramps. uh this is leah t a gas was fine. it's a march led by the mazda of the boy who was shot dead during a traffic stop me

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