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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  July 7, 2023 6:00pm-7:01pm AST

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living for centrals like to the transport, forcing them into extreme poverty. people in young going confinement since camilla chick k prizes on public transport. double services. the building was the one sick to is booming. this to you, the ministry of agriculture names to an a $1000000000.00. right. 6 boats. a nation well, when in full people didn't have enough to eat. sending food over seas. the government revenue the the hello, i'm emily anglin, thanks for joining us. the system use our line from coming up in the next 60 minutes. we don't, we don't have to wait till to freaking migrant stranded on the libyan buddha.
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aptitude museum, expound them following racial tensions. the un security council makes us choose palestinians acute and yes. and now they use riley right. and the occupied westbank . we speak to nato secretary general on the us decision to potentially send class to bones to ukraine. and china bands through the imports from japan after its plans to release trees and radioactive water into the pacific ocean. and on piece of standard for the schools, the world number one carlos al, caressing action on since a cold at wimbledon. and the strain, the electrical upstate, lead england in the food ashes taste of the building, the hostile before lunch from day to the
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it's 1500 gmc, we start with the developing story from the border between 2 needs. yeah. and libya, hundreds of african migrants including small children that have been stranded in the middle of the desert aptitude, these individuals expelled them from the country. many of them had been hoping to reach europe to seek asylum them. now they stuck in the boat region and say that being forced to drink same was it to survive the migrant say after 2 easy and officials pushed the mouth, leaving border guns and now refusing to let them in. a correspondent melick train that has this exclusive report from the libyan to news in buddha. can you tell me, did you conference locker? who brought you here? who watches the eye? what? what does it you want? what does that you want? you want to have your out of your head water. have you had food? we don't, we don't have the history as you can. as you can see, we're,
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we're here on the libyan museum border and where these hundreds of migrants of refugees were brought here by to visit us. or what they're telling us for transitioning is dire. we have are people here that are intern, veterans dire need that are desperate for some kind of help. we're seeing women and children, women and children here and they want, it said they want a safe haven. they've been here for others for a little bit for you, but there needs to be some sort of a bright health where people say that they're already dealing with with a migrant migration problems are over, according to the one over 700000 migrants in libya, routes right now, on the with the border and why the l as my, as the president of your med rights, one of several civil society organizations calling for help for migrants. he says,
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tennessee, it has violated its international commitments on the safety of migrants. what do you know now is that say, well drop by the canadian, or sort of the on the board, that was the, the mtv is refusing to, to admit them. and now they out of them and kind of in no man's land so, so like i and that kind of and then knowing situation because tanisha refused to get them back and say, i'd say scoff at, i mean, and, and to be dead. and they are risk of being attacked also by the median comes and he be inside because he knows that they need the stuff. they're almost state. no, no, no, no. phil was so. so was it really is a canadian government? what has done here is violating or his international commitment on onto the safety of people who are moving into media because they've got, this is a, i'm the comments if mike then what i was in m c could or, or if he's and some of them i think she's and they just have to, to you and i say off. so the technician government here is violating his commitment
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towards the end. the emotion that, for me, i would say is it, and it trends into an easier for the last 2 years. with this a hate campaign against giving fees or back in my doing like it's amazing that was the reason of the funds down. okay. no, because was down in tanisha, it's a way it's a ski boat, it's a way for the canadian government to die. that is the population. i would say i'm going to watch someone as then towards the political situation. the un security council is meeting to discuss these riley is sold in the occupied westbank city of janine earlier this week. there has been a wave of violence in the region since the latest in nablus, where funerals have been helping to palestinians killed in n is riley right. it happened days after the assault engineering refugee camp that killed 12. ellis. damian's is riley prime minister benjamin netanyahu. it says the crack down will continue. island fisher has the latest from ramallah in the occupied westbank. now what we're told by people in nablus is that before dawn
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there was a long line of there's really military vehicles in a convoy entering the old part of the city from 3 different directions that were heading to one house was a believe that to man the village were responsible for the shooting as a matter thing, community where they were new injuries elliot this week. where hiding once the convoy got to the place and there were a number of skirmishes on its way and they asked the man to give up. they were met by a responsive gun fire, an improvised explosive devices. they've been opened up according to locals with a huge garage of guns. fine. and you're seeing the pictures on social media certainly sustains those claims. during that exchange of fire, the 2 men were killed. now were told that they've been named as homes at my school and tv shaheen, both members upon the of the popular front for the liberation of palestine. and in the last few hours, the funerals have already taken place. but it's a sign of the increase tensions here. you remember that after what happened in
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geneva 40 our is really milledgeville operation, which claimed the lives of 12 palestinians wounded more than a 120 of them. critically wounded at many palestinians groups was that there would be a response to that. and these really probably ministered insisted there would be more operations in the style of janine. so that is why security across the occupied westbank is high. why tension in every community is even higher, and there's no site that this cycle is about to end any time soon. island fisher. i'll just the to ramallah to i'm, we're getting some use just in that a palestinian man and he's 20 as has been shot dead, binds riley forces. it happened in the occupied westbank village of on south north west of ramallah, $198.00 palestinians had been killed since the beginning of the year, including $37.00 children will be more on the story as it comes home.
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let's take a closer look now at them janine refugee camp. it's in the north of the occupied west bank and has an estimated 14000 palestinians living in less than half is waking me to the descendants of people forcibly expelled when the state of israel was created. in 1948, one of the 1st mines is riley raised in the camp, having back in 2002, attend a military operation that killed at least 52 palestinians and destroyed much of the area today. it has one of the highest rates of unemployment and poverty. it also has several of the groups that operate under the janine brigades umbrella. for more and the story, let's bring in gabriel. alexander, who joins us live from the united nations in new york. hello. they gave but amazing is underway, but it's behind closed doors. what can we expect to come from is if anything you have a security council met about an hour ago there still meeting and the security
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council chambers, as you mentioned, behind closed doors. so we don't have any access to that to see what exactly the discussion or the debate is about. but in terms of what we expect is we hope to hear from ambassadors as they come out of that meeting to get a sense of if they are cracking some sort of statement or some action if you will, in response to the is really rate in janine now this has been building and united nations all week just as a quick brief timeline here on tuesday, the united arab emirates called for this emergency meeting saying, due to the disturbing developments in palestine on wednesday, we heard from a un spokesperson, who said that he believed that these really actions in jeanine were definitely against international humanitarian law. and then on thursday, yesterday we heard from the secretary general himself, who said he was deeply disturbed by the israeli actions engineering. and now on
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friday, today, there's closed door meeting by the security council. we also heard from the palestinian representative to the un riyadh mentor, who he told journalists here that he wants action and not just words. that's what he wants. he said from not only the secretary general, but also from the security council. after this meeting concludes, here this afternoon. okay, we'll cross back to you a little later. thanks so much for breaking it all down for us. gabriel. alexander, in your, for us, in germany's foreign ministers says her country is against the us plan, just in class, to munitions, to ukraine. the weapons have been denounced for causing a high number of civilian deaths and injuries. so what custom munitions? well, the missile chemist is contained hundreds of smaller bombs or bone length that break apart in the air with a wide spread and devastating impact. the international committee of the red
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crosses as many as 40 percent of the bond lives failed to designate and pose a threat to civilians, often decades lighter cluster munitions are banned by most countries, but not the united states. ukraine, russia and a few others. human rights watch accuses both ukraine and brochure of killing civilians with cluster munitions. will cause to add different medic edited james base who's at the nature of headquarters in just a moment. but 1st let's speak with l. y has correspondent, kimberly how get hello that. kimberly. what's the thinking at the white house on this particular decision? yeah, well more still waiting to get the official announcement, but what we're learning and according to reporting here in the united states, what's the feeling is of the by do ministration is after months of deliberation between, depending on the white house capitol hill, is that the tide needs to be turned if you will, with respect to how this war is proceeding that the you printing and forces are
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exhausted, that the scarcity of weapons supplied by the west is becoming increasingly dire. and as a result, there is a need for a plastic not that you will and. and so it's sort of the best of the bad options, and that is likely to now be this announcement in the tune of some 800000000 in cluster munitions, a highly controversial weapon that is the, the west hopes in the united states helps will push back russian forces, particularly along the front lines. so that is the announce, but we are waiting for. we expect that it may come down in the form of an announcement from the national security advisor jake sullivan, around 1700 g m t. when he is expected to speak at the white house press briefing. alright and kimberly, as you mentioned these comfortable items uh controversial because the dangers to civilians has that particular issue being addressed by washington at this stage. well, it's been addressed in the past so much so that the us president has had to sign
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a waiver over riding congressional law in order to even allow this to occur. and so that shows just how controversial it is, even within the binding in white house. the fact is, is that the george bush administration with heavily criticized when this was used during the iraq war. and since then, the us military's phase this out, given the fact that these cluster munitions often leave behind a footprints that can be in place for decades. and we know from statistics through mandatory in groups that often it's the civilians that are hit the hardest from this often making civilians for decades and, and often it's women and children that are hurt the most. so this is the controversy behind these chrome cluster munitions. often they have a high dead rate uh children pick them up. they look like little golf balls that can look really innocuous,
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but can be lethal. and that is the problem here. and the other part we should point out in all of this is that this administration said is foundation of foreign policy was going to be human rights. and that is exactly the offices of what cluster munitions are intended for. okay, thanks so much for the update. kimberly, how could tell whitehouse corresponded the that's bringing out diplomatic edison james phase. now. who's at nato headquarters in brussels? i love that, james. what spring? the reaction from a nation are members to this decision? a while we've already heard from the german foreign minister that she doesn't want to see any cost of munitions sent to ukraine. that is a problem half an item, because the us wants to do this. and the us is the most powerful country in nato. but you just look at how many of the countries and nato have signed the international treaty against cluster munitions, and it's 2 thirds of nato. so there is a division on this issue. and i think even the nato is saying that they don't have
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a position on tests to munitions and ups is up to an individual countries. what they give you train the public and nato countries. they do have a position on cluster munitions and they are deeply unpopular and this is deeply controversial old, tracing a bit of a problem for the nato secretary general general. yet in stilton book, i spoke to him earlier, and he was choosing his words very carefully when he spoke about this. cluster munition is all the all the in use a in the, in the war on both sides. so the difference is that a restaurant uses the, goes to munitions in the water, aggression to occupied to control and they ukraine, while ukraine is using to defend itself against aggression. and some of us have signed the d conventional custom emissions, but others have not. so. ready next lesson lines and doesn't have one position on
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this issue. on the it is up to individual allies to make specific decisions on what type of need to support they provide to ukraine will allow us support a mentor aid are in support with me today to bring about exactly what type and whether they provide this type of a mission, that's what didn't do it all last of this. and so it is a difficult issue for nato which has got a big stomach coming up in vilnius just in, in a matter of days and miscellaneous. and there are other outstanding issues at that summit. for example, sweden wants to be a member of nato. finan was accepted, but sweden is still being blocked by. took it. i'm for that mass, a hungry there is now going to be a meeting with the president of turkey and the prime minister suite. and just before the summit stops, to try and resolve that issue. and also ukraine wants to see some clear language
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from nato, that there is a concrete steps for it to become a nathan member to a. and i can tell you here at nato headquarters, diplomat. so working very, very hard on the language of a communicate that issue during the summit, and they haven't reached agreement on the language that they're going to mention about ukraine's aspirations. the diplomacy on that issue continues certainly. sounds like a busy upcoming summit. thanks so much, james. james, phase of diplomatic editor there in brussels. spending more ahead on these these our, including the nearly 3 month long conflict in the sudan is trapped in many tables in and around the capital with little or no medical health. the us improves. the 1st health sign is drug present to slow progression of the deal of debilitating disease and install we've paid a real madrid introduce. it's new as seen your old style. the
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us treasury secretary has begun, has filled a visit to china by calling for monica or phones and the world's 2nd largest economy. and janet yellow i'm is wanting to us will fight back against what she called. china is unfair economic practices. china is urging washington to create a favorable environment for healthy bilateral trade. yelman's visit is aimed at improving strain relations on various issues, including taiwan, human rights and export controls. are using the relationship with the try that must work for american businesses and american workers. i was always championed your interest and were to make sure there is some level playing field. this includes coordinating with our allies to respond to china is unfair economic practices. that's bringing david mine who is
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a fund to manage and the founder of the advisory from amman, china, he's with us live from badging. thanks so much for being on this news. our david certainly the list of issues that divides these 2 superpowers. these link the, this human rights issues and sion, john and hong kong territorial claims in taiwan and the south china sea badging, scrolling domination and production of where us and the list continues to name a few sir. how optimistic can we be that the relationship between the us and china is storing at this point? i don't think there is a little close roof. the rest of the game countries is quite negative. the us just a 10 to ball, china's rise, and it will side all ranger issues but justifies what lottie. it comes down to security issues, especially about technology and technology exports. but getting y'all's visitor is a cause for optimism that both sides are probably by the choice. now we're getting
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to a point where for the domestic economic moving of both countries. does that mean on the origin rich pets pulling down and some genuine, re engage for the moment to whether they will be a fundamental change in the china? us relationship will not entirely depend on yelling old this particular trip. will it, you know, once, but the fact is she requested the account and also if you look at the track record, i mean the list of times she just said one of your plan. oh politicians are obliged particularly american politicians to list as grievances and plans. that's from domestic american consumption. i'm sure that the conversation that she had was the child. and what i really enjoyed chart chas. i have a bank here. i going to be very proud music around the investment and trying to
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loosen up what is a crucial relationship for both countries and china is recovery, coming out of congress is now 6 months old, and it is much weaker than anyone really forecast. so china has good reason to have a good conversation with her as well. so i think of the long term the changes are still there, but this is a good sign for both sides waiting for businesses wishing to do make investments in china and chinese companies to work in the us. this change and my, since that at least the politicians i've been quite message. all right, you can only the interest. as you mentioned, you know, the chinese economy has been slow to recover. post call you that. how dependent is the us economy on china's economic recovery of the global economy? it just depends on the chinese economic recovery. i mean,
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china, if you look at the manufacturing, probably some china is the equivalent of america, japan and your combined. so for china to continue to grow the right means the consumption globally is affected. try as a measure them for the all components materials. so the chinese recovery is viable for countries in the economies era and stephanie throughout the region. so on the one hand, you have this contradiction all the political position that america was checking because it is worried about china. i wrote against pound globally because of china's economic price. china sort of a regional phrase to anyone. the ropes in respect of g is more of a gesture. they not materialize the imagery chance. and the writing major territorial issues. of course, apart from taiwan, which china, she is
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a power started kind of itself. and frankly for the last 40 years old trading partnership with north reality. so it comes down to this broader engagement between a fading american and pa determined to contain china. but at the same time, 9 to china's economy is crucial, is well being added to the global building. so at shut americans during the 1st increasing pressure from euro and from southeast asia to lower the level of pressure that is china the or. yeah, and it's certainly going to be fascinating to see how it plays out. we really appreciate your analysis, david mine, a fund manager and founder of the advisory firm. mon, china, thanks for your time. thank you. a don now where explosions and fees funding were reported over night near the capital caught, soon as he combined is a power millet trees from the rapids support forces attached to the general combined headquarters in on demand mohamad valley's following developments from for
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students. this was in his ami statements said, the officer pulled forces mounted a major attack on the army headquarters over the night on thursday. and it took the army more than one hour to the pedal. vast attack. this is a new development in the war for the last, the several weeks. the opposite support forces seemingly have a band and the attempts to take the, the army headquarters because of the huge fortifications around that location. and now the media will, between the 2 sides, suggests on this, on the, on the, on the side that the opposite support forces have lost the initiative and have considerably being defeated under the juice. and what's happened overnight, it seems to be more symbolic. it seems to be a message from the off. it's false false is that they have the spirit of initiative, or they can still mount a tax on the headquarters and the they are intent on achieving the goal,
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the ultimate goal, which is to control the cops of costume and defeats this with these on how much fun does the other parts of that and that finding in sudan has entered its 3rd month. thousands of people have been caught up in the middle of it. getting critical medical care is increasingly difficult, with thousands of hospitals forced to close because of the finding out is there is even more than brings us this report from a hospital and the on demand. a warning, some view is may find the pictures distressing. it's not easy. to remove a bullet to some of the chests of a 7 year old child. doctor's at this hospital in i'm through man has been trying to save the life of what makes the. his father says he was shot by a soldier while they were on a bus. he brought him here after trying other hospitals, which were closed because of the fighting. most of the my son's injuries
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a severe his right hand and left hand wriggling his right and left them. and every time we discover a new splinter from the bullet, i took him to one hospital when a doctor that brought us to here and helped us to try to get him to recover. what law is one of dozens of patients who come to a no hospital with a gunshot injury most arrived hours after being shot because it's just not safe to travel across the capital. fighting between to dance army and the parents and the 3 rapids support forces has resulted in many civilians being caught in the crossfire . at least 1000 have been killed since mid april and thousands more have been injured. so my friend was shocked last night as he was guarding his house. it's rebooting him on the back. we took him to one hospital, but it didn't perform operations. we came here and there were no doctors. we took him to a doctor in our neighbors and he couldn't do anything. so we brought him back here this morning and the boat was finally removed the where has resulted in the closure
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of many hospital people in need of medical assistance trickle into this hospital every day. and that was a lot of pressure on the medical staff here. many times come in because of the fighting in under man and for those who can make it's here to provide medical care . there are other challenges staff here see they're facing a shortage of crucial supplies and of a live seating medical equipment. and when i showed up and when i showed the yeah, we're asking for the basic things we face of the shortage in medical goals due to the high number of patients with injuries, we don't have live saving solution. so we want those things to be provided. what we have is running out, and even though some organizations provide us with supplies, it's not enough. we even sometimes perform operations without anesthesia go stairs a shortage and that too. it's been maybe 3 months since then plunged into conflict . the patients young and old will continue to arrive,
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but doctors here fear they may have to start turning them away. if they don't get to the helping people, morgan ultra 0 on through man. still ahead on how to 0. i believe that humanoid robots have the potential to lead with a greater level of efficiency and effectiveness and human leaders. a group of roy pods to attempt to reassure people that artificial intelligence one take over the edge of the world. and some hollywood clam are in attendance during practice for the formula one where it is chrome pre paid. it has all those details a little later in the the it's friday. here's how the next 24 hours is shaping off across the america is great to see you. so storms are pressing out of this central plains into the
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southern plains. the problem spots will be kansas, texas in oklahoma. i gotta tell you could power up some hail storm and the threat of tornado is here as well. although this is helping to keep the heat at the boat where the heat is beginning to rise, arizona phoenix, excessive heat alerts in play. here you get a stretch of hot days ahead really going to bake in the heat there in san for the us states of idaho boise at 36. that's a few degrees above where you should be for the sum of the year. that extends into the pacific northwest in western canada, again, temperatures just to touch higher than where they should be. the time storms have cooled, the atmosphere through the great lakes, kicked out that humidity. that energy chugs further toward the east, across the eastern seaboard, central america, the eastern pacific. this could cook up into something tropical, potentially a hurricane. so check back with us for that. and for ecuador, we've got whether it's in play for intense rain here. temperature is above average in southern brazil, including fort florida, off list cell paulo in rio de janeiro. different story though,
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in parts of lake ray, with storms only through their temperatures below average. and with a breeze of the south atlantics, montevideo you too, are below where she should be for this on the year, the frank assessments, quite frankly, elizabeth dressed, the elephant in the room. the reason of the south koreans want their own nuclear deterrence is because they don't trust the us informed opinions. fighting has basically lock this thing up so far that it is impossible virtually for somebody else 7 to the race at this point in depth analysis of the case headlines. so then, case by the end of the states, that there is no strong government to control and which means that this might affect other countries inside story on al jazeera, the latest news, as it breaks deeply live here over the years have had to grow used to repeated sets of attacks that they say they've never before seen anything quite on this scale with detailed coverage. how was this allowed to happen?
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who's responsible and should safety standards be changed from around the world? ukrainian soldiers in this area said that they were going to try and exploit and push hard to hold off loaded with wagner. played such a fundamental role. the, [000:00:00;00] the hello you're watching out here. i'm emily. angry. and he is a reminder that top stories, the sour funerals have being held for 2 palestinians killed in an is riley, right in nablus. it's the latest as riley, offensive in the occupied west bank. just days after
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a major is sold to the janine where c j can, the un security council is holding as close to making on that range. gemini says it's against plans by the us to send cluster munitions to ukraine. the weapons have been denounced for closing a high number of civilian deaths and injuries. hundreds of african, my friends say the st. expelled from 2 nivia ends and now stranded at the libyan border. they say they being forced to drink, see, was it to survive? i'm leaving for guns, refuse to let the mean. let's get more on this story. we've malik trainer, who joins us from the tune, is in libyan border. hello there, malik. you sold those people in dire need of help. can you tell us a little bit more about the situation now as well? they are in dire need of help. we use went and spoke to them of the
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hundreds. we couldn't tell you exactly how many but at the specific spot where we were at, we saw hundreds of them in, in desperate and diary conditions, many without food and water. for 6 days. we saw people that were injured. we saw people, we saw women and children and the situation looks like it's only getting worse. i mean they're really, they're stuck in limbo. what we could clearly see was to do easy and border patrols and libyan, and on the other side, libyan and they were stuck in the middle of the 2, easiest or pushing them towards the live inside the libyan side was not a lot, allowing them to enter so i mean, the situation, you know, people are really especially active as in human rights. organizations are really worried that unless a situation is bound soon, unless some kind of humanitarian assistance can reach these people. uh, you know, they're going to suffer from dehydration from, from famine. i mean,
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it's extremely hot right now and the terrain that they're in is, is desert. it's hot, the sun is just glaring at them as so the situation is really desperate for these hundreds of people. yeah, certainly doesn't look like they have any shelter as well. malik, what is libya's saying, particularly given the allegations, it's now ignoring its international obligations a well, we spoke to live in officials here and what they were telling us is that listen, these, these people are irregular migrants, but they're on the to knees and they're on to easy and territory, you know, when we spoke to the director of the, of the, of the board or the ross is the board are here on the living side. he said, he said we like any state, do not allow people to enter our territory without legal travel documentation
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without proper you know, visas or passports. so, you know, the libyans are saying that, you know, we, we have, we have the, we have the right to refuse to refuse entry to, to people who, who don't have a, don't have the proper paperwork. but at the end of the day, really, i mean, you know it's, it's an easy and expelling these people and the libyans not allowing them to enter . so they're just stuck in no man's land with no humanitarian assistance or no help . and no, and, and really no, nobody or no there's, there's, there's no solution inside unless between agents and libyans are able to talk to them to talk to each other, come to some kind of agreement and figure solution out for these people. and that's how that happens. so thanks so much for the update and melick traina on the 2 museum that live in florida. moving on now in south korea says, depends plan to move in a 1000000 tons of traded radioactive waste water into the pacific meets
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international standards. you and nuclear watchdog approves the project this week. rafael rossi visited the fish in the nuclear power plant, which was severely damaged during the 2011. i was quaking. synonymy is due to visit south career pacific island nations where they have concerns about the japanese plan. we do not endorse the plan or recommend this to be done. we say this plan is consistent with the standard. so i think the qualification is important because they often say this is one sided. we do not take sides. i'm not on the side of japan or on the side of china on the side of, of korea, the stand as a by to or the same way they have expressed the number of a number of points. as i say, i stand by the, the, the conclusions and the assessment and i freed extremely confident about it. and response,
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china says it will bad food imports from 10 japanese regions because of safety concerns. chinese health officials planning strict and monitoring for radioactive substances, especially in fish, radiation testing is also being increased in south korean fish market, which has a voice in mind that the we will not sell japanese products now and in the near future. this issue is related to the health of future human beings for the voice that i want use to eat chip on his food in the near future. the turco electric power company storing 1300000 tons of waste water. that's the equivalent of around $500.00 olympic sized swimming pools around a 1000 storage tanks and 98 percent full of water has been diluted to reduce levels of radioactivity to a level that's allowed for drinking water. that's bringing to making me so who's a biology professor with the university of south carolina?
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he joins us from charleston. thanks so much for being on the program. timothy sir, if this meets international standards and south korea has changed its position. what are your biggest concerns about the release of this radioactive washer as well . thanks emily. i, you know, that the, the main issue from my perspective as a scientist is that we really have in sufficient information to, to assess the long term sort of, chronic exposure effects to the environment. you know, the, in a recent review of, of the literature, we found that there were just a few 100 papers that dealt with us and, and, and so the, the real concerns is that tritium, for instance, that one of the main components of the release water is actually a much more hazardous material, the same thing, people would like to admit it. it's really perhaps not an issue if it's an elderly environment, but if it's consumed, if it's ingested, if it's inhaled, if, if it's absorbed through the skin, it has the potential to do genetic damage and more,
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more so than many other of the radiator cards that might be released. could you give us a little bit more detail about what tricky him is and what we know about its impacts? you mentioned just a few then. a yeah, it's a trick trinity i'm, it is it's, it's radioactive, hydrogen. and as such, it, it tends to be in the form of water and, and when it's in the form of water, it can go anywhere inside the body and, and, and, and caused some sort of effect genetic or otherwise. but it also comes in the form of what we call organically bound. tritium is bound to, you know, materials that can be consumed. and when that happens, there's the potential for this tritium to, to bio cumulate inside the bodies of organisms. and actually potentially even bio magnify overtime up the food chain, such that levels in say top predators like fish might be much higher than the ambient levels in the water. and, and we don't really know if this is
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a huge concern at this point, but the point is that there's been no basic science, no basic research conducted to assess the potential importance of these kinds of effects. you know, there been these kinds of issues related to you know, pesticides in the environment like the, the t c's and the ozone these days, you know, c o, 2 and climate change. and you know, took basic research to determine what the long term impacts of these kinds of f ones might be. i think we're seeing the same sort of thing with respect to tritium here. timothy you, you mentioned more research is required. what does that look like? how do we do that and how long could that potentially take as well? you know, the, from my perspective of what needs to be done is a whole lot of baseline research. basically, folks need to be signed, just need to be out there in the environment, collecting organisms that live in this area right now before the release has
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actually happened. and so that we can get some sort of baseline as to what their genetics look like. and, and, and then, then they need to be tracked through time every, every year or 2, there needs to be a re sampling to determine how the, the genetic material has changed or is reproduction of the fact that or imply impacts on development. are there diseases that pop up in these and these animal hawks relations? and so there needs to be a massive investment into the basic science, but by massive, i mean, it's relatively small compared to the costs of everything else associated with this disaster. i guess one thing that i found surprising when i was doing research into this particular topic, is that there is radiation in almost everything, there's radiation to some degree in the, in the water, and then the appliance, or perhaps that needs to be looked at as well. you know, oh indeed and, and then of course, you know, topic that that's really considered is the fact that we are dumping radioactive
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materials of, you know, all over the planet and, and really there's been very little assessment of the long term impacts of, of that these other areas where dumping is occurring. so yes, we need to, we need to look at other aspects of the radioactive environment. you know, we've been working in turnover for over 20 years and uncovered many consequences that had not been predicted prior to the basic research. and the same is true here we, we just need to know if there's going to be something that needs to be a research program in parallel to that, to determine what those consequences over the long term might be. really appreciate your insights on this complicated topic and timothy moose. so a biology professor with the university of south carolina. thank you so much. thank you. have like, for people across cities, impact has done i denouncing burning of a crime at last week and swayed in prime minister should be chavez, sharif rather,
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and other political late is called foot protest. some demons, right? is the money in the government kind of diplomatic ties with sweden tomorrow high that has moved from islam of that garage plug is gone. people have come out in large numbers to avoid before protest rallies against a binding of the car on the outside of march. can stop from read and yesterday i focused on parliament also you're not number to make any damages. i think that would create more acreage between a major religions of the word that over the opinion. muslim that on the wall to wall hard with this particular act. and the expectation is that the readers government or criminal like actions because it's hard that sent them in all the most of them word and i've got those are insides paper to widen. the new government of card for using strong language. as you can see, people ahead of all social game that slogan they want. they've brought this across,
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the world should be very and can be seen across the words that does it something which is unacceptable. come out of how are you good, how's your day at all? it's not my blog. the doctors in the united states have been given the government the go ahead say, prescribe a new drug design to slide the production of assignments. disease phonics, but it's a warning, the drug is in the queue and there's potentially fatal side effects. petty calhane reports from washington help them, jo, myrtle was facing her risk future diagnosed with alzheimer's disease. she knew she would forget every thing and every person in her life eventually, and it would likely lead to her death. but in a 1st, she got into a clinical trial that offered help. sometimes there's a, a word or a something that i'm trying to recall. and i'm, yeah, i can think of that, but now if i just popped into my head, it's so good. i mean,
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i just feel so good. you know, i don't think guy would be probably able to do that earlier. the drug la can be, has been approved for people with early onset alzheimer's is an injection of a lab made protein. the targets, the buildup of the protein amyloid, which could be a cause of the disease. but the f d a says the drug will come with a warning, it can lead to bleeding in the brain that can be fatal. and medical experts are quick to point out. this is not a cure. it's an 18 month period of the trial. we see the group receives medication carpet, the group per se, plus symbol. the rates of decline was 27 percent less. it is a small, but this the promise thing then we don't have any other treatments available. another concern, the cost estimated to cost more than $26000.00 a year. but for the more than 50000000 people estimated to suffer from dimension worldwide. a 1st array of hope. for one of the darkest of diseases. patty
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calling l g 0 washington. it was l is home to the 3rd largest prison population in the world, 900000 prisoners are crammed into a space built for half that number. now a non profit organization has also the unique model that could be the solution to the crisis as want to get you not get explained. in the thinking their prayers, grateful for serving their sentences far from brazil's violent an overcrowded penitentiary system. leading to fire is part of these tiled dom english daily routine. in this model, prison run by a non profit organization in the state of them. you know, shit on the 34 year old compet has spent half his life in and out of jail for attempted murder, armed robbery and drug trafficking. ill look at, i used to live with
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h e inmates and the sell built for service that you like most convex. i spent my time thinking about the crimes i'd commit when i was released, but not anymore. here domingos has the key to sell in the facility surrounded by gardens with no arms guards. it's a far cry from brazil's typical jails were inmates lived in cram spaces, often without mattresses, adequate hygiene or food, mostly 80 percent of brazilian inmates full back into crime. we're always in our system, less than 20 percent of them relapse those 60 full facilities like housing, the country, funded by the government. the cost of $50.00, the amount of a normal channels because we spend money on education instead of weapons and cons. 350 prisoners lived here. 70 of them women like might be allowed, have been able to convicted of manslaughter, the roach. i couldn't believe it when i was ordered to take off my handcuffs and
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switch my uniform for old and new. the codes come by studying and working or mandatory inmates, make their own food and learn skills like carpentry mechanics. if the system works so well, why aren't there more model prisons in brazil? one reason is that people living in the city are reluctant to have jails with no locks. next door judge in any bottom, bonsa says local acceptance is essential to the project. can we finish the resistance extra people? one criminal is not the top and far away unless the criminal response of their family. that's why it's also necessary to have a judge if we're committed to the project. it's up to the judge to decide who qualifies for the model. present. prerequisites are good behavior. in the long sentence, so inmates have time to finish their rehabilitation program. domingos had serv half of his 7 year sentence. he's finishing his legal studies hopes to make a career as
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a single monica. you're not here. i'll just sierra someone from the hey, resume. non human always, the social robots have held him, maybe a conference of the you and i for good global summit in geneva or a challenge is that you have the i forget somebody sent you an email. i participated in what was billed as a global 1st to 1st press conference hosted by a panel of robotics including sophia here on certain questions from john this slightly. there were some interesting questions, but more importantly, there was some very revealing answers from the right book. has a i becomes more powerful and more sophisticated and might, at some point, develop agendas of it. so how can we, as humans continue to trust you, the machine's trust is and not given as a defense and becomes more powerful. i believe it's important to build trust to transparency and communication between humans and machines. but do we know that you're not going to lie to us?
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no one. and as i know that for sure that i can promise to always be honest and truthful review, i believe the humanoid robots have the potential to lead with a greater level of efficiency and effectiveness and human leaders. now this is daniel. all right. who is the chief robotics officer? i've had some products you've made sophia here. sophia, was off an interesting question in that press conference. she was off if robots would, that would be best to leaders. but the politicians perhaps then, then the ones that we have, the human ones, and she said she thought it was good that they wouldn't be biased. was that a bit too much? truth absence of it? my personal opinion and that is a bit too much truth, but really not even true because that statement is inherently by it. is you have to remember that these are a eyes. where would i like to call p i's or pseudo intelligence are made from data sets that are inherently biased. everything human is made in the end up being bias
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. so i personally believe that she has somewhat of a point, but the key thing is that a human work directly with a robot. so we can benefit off of, you know, somewhat um, non biased data. get objective bags, but have subjective views from the human to help make a better decision. still ahead don't al jazeera, brazil's president criticizes the appointment of the national football teams and the manager. peter is up next to tell us why in the the challenge is here. with
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the it's time now for support. he's peter and the good use continues full of the cricket fans. great. if you're a fan of the all these uh, is it extra steps just moving at quite a page with the straight ins already building a 2nd, endings need to ring them they to at hitting leads. the english one pulled out for $237.00 before lunch is a safe and weak. it's in the morning session. so in on a one of 6 taken by australia, captain patrick cummins. he's often september been stokes, provided the lakes flourished to england circle with another display of big key things. but they went out when stokes width 80, to spin up to the movie,
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pulls into the by steve smith. and i'm usually 5 catches for him in the unit, facing them with a date for 6 of 26 and they go to very, very 3 and australia 2nd dealings. david luna again forwarding to see what's good for one. a short time ago started. it was $66.00 for one that is a lead of $92.00. right? well then below i'm carlos al cortes is 3 to the 3rd round at wimbledon. thanks to a seem to cold. when of a francis alex on the move to the top feed took care of the world number 80 full and straight fits alcatraz is on a quest to add to one slam cycle. that was the us open title. last year. on this occasion, the spaniards took the on as 6476, and 63, waiting for l correct. in that 3rd round would be a strategy of jason cuba for nicholas jerry options. so to see the new med with over to him to finish these match with adrienne manor reno office, they were canceled by stating lights. he would wrap up a straight fits,
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waited to secure his place in the women's drawers, they can see that rena sutherlin co survived the escape. the straining open champion has come from a sit down to beat. above all the chair taking the decided 6 to no problem. so 2 time wimbledon champion pitcher, cuz that's of the she's stoned into the 3rd on the streets. it's when i've added zones assessment, it's next for stuff and later reboot one to in the 1st practice session. full sundays, british chrome, pre the world championship lead, it was quickest to hit a teammate sergio pay raise and williams alex elbow on the head of practice. there was a familiar face in the pits, the appropriately named brad pets is currently filming, and f one movie, which is being co produced by 7 time will champion louis hamilton. the person is when he's home gone for your record 8 times, but he is unlikely to add to that this weekend. hamilton is kind of the 123 points behind for stuff and in the drive is standings as
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a team with where we still have 100 percent face in this team and. and it is taking longer for all of us to get to where we want to be and it's definitely not easy, but i believe that we will, we will get there. thank you. just go to continue to, to our friendship with it. and that's what we're trying to do. so that's why we have the upgrade here for the front wing. we've will have bits over the following. breaks is hopefully, it can come soon enough, a round the goods new teenage signing all the good is say is being cooled by the best club in the world. was the only reason to leave in about shape. the 18 year old took ition material that has been introduced by rail. your rides on a 6 year contract for a fee of $22000000.00, which could rise by for the $10000000.00 with add ons. them i did took, and i mean the me right, how much weight has an important heritage from christiana, rinaldo? he's a legend. everyone knows him. o zill,
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done gucci. a play as i've always had in my mind. i want to be like them. i want to become a legend of this club. i want to be possibly is history a day off the he's a tearful goodbye message at chelsea said so as pen equate to has been introduced by his new club athletic co, madrid. the defender has signed a one year deal with the spanish side or another excessive welcome this time for a visa, or it's a familiar from the fan. so these new saudi arabian club, honestly, because indian has joined the team on a free trial and so on. the leading level following a use at the end field. the striker was not but by all of the support his as he arrived in jail. with the upcoming appointment of carlo angelo c, as manager of the brazil football team has been criticized by the countries president blue led the silver on wednesday result football federation announced until last the who is currently managing round the good would be in charge of the 5 time will cut when is a mixed use cup of america?
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well the angelo he himself has gets to consume the deal. if he does take over, the tenant would be presented 1st full time foreign coach. and that does not sit well with the countries either on the watch or not, cano original to you. but here's the thing. he's never been utility national types . i think if you was to solve the problems of brazil, why is the doping cold to solve the problems? the visually didn't even qualify for the last well count. the young, uganda and baseball play that we featured on al jazeera back in may, is returned home from the united states of the competing he spends playing in the m l. b 's draft lead 19 year old dennis costume, but, but it headlines with videos of these unique training or she went viral events and being off to play full. the frederick keys in the m l. b 's draw fee, which is used to showcase young baseball tenants then assistance with the keys and this week. but he's hoping these performances will lead to a spot with
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a junior college team in the united states next to yeah. or the quick update from the ashes that hitting me the australians are now 67 for one in the 2nd evenings. and i'm sure that's something that makes emily very happy. it's always good news when the us ease of doing well, thank you very much. paid all right, and seeing a little bit that fit for me in language for this news our anywhere i have more of today's news in just a moment to me in the meantime to our website, which is 0. the the where is the western agenda heading. that's the g 7 really even matter any. who's
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more electable, joe biden, or donald trump, or journalist in the media undermining our society. can americans cross their supreme court? is not the quizzical look us politics. often line, whether it's cute and cuddly in australia. wiles and promotions. find with us devise repressed is the balance between endangered wild life. and then your neighbors that touch the floor is right there and there's nothing between the tiger i haven't met. i'm assuming habitat nothing to live together on, on how to 0. how many people here have seen a tiger? oh, really. july on a just thing goes to the post of the local election, sort of shift to the right. could the country with me. so now that you with the in fall right government, 11, he meets the indian women breaking down gender barriers as they fight to become
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champions and features the coast african meters from across the continent as well. so 6 to strengthen relations with the region. people in power focuses on somalia as a fight for survival. as years of droughts in hom, conflict have combined to create humanitarian disaster. as to security becomes increasing global concerns. the united nations launch is a re, quote, examining food crises and sound good around the world. to live on a jersey to the we don't, we don't have if we told to african migraine, stranded on the libyan border, up to tennessee expelled the following racial tensions.
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the hello, i'm emily. angry and thanks for joining us. this is i would just be rely from so how's that coming up?

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