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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  September 16, 2023 6:00pm-7:00pm AST

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i was the 0 calls for the immediate release of its generalist, detained in egypt. generalising is not a crime. the, [000:00:00;00] the hello i'm it has withdrawn him in distance and use our lives from doha, coming out for the next 16 minutes. searching for thousands fed dead rescue teams and eastern libya of 6 remote intensive debris days off to synonymy like slots. the daunting task of rebuilding on to last week's earthquake and the rock coast. we report from the high atlas mountains, ocean lucas on striking the us demanding a pay rise that keeps pays for the inflation will be lost from the choice. and to
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stay a few known as held in south africa for a controversial suitor leader emerge from the strong against the pa tate and in sports will have the latest from the rest, the wealth comp for plus live poll. come back from a go down to be 31 in the front make. i make it full when it arrives the it's $1500.00 g m t, that's 5 pm in eastern libya with bodies, a still washing off on the shows or decaying under rubble needed. we had, we call to devastating floods had the region shipments of international aid have started to arrive, but most of it is yet to reach the hottest head pulse, a seat of the no, that's with thousands of the a dead. the world health organization has sent a shipment of crucial supplies, which includes medicine and body bags and did you one has called for coordination
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between libby as to rival administrations. is the international, recognize government and tripoli and the one based and the dissolve to hit east libyan one or leave the hospital who backs the government in the east visit the on friday and has full source of allowed entry to 8 convoys. the spot dispatched by the arrival government but i'm the one to jump to here. if i was here to put it over my head, as the merchandise fell over, we came here and took the merchandise out and found much reaching up there. everything was covered with mud. look at the cans covered with mud. well, the culture of law, i'll tell you how the houses cars are all gone. even the children and men from the neighborhood are also going to have my relatives have been lost. one has been found
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and the other one is still missing over 20 cars from the area have been lost. you know what i mean? uh so yeah, that's the i, the i heard a big explosion of that. it was followed by an earthquake due to the floods flew down. so that was clear to me that it was coming from the dam. i started to tell you, or, you know, go up and i found a water reaching up to me and cause being sorted by the flood waters. my correspondent, amount of china is joining us live from tripoli now and a trickling in mind. it would be uncomfortable cases by the fact that roads have been destroyed, not to mention the political situation in libya. you're exactly right. i mean it's starting to trickle into these impacted areas like the city of dun and people. i mean the residents there. we saw that we seem to been seeing these pictures. not only are they having to come to terms with this reality of losing dozens of family members, but they're now, you know, oh,
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more than 30000 people have been displaced and there are very critical that the authorities haven't moved fast enough to get them the that they desperately need, i mean, we're seeing an outpouring of support from the international community. but also libyans are coming together in a way that we haven't seen before. convoys of aid from donation donators, people trying to help their, their fellow countryman in the east or just trying to get everything they can. but you know, logistically, it's been very difficult to get them into the city of deadman. and malik, it sounds like the divisions between the rival governments are they on display when it comes to this natural disaster? they've both been talking about how this is the time to come together. are they doing that will give it's extremely complicated. as we have the here in, in, in, in tripoli, the internationally recognized government has appointed an emergency emergency
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committee. they allocated a budget on eastern libya. they've also done the same. we saw war lords, police have to a, you know, touring, the city of doesn't know, looking at the aftermath. but elizabeth, what i can tell you is that of people here. and i think across the world have been moved by the pictures in that in the and they're coming together in a way that we haven't seen before. and you know, this is of a once decided people. so the unity that we're seeing now, we haven't seen that in, in many years. and the hope is that officials can eventually put aside their differences and do the same monica, thank you very much for that. i know this, this is an unprecedented disaster that you have been covering for us of the past week and we really thank you for,
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for that monica small. lik trying to live and tripoli, well trucks have roles for the city of done a spring disinfectant authorities at hong to sterilize the streets. and the hope of preventing the spread of diseases. agencies have wanted about the berlin risk that could compound the humanitarian crisis. i'll just say i was mohammed and buckley is in the now with more on the situation there. so how did that? oh, no. oh no, it's about coming up by the and what will i be out of the file but we are in during the for what is left of it after floods, which had no mercy on its residence, has been enough for the why the thousands lost their lives thousands more are still missing. the countless number of decomposing bodies are still under the rubble. the picture here speaks louder than words and um, but the words of survivors are impactful. hope the college is one of them. mean he told us how he survived. there's that because we well, thank god for your safety called and said i must have had a lot of a sudden i said look,
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the less you for party. but can you tell us what happened on that day? bobo says, yeah, and then we were all taken by surprise. we never expected such a catastrophe. i lost my young daughter. may god accept her and his mercy. we are helpless and god almighty is our wrong. what did they be? they uh, how did you watch? i mean, uh how, how about how fast. yeah. one of the most difficult moments for people here and during the is whenever a body of a loved ones found this corpse was just recovered. after being washed up on the shore, a total of 10 bodies had been recovered this morning, although i mean now this ambulance will collect, the bodies are bob and we will try lucky. and this is one of the buildings which was submerged according to neighbors. it was home to a family of 10. none of them have been accounted for. diverse have been searching under the water hoping to find any of the victims mass. that's only medina, but that's i mean the catastrophe. and during started in this valley, which now looks peaceful of the how after last week,
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storm the floods begin in this area is drawing whatever came in its way. and i know there's been widespread destruction. what were once homes to hundreds of families are now their own graves, search and rescue operations are still underway, but chances of finding any survivors are very slim. instead, rescuers are finding more bodies than survivors. it's a tragedy by all measures during that is now a disaster stricken city. i'm in the body. i just hear that i'm not starting to leave you. caroline, hold is a global head of operation. so the international federation of the red cross and red present. and one particular challenge she highlighted in bringing a to bed, now unexploded landlines is guessing the age of clothes from the apple to done or itself provides an additional level of challenge. we know that roadways have been greatly impacted by this. we know that one of the main roads in sedona was partially washed away, which reduces the traffic flow and creates bottlenecks along that road. but really,
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the priority is to get those 8 convoys in, not only to commence the search and rescue, but to look after the survivors and really provide that key support. so those that i'm now left without anything, but also a context such as libya which has faced conflicts over recent years. we know that that will be security issues on the grounds such as unexploded land mines. when a flip, this size comes through and disturbs the uh, to the extent that this one has those land lines that may, once upon a time, have been matched clearly and we understood the location of them. now all of that will be the steps and it adds an extra level of security risks to all of those, both the population and data, but also those coming in from the outside. and we have been hearing harrowing stories from survive is about the moment the flooding happened with the card kind of tells us what he and his family did to survive. i did get that,
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how you doing all the time. i've are sitting with the family on the ground floor when the flooding can house, you know, my sons and daughters were there, and one of my sons was on my lap. my wife was also when the, when the flood came, my wife and children started to scream as you know, but when we went to check what the situation was that we saw the water was reaching our knees. we didn't know what to do. they didn't share. tiffany: been, do you have tiffany? me did. i asked myself, what shall we do? my wife and children started to scream when i looked at my parents yard and i told them to come and save us through the time that they told me that they are all sort of drowning in the floods. reach them as well for the whole us because what everything from the yard, including our cars hovering to see, you know, it's, it's not in my judgement. i called my neighbor and i handed them my children and my wife, who's closed her due date, close to giving birth and get a tour of of how much i told my wife to lee and what to do next saturday, up level. but i carried her and took her to my parents house, so we were going to see. yeah. and then how do you fold up?
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i have just a year. i have to design and tell him on a guy that is, what do we uh, law we have i called my neighbor from the building and we started to say, oh god, oh god, let's save the children. when i started to hand him, the children, one by one, is that my 2 sons and my 2 daughters. my go, but i get to the light, came back to my wife. i carried her and my neighbor took her to the stairs and things and like, but she couldn't come down because she was carrying a manual for daddy and we sat upstairs. i pray to god, what do i hit a level home with us on? we have had to move ahead on the news. allah, including sake is to change the rules of the game delegates representing 80 percent of the world's population meet in cuba. may mon makes his debut and saudi arabia as toughly. gemma will tell you how he goes on in the
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the g $77.00 group of nations plus china wants to change the rules of the game when it comes to the global economy. the block, which is mazing into the, represents about 80 percent of the world's population. i would just say what's left in america, edison new, see and human is joining us live from have on and now lou, see it, the g 77, it's cooling for, for a new world order. but what does that actually expect to obtain from this summit? the new world order is a pretty good are you must admit, but what we're hearing here is that the countries of the so called noble south are getting together. they are feeling that they need to empower themselves more. they need to speak with one voice just ahead of the un general assembly meeting that's going to take place in new york next week. and they are coming with a list of demands, a modem, a need for their to be a much,
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much greater cooperation and lack of discrimination as they call it in the access to scientific, technological and innovative methods, especially the in this digital world. they, they are, they are emphasizing the, the, a norm is digital gap. that is making it very difficult for developing countries, particularly the pores of those developing countries to be able to move forward. they've talked a lot about access to been her health systems and scientific good laboratories, etc. so the is, there was a new pandemic that they will also not only have access to vaccines, but access to the ability to make them. this is something that's been talked about over and over again. so they're going to arrive at the united nations and speak apparently with one voice. now keep in mind that the members of the g $77.00 plus china are not all the like, some of these countries are far more advanced than others. so cooperation amongst, for example, china, countries like india,
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the single or the south africa. there are many countries that have more to give, to help out those that don't. and so this is an attempt to have a do you have a really strong commitment in that sense to helping each other out and not wait for the north, the global north to come to their aid all the time. okay, let's see and tell us more about china's participation this year. we know how it's been trying to portray its role within the development of the global south. china is it, as you mentioned, it is not a formal member of the g 77. but back in the 1990s it began to become a very active, shall we say, collaborate or, or, or sideline participants. and nowadays, trying to actually contribute to a great deal of money to keeping this organization together, added different meetings. and it said there, it's representative here who happens to be a member of the public bureau of china. and he's in charge of things dealing with corruption,
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which is an interesting point to the he's the one who was sent to you. and he has said that china will continue to be absolutely committed to cooperating with the members of the g. 77. especially now that they are that their emphasis is on science, technology and innovation, but also vaccines and medicine and so forth. so china is not, is not only a big investor in the countries of the $277.00, but it also wants to take the lead in terms of being its biggest benefactor. right . lucio. thank you very much for that. that's our last in america editor, lucy, a new newman joining us live from the g 77 summit and have on the bottom 300000 people in the rough coal have been affected by the earthquake a week ago. that's according to the united nations. nearly 3000 people were killed
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and clean up operations all still underway. villages and towns in the high atlas mountains are among the hottest hud shamella by their reports from we're going south of medication with the aid effort is ramping up. this is the assets that has been used by the gym diamond over the last few days. he's been the focus point of the emergency response operation that has been going non stop since the often math of the earthquake, this headed cop to is going to take us. we're going to fly with this through all the way to some areas. and this is a pilot, which is going to give us some details about what is going to happen. uh, good morning. good to see it. good to talk to you. can you give us a sense of what is happening? our mission is the tools supporting the generators and um the, the color gym. the on this had to go up to a super print most of the way until in the morning. we will take off from we're again and do it last night over the world of stated, i re all the to the village,
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which is the very room i do with the on board with you. thank you very much indeed . fucking mazata. this is the operation center top darma. the general is over here with these all the generators we saw going to be taken over to the affected area. so we have the biggest challenge, which is going to be over the upcoming days, is the weather. and this explains why we're, because we were driving to this field, the basically the biggest challenge was basically the need to deliver more and more a, to the affected areas. because with this mix shift comes with o. uh the installation is put into place. you have to brace yourself for what could be a prolonged cold weather in the upcoming days. the medical teams over here ready to fly over the area. and this is, you can see behind to be more highly comp to us, which are going to be part of the acid, which continues all the way below. you can see the tone of where the gun when we were reporting live over the last few days,
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dotted with tens. mic shift comes all the way and the ravine which slip in times its way through the mountains is why you have the most affected areas. a in the office balances or, and that sort of stephanie deck and now she's in a, those in the atlas mountains and stephanie on a village that wasn't accessible until recently. so progress and accessing these affected areas, but little remains the yes, nothing remains certainly in terms of communities in terms of homes, in terms of life and nothing remains here. in fact, earlier we were just watching um, 3 villages pushed 3 small cows into the back of the van and to get them out of here because of course livestock so important to the people of the mountain, the mountain so important to these communities that have sustained them for
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generations or what remains. of countless people's homes is nothing is this is, is pretty much dust. this part to what you're looking at now is immune. tyler, you can see how the mountain gave way during the earthquake came down on top of the village. we actually entered that village on the 1st day we were here, they were still searching for bodies. then i'm at this point in time, we understand. and it's also in line with every other village that we visited this week that the bodies have been recovered. so now the question turns to what is next? how do you clear this? how do you rebuild this? when these areas is so remote and so hard to, to access? so the last place we visited was an area that's a little less remote if you will, easier to get to in terms of infrastructure in terms of roads. but people, they're also struggling very much and also you know, the question about what's next. this is our report and we've come to
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a different location today. this is the town of like team. it is easier to get to. there's more infrastructure around here, very much. also as a tourist pays for tours coming. we're trying to figure out what the situation is like here. we bumped into this gentleman david. uh yes. it is. okay. we're going to see a friend of his who is with him. david was here the night of the earthquake on friday night, and he says he hasn't heard from his friend. he's not answering the phone. so this town is much more stablish than the other very remote villages. we've been to but destruction here also on a very large scale. how much of the town has been damaged. this is as low as it might be. you have done 50 percent,
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completely destroyed seats, minarette and crux. and again, here just goes to show again, the challenge of um, bringing heavy equipment into these areas. removing all of this and rebuilding, that is the main challenge, really everywhere. here we go, the frame for his friend is home and fine. next time onto your phone. he tells him, don't make me worry. we've been traveling through the mountains, is post week to villages more remote, less remote, and everything we see raises the question just how difficult it's going to be. to access these places, clear it and then rebuild that article. how are you coping? we ask this is god's will. he says we have to accept it. thank god, we survived public also. net. this man tells us we have enough age. the coming
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winter is the problem. as the whole village is sleeping outside, i ask him what it's like to see his village in the state. the pleasure of books they may like to print. i must have got this. i cannot express this. for me. it's a catastrophe. stephanie decker on his era, while abraham morocco's atlas mountains and survive as of last weeks of clicking morocco, trying to adjust and living with less, but they are afraid that conditions will get worse during the coming winter months . kadijah aback lives in the town, it's a business. she explains what her concerns says. it says the exemption has to be and then hopefully we feel lost. we feel very lost. that is why i can't explain it. you see how hard it is for the children and i saw dogs,
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but we can take more because we have strength. but what about the elderly? if they weren't standing in the room, we still have hope to go back to our home. we have big hopes do the mess of minutes . there's nothing better than stay, not home to stay at home is better than staying outside, especially during the cold. yeah. that's what i'm is ms said you the cold is very hard for very hard to know if you're outside, you'll get sick, especially with the children. so the elderly, no commit, you sold, you missed the mazda of such a road that wouldn't be able to cope with a common cold. the cold here is extreme, which so that she did save, save, save. some of them is even if i explain it a confidence press everything. i don't have the words to express how i feel. i feel so bad. she fucking boom is all and up in do bonus. oh no. it's not about having a nice home or that we love to nice home. no,
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we lost something inside of us. go to home key. we're calm, peaceful. i know we're not just on the were outside. we were at peace. even with the small houses we were living in peace, but that's not the case anymore. we met the north korean leader kim jong has inspected russia's, will planes and naval fleet and the far east and full city of level stock. it was joined by the russian defense minister, so they showed good. the visit has raised concerns that north korea may provide russia with weapons forwards, warren ukraine, florence louise following the visit from south korea's capital sol. a north korean leader kim joins visit to russia roles into its 5th day. on saturday, he was met by defense minister sergey showing at an air force space where he was show nuclear capable bonus. and hypersonic missiles, they can't fly from most go to japan,
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and then back it carries 12 missiles. this was followed by to of a naval base where he inspected rushes, pacific fleet. it may be no co incidence, but kim's itinerary has consisted mostly of visits to defense and military facilities. the north korean leda has spoken frequently of his intention to modernize his country's cletus at cost ships and submarines. while some analysts are skeptical russia what punch with highly sensitive technology, other say the voiding ukraine has given north korea the upper hand in negotiations . there are concerns, particularly here in south korea, that a more powerful young young could accelerate an honest race and further the stabilize the median. the kremlin says no defense agreement has been signed during kim's visit, but the white house believes a weapons dealers in the works. and has won the 2 countries not to violate un sanctions or view has been before the visit. and after the visit,
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that talks about the provision of weapons by north korea to russia to kill ukrainians, have been advancing and continue to advance. in north korea, tim's visit has received widespread coverage. julia and the guest all respected comrade, king drum, and visits you re gathering ation. conte respected, come read, king drum and express the respectful rushes, fos, developing aviation technology that allows it to outpace potential threats from other countries. perhaps and intention to communicate with the domestic audience that north korea is a powerful nation with important allies and rushes warm welcome of kim has left no doubt that these countries intend to build strong good ties. florence li, algebra. so the head on the news, our, we look back at the life of columbia and paint of financial potatoes, dives the age of 91 and new zealand to attend when in ways of other people's confidence coming off in
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the the hello hurricane. leigh is barely up deadline tickets. go into eclipse, the coast of new england. but i think the worst of this storm will be reserved for canada, is maritime provinces, as it makes land fall on saturday. mostly a wind event for nova scotia, and mostly a rain and wind combo for new brunswick. so by the numbers, parts of new brunswick looking to pick up a 100 millimeters of rain. and winds, for example, in halifax, will got us to about a 100 kilometers per hour, so that will certainly caused some damage. there's also been strong storms in the us state of georgia around defiance of that could continue today. on saturday. the storms will push up into tennessee as well. had also been some storms around nevada
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seems of quite it down for the us. southwest temperatures touch above average in phoenix at 40. but we've also got some warrants coming into the pacific northwest portland at 30 degrees. rain is being funneled into alaska, but i want to take you to central america. fairly quiet picture here as well. the trade winds not too strong. most of the weather will be falling around costa rica, and panama top and south america. it is a windy pitcher for the northeast of brazil. i think we'll see wind gusts care of about 60 kilometers per hour. and we've got some warrants coming in to a salsa dealing with the north or the wind. 32 for you today. the coveted beyond well taken without hesitation, fulton died for power. defines how well we live here. we make the rule, not them, they find an enemy,
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and then they try and scale the people with that. and people empower, investigate, expose this, and questions. the use them to be of our around on out is there, the women use brakes? parts of this community are still under water and when people need to be hunt, the deepening political crisis here is only exacerbating social divisions and the story needs to be told be but the said franchise for decades made state let's what they did with exclusive interviews. an in depth report scores press ration. people are in desperate need of algae 0 as teens on the ground to bring you more award winning document trees and live news the
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the watching the news out of me and as of a to on and don't have a mind to about top stories. the saw, the libyan for the, for the, for house that has allowed entry to 8 convoys dispatched by the arrival administration in the west. and i'm for ad display of cooperation have found, visited the city of done on friday with thousands died and devastating floods. the un estimates that more than 300000 people have been affected in the co op to the devastation of quite a week ago. people in the high atlas mountains were among the hottest huts, nearly 3000 have died at the north korean leader kim jong on has visits of russia's pacific naval fleet in the far eastern portion that have lost all rushes defense. and then it's just a big issue accompanied him on the last leg of his multi day tore us present. joe biden says that he is backing astride by order. most of the workers who
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a demonic higher wages st. profits should be shared fairly well. it is the 1st time in us history that 3 major comic is have been hit with simultaneous will counts maybe 13000 work as a general model moses forward and still lantus have gone on strike. the also workers union wants a 40 percent pay hike, increase in salaries by 10 percent per year over 4 years. but the company say that's too much as spring and she have baton so he's joining us live from detroit michigan. we'll salacious on the negotiations. she held or around the sound, those negotiations have resumed here and you a w had causes in detroit. the news this morning was that's the land test, which is the international entity that encompasses chrysler, as a risk, as it was raised its offer on wages 2, it says 21 percent over 4 years,
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gm and forwarded out 20 percent over 4 years. as you said that you, i dealt with you actually it's, it's actually, it's low and it's demand inside about 36 percent over 4 years. the logic being that the seniors themselves are these companies don't fit to give themselves 40 percent raises over the last 4 years. or why shouldn't the workers also also get that this is the type of record profitability, a quarter of a trillion dollars over the last 10 years, but the actual average u. a w workers, i think 30 percent less than they did 10 years ago. and there is a revolting of actually the call companies probably could all willing to go up to somebody, maybe the mid 30 percent on way just because frankly they do of the money labor and is for accounts for about 5 percent of their expenditure in making calls but this is about more than just wages. this is about the union's getting back for pensions, for health care that they surrender in 2009 in order to, for the companies that just the big 3 to restructure and become immensely profitable. this is about a re balancing of that, but also even beyond that,
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this is about the future and the transition to electric vehicles. and the suspicion of the u. a. w is that the car companies are using the noble cause of climate change, switching from internal combustion engines as an excuse for race to the bottom. i'm tracing loads of all jobs in the, in the new industry of electric vehicles which weren't being utilized, which right have benefits, which we paying the lowest possible salaries. so this is why the parties look like the low web a long way away from each other. and this might go on to something that was interesting, she have what about public support? how much public support wants to the workers have in the last gallop poll, that was the that was held 75 percent of americans are in favor of the u. a. w. strike because i'm as this is the theme that we did during the riley on friday with the nissan does not. there's this isn't just about the, this is a phenomena limited to the comic it's across, you know,
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liberal kind of lead capital, the society, especially in the us. we see the ceo's, the executive pulse of both streets making rec, or profits and recommends amounts of money. meanwhile, 60 percent of americans are living paycheck to paycheck. that money is not trickling down in any, in any forms excel so i can pull it. and when you looked at the kind of statistics here on the public sees, but i mean, you know, it's difficult to argue that you have a c of g m. she gets $29000000.00. that's $363.00 times more than the average gm worker for $21000000.00. the seo gets each year. that's $287.00 times an average. well, i mean what, what are these numbers even come from? it was worth that much more than the average worker at, in so much money from these companies. as with all the companies is going into wall street. the chef i bought stopped by bucks. $5000000000.00 isn't going into reinvesting into manufacturing, or the workers is going straight into wall street with stock $5.00, which inflate the shaft price. i make
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a huge amount of money for the whole street onto the seniors whose pay is related to the shaft price, so they make a fortune productive out of this is just wall street speculation itself going into the call companies. meanwhile, the company is getting records the amounts of money from the by the administration of electric vehicles, which they can actually for themselves, getting no guarantees about the future of labor. so that's the reason why button isn't terribly popular here necessarily. so these sorts of arguments do seem to be striking a quarter amongst the widest aside to have, despite the best efforts of the big 3 who are trying to paint the work is brady and insights. i know, yeah. they helped along by that the all department side of the, the main stream media. right. so, you know, the bbc, but characterizing this. yeah, that headline was you, i w was a guy all strike, this is what causes it got to be more expensive for you. so i tried to say look to g like these people are going to make it like more difficult for you. but these couple of messages on the rest of the day thing. yes, no, it doesn't sound like there is a nice thing at all. if we go by those license poles that you mentioned, she have thank you very much for that, that she have a time. see,
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joining us live from detroit as the dominican republic has closed or as borders with hate to the countries are in dispute, or the hazy is construction of a come now from a shed for the john whole and reports from dominican republic, capital santa domingos, the dominican republic has closed its line see an ad border with hate see the country that it says an island with and its sent troops the at the god, the buddha is taking this rest. that because of a will to dispute haitian farm is the single to from the masonic figure. if elizabeth 2 countries chair to irrigate the crops, they're in a period of drought right now that the dominican government says that violates and 1929 treaty between the countries. hey, to me, i have a hand says, well, we should be allowed to exploit natural resources. and some patients have said, look at the several water projects that you put on your side of the river in the
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dominican republic. why can't we have one? but it's now escalated into this border closure, which really is going to hurt both countries economies. hifi, which is the poor of the 2 countries, has more than half the population in danger of starvation. it depends on the dominican republic to bring poor thing, a lot of food. so it's really going to affect that on the other side of the medical republic is going to hook to $1000000000.00 worth of expos when so hate say last year, what the dominican government has said to people like school thing, especially 3rd will by the up instead, so you don't lose out. now the person that has called for this board exposure is the dominican president risk. i've been a dad. i'm see, he's got a real track record of being hard and tough. on migration, at last year, he will to the board was built between the 2 countries, he's famous for expelling haitian migrants and he's in the pos referred to haitian
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migration as an evaluation. so i'm, this is saying that in the big picture, he could be up for re election next year. that this might be the start of his campaign and opportunity to look tough. the problem is, if it gets out of time and really hurts these country economy as well as hate, sees, they're all caused for fresh negotiations as the countries try to hush this out before it gets to fall. don't home and i'll just get a sense of them and go to south africa. now we are a state funeral is being held for investment politician most with, with the lazy and clubs within the tall, the thousands of more of the town of and then the, the sooner prince, who died in the hospital last week played an integral role in the empty apartheid movement hadn't latasha is at the funeral in an empty. and the lady was larger than life in the top of the page. additional prime minister, you will just be they,
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they've done all the rights and customs, the man office to make sure that his soul needs me into the off to live. this is the state several high profile problem sought after getting out of pocket to pay them to make, to celebrate his life, and to say good bye. but even man, instead of a complicated political history just before 9 to 94, the people inside the war to sometimes the in the evening joined the government in 1994 to cancel. the change in the seen as the advisors are not afraid to chime in and see one here, but he felt they did something wrong today. people said good bye to what's amazing . he said that i knew celebrate slides, and they'll remember him about 25. and we talked about well let's take
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a look at the life and korea of mongo, some to book the lazy initially associated with a novel leading african national congress. if i wanted what became the income of freedom party in 1975, many accused him of colluding with south africa's upon a government by supposing it's policy of home that the eye of p and and c engaged in violent conflicts during the 19 eighties and early ninety's during the transition from the potted, thousands were killed. a political reco. schmidt was an act at all for the 1st democratic connection in 1994. when nelson mandela became south africa's 5th black president, and both a lazy was made, the minister of hon. fis, it's david munoz. it is a political commentator and professor of politics for the university of janice book and he's joining us live from there. thank you very much for your time. so both the lazy is in cause of freedom party was implicated in south africa's deadly as violence ahead of that election that we mentioned in 1994. we'll see
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a war as critics have dumped to or vision re does. it depends on who you ask. indeed, it depends on who is saved his life. easy street is quite complex and healing presents the very best, the west of south africa, part of the site. if it does not, i do, and there is absolutely no single narrative about them in the united states. and therefore, the president put it quite clearly at the finger at all that he's the fairy, at the role that he played out to use for the history to be the greatest judge. and we have to wait and see. however, he has played a critical role. and at the age of 95, he has been given at taking the 5 send off via or political puppies, a unified south africa input presentation of the international community. it is
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federal. one of the biggest criticisms of with the lazy is that he's, you know, often regarded as an allied allstate of potter government for his role is premier of the independent homeland of causality. that was, of course, a political creation of the pots, a government was he, an ally of the racist raging. and so he plays a significant, significant role is part of the positive system, a bunch of stance. however, in use on you that he was forced, imagine $75.00 to fix the bush and from being cut the freedom part to use on putting ben to fight with being in use on an attitude that t, his thoughts it's best to protect. firstly, the king dumb of course the top of the kingdom itself and he played a significant role with them but some emission but beyond that which is
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a higher context it that so he was part to quickly part of the agency and he thought it was best to negotiate and discuss directly with the poppet and collapsing with beam. but however this part of history in certain quarters is, is highly disputed. why is it still disappears at so many decades after the fact? why aren't we any clear about something so important in south africa's history? i think it has to do with the number of people who died and i think you'd also be unfair to attribute all those debts to one man. it was in a profit system that to use the strategy of so called black on black for finance. and that was what we used to coins. it fed well to instigate violence among of like the communities and parties. and therefore,
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his name was the right of the center. what appeared is the resisting must seem from the movement of the agency as it gained support of to then binding in the release of president nelson mandela. this last name is the one you i, that the fact that he ended the war with the and say he joined the government. did that redeem him to good to extend as a, represented by this send off today. i think you can see that even those who um, i see him as a mentor and i somehow do have knowledge that he did contribute greatly to the making of the constitution of this country and a peaceful resolution of that conflict. particularly in closing, that the conflict proclaims that to us monte mazda environments. and i think he worked quite closely with a n c,
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a to ease the pressure and had to bring the coffins into mainstream politics. and also he played a critical role negotiating and i'm both of the issues pretending to south african body politics, particularly in parliament as the longest civilly member of parliament. that's the one you know has been really great to get your expertise on this. we appreciate and that is a political commentator and professor david, when you, i, in joining us live from johannesburg, small fires, building across the northern areas of algeria. they have destroyed thousands of hector is a false color in the mountainous region of columbia, which was devastated by finest as last month. several people have been killed or injured. temperatures have sought to more than 60 degrees celsius. the celebrated colombian painter and sculptor. fernando boterro has died h 91 low commercially successful. his work was often look down on by the going to
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stablish meant choice, but it looks back at his life and what he was columbia. as most nameless arts is said by many to be left in the americas. and so to be got. so fernando a bit of paintings and sculptures where we known to round the world. he style show subject to an exaggerated form displaying every day of life with connor and a unique irony. voting to columbia in the city of managing in 1932 for data was a youth study to become a bull fighter, but ultimately follow his passion for art. he was kicked out of secondary school for his drawings of naked people, but who persevered, and as an adult began to develop a following, would be to created a movement known as a very small that it was also committed to denouncing of you some more. to keep painting about the conflict in columbia, but also the abuse is committed by the united states in the i will read a prison during the war in iraq will that, that will the entire will rejected these actions,
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especially since the united states presents itself as the country of compassion and civilization to peace. bopper stock seemed like something from the middle ages. what they to created a collection of 50 paintings that he says came from his heart. is that correct in columbia? violence is a totally different phenomena. it's robin the result of ignorance and the lack of education culture carried out by the wealthiest possibly the most civilized country in the world is definitely not the same thing. what date it was 91 years old when he died in columbia, the president said she was a painter of the country's virtues and its arrows. what data is called suzanne paintings are located in different cities around the world. a reminder of an artist who dared show the world in his own unique way. maybe so i'll just see to still ahead on the news. all of a snake stops playing australia and jemma who has the details coming up in school.
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the born in alice towing under british rule educated in america controversial professor in new york. he realized that she was the voice of the people on the 20th anniversary of his test. world explores which made him an intellectual writer and champion of the palestinian cause in the west. edward studied out of place on noticing around a task every year, thousands of on peace. they use to scientific research,
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activate and conservation, a say the testings into main one and one east investigate assuming illegal trade and meet scientists who need to keep them on king sam lives be on this on a tree. caught 2 of them on christmas on l. g. 0 the, [000:00:00;00] the fund the schools use demo. thank you, elizabeth. the premier league is back up to the international break and champions mine just to city or in front against west time. i'm just united a losing to bryce and we're into the final few minutes and those games live a full were white was in the early game. yes. it's not 5 sales when any of the 6 months on people's last season and they cut off. so if that's not here,
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find the town, giving the home side the leaves, took a little hole, equalised 10 minutes into the 2nd house. i tried to get by stopping in a homage, sal across the silence divided another assist on 85 minutes as i'm these robots and made it to one little pool on egypt. sin was involved in the me. so that's the rules and go right. you go when i saw it has now become the highest for can assist, provide in the family history. 63 that's now for wins. integrated political world wide by munich, striking hurricane says he's still got room to improve the spikes covering his bowls. call him as many matches on friday came opened the scoring for buying as they took on top of the table by a letter to the captain says he still, it doesn't seem to his new side having made me for this is seem look, set for 8. see one when that was before origin, tina wells cut when it exists. you may feel for a self exciting penalty to seal
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a true name has made his saudi protege davy, with his new club hello. during the former agent, champion almost $96000000.00 from paris 1000 miles and came off the bench in the 64 minutes of the months is crosstown rivals. we asked there was a time to score students for himself, but he did help the team. it was $61.00 when setting up resume teammate malcolm, who allows for the as somebody would have stopped at the rugby world cup campaign on a winning night. thanks to a 4310 victoria. eventually the told him in saving told some press last week and a news efforts against a panic ended while here. but ultimately the samoans watch too strong kind of pilot with that bus try. they would school for more and 4 days. so my husband reached supposed to file for the 1st time and i
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put to go to making every 10 to 12 cop officer and absence of 16 is a just kicked off against wild and niece and they points on the votes. i saw wells number one site all in sites holy and the life game is going to be re, physically, kansas you know, we're going to have to be switched on in defense. some really incredible, incredibly good athletes. you know, so yeah, i've had, i've, i've seen this with my left for a season and months, so i know where he can to obviously ted against charles viewed. so he's timing officer. so we know we have to be on his red screen, the media into town. so anyways, on friday i'm losing that right. and in game to hosts from the old lex running 11 tries to how about in the media? 7213. and please, can we go to i'm same in mackenzie score 25 each. it's an easy lindsey 50th when app throughout the world comp safelite. it's lee jones done well. we wouldn't
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need with a clean, clear part to you about how we wanted to pricing. i'm the one of the control, the guide really through pick him up and also the quotes that a good job of them. and then i will as to to apply it and look at the opportunities if we, when we felt that role. and so i was really pleased with that speak to the guy in england will look to make it say when from say when i say comments of time on sunday in these staples, with 5 of that i received 2710 when i've origin see not in the right to the game, despite having a mind center of south today's victory was just the 2nd. when in the last 7 test matches. it's funny, you know, with, with the worst came in the world 2 weeks ago, suddenly with the best saving, the lowest cost money out of that can change in 2 weeks time. but, you know, i think for us, you know, we're not, we're selling no getting ahead of ourselves. we don't believe a life around us is much like with the legal,
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the criticism is coming all way previously. it's just for us about making sure that we take we make the most out every day for me to one now and it was back to back whole positions for our recall science off, the qualified fosters the sundays single, full grown pray. that was a huge crash involving us. the mountains launch strolled at the end of the fast qualifying session, which broke out the red flag. straw was on huts, but it's called stuff. it's significant damage. once qualifying resumed, science claimed poll ahead of the series is george russell. and the other for ari of sean, the class championship beat up max a stop and we'll start from 11th on the grid and his rental and a couple of other stories to tell you about never a joke of it just made a when it was done to action days of the clinton victory at the us open the lot number one helps the books have placed in the course of finals of the davis cup, which beats out hundreds of individual, king of spain, to secure and unassailable. see no need to salvia it was the 13th straight match,
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victory. and in australia, it was a case of snake stops, play a venomous red valley to black snake with spotted during a woman's f. okay. and sidney a slippery pitch invite. it was eventually captured, allowing the game to resume that as a spot for now, i will have another update later. elizabeth, thank you very much for that. now. finally, this bulletin, the global coffee industry is booming on for juices and looking to tap into the middle east market. coffee is the 2nd most traded commerce commodity in the world. also, petro and brands in about $200000000000.00 in revenue. but as the market grows, there is a push to make sure traditional our book coffee doesn't lose out. katia lopez hold on one to an international coffee exhibition and don't ha coffee is a big part of arabic culture. it plays a role in rituals, marriage proposals,
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and even in settling disputes that is making specialty coffee more appealing. this convention and guitars capital is proof with hundreds of coffee growers, producers, and distributors, looking to expand their business in the middle east. we want to emphasize the traditional coffee will always be there. and this is important then this is what we are trying to do. something is different than what you're seeing in europe or what you see is actually in asia. for satellite coffee is a family business. his father founded the biggest coffee distribution factory, inc. guitar. they roast more than a ton of coffee beans a day sourcing it from across continents. fuzzy instead of at the bottom, us are also in asia. we start talking about dangerous. yeah. i'm talking about the also the i'm going to be hold on kenya, but takes just a few minutes to drink. but the production process behind this cup of coffee takes
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about 5 years from drawing the plan to selecting the beans and shipping the product every day. about 3000000000 cups of coffee are consumed around the globe. auxiliary level niga is from costa rica. she's among more than a 100000000 families who depend on the industry. during harvest time. they rely on temporary workers from the area and others who travel from panama and to get up on the pick up drinking. a cup of coffee takes you on a journey. hundreds of people from different walks of life, play a role and bring that to life from the coffee feels to the coffee table's. there's a big push to make sure arabic coffee and the culture that comes with it is not pushed out by big chains. we try our best to make the next generation on the next generation to have a more than a drop off. it's not just a thing, it's, it's audition a tradition that's merging with specialty coffee, reflecting change, perhaps beyond the flavor in a comp to catch a little bit of
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a n l just sarah to ha. and that's a for me, elizabeth ronald for this new job, but we are back in a moment with more of today's top story, the village estates, control information, the controlling the narrative to dominate thing, the media. how does the narrative improve public opinion and enormous fight? it might not be the most important story about china of the day, but that's what the big piece attention to. how is citizen? jim listened, replacing the story, the listening post,
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i fixed the media. we don't cover the news, we cover the way the news is covered here and there's been heavy hearts in the refund. the 1st minute of the expiring of the ceasefire. something has changed at this border crossing whether they are civilians or fighters. none of that seems to matter here. now, those law medicine data you and hcr is here and someone told us that they have never seen a dispatch. many people say that even when they are about to prophecies neighboring tad save us to being target. 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. and what happens now, tens of thousands of children were born into we'll live down to the ice old regime in iraq and syria. now many are in kemp. i the role funds are with the, with the mother is rejected by the arrows and communities checking the things that
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people are going to welcome them after that. of course, not an emmy award winning documentary. here's that shooting and traumatic story for children throw stones at me erects last generation all now just the searching for a 1000 say a dead rescue teams and needs to libby a dig through the mountains of debris, days off to synonymy like slugs. the bottom of this is algebra live from to how so coming up the don't on task of

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