tv News Al Jazeera September 28, 2023 12:00pm-12:31pm AST
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one which is 0 calls for the immediate release of its generalist, detained in egypt. journalism is not a crime the the prayers of 2 sides of the iraqis, holes funerals for victims of a fire at a wedding that killed $95.00 people. the know about this and, and this is all just even live from don't have also coming off of the end of a self declared republic. the president of the economy box and science to, to create dissolving all state institutions. as thousands of ethnic albanians
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continue to process that have been sent here by the state of texas are now picking up people filled with hope, but facing uncertainty. challenges ahead from mexican migraines sent a distance us cities under on 100 in southern california. with the 2nd debate among republican presidential hopefuls got spicy right from the start, the funerals are being held in a rack for the victims of a fight at the wedding ceremony that killed 95 people, hundreds were celebrating at holland. i'm done, you one plane swept through the venue on tuesday, the basis being blamed, and fireworks set off inside the whole. the survivors are being treated in hospitals and the bill and hold a book. not most of the walk hands reports from some done the. the
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wedding, so the brush into mess funeral a day after a fine ripped through the vineyard. not on my head they. they like people when to have fun but it became the opposite. it was turned upside down and got side just instead of happiness. i mean, it is a very big tragedy. honestly, the atmosphere is unbearable and we are very sad. the families now this the, me to wire a 100 auto mall and their families. he lost cool. others loved 500 or so thanks to god. we have less because my son has increase on well, i'm lucky if you lost one. 0 and still has to. oh wow. many spend i was searching for the loved ones. how much do you think i didn't have my mother in law. we was sitting at the wedding
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party, she fell over her head. i was with them. we was sitting next to the kitchen and when the door was opened, we got out 3 days. or else we wouldn't have been able to escape neighbors who were trying to help no traumatized to swallow the c at odd. when this have gone bit, we heard ambulances and the cause. since on one of these close to the hole, we came out to check what happened to the bodies were being taken out. the young people will flooding through the halls to get out as many people as they could. the sort of to say fired work started the fire that to the, through the packed whole name of the materials used in the construction of buildings like this one has the 5 to spread rapidly. some of the bodies of dead are so bad. the chart that it is difficult for emergency teams to to identify them. hopefully she'll say an investigation is under way and the number of people
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have been arrested. dr. tod jodi. a stop for the investigation is ongoing. you all know the reason of the fire. i've not, it was the setting of a fires inside the home. they use a fire works in an unusual way, and as you know, fireworks and not permitted outside of the home, let alone using them inside. deadly fires are frequent in the rock, but people here say, until the cd is action is taken to ensure safety and accountability. tragedies like this will happen again. and then a note of the rock, the president of the color block assigned to decree to dissolve the self declared republic. all state institutions will cease to exist from january the 1st next year . i mean, he says, more than half the 120000 ethnic albanians in,
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they're going to kind of box a fled as a by john sees control of the region in a 24 hour military offensive last week or so on. the bench of a has more from for solely in azerbaijan. a significant denouncement from the president of the says, declared republic of new gordon ricardo, also known as odd stuff to ethnic armenians, that the state will cease to exist. come january. the 1st is the 1st time you are hearing from if that means that they have agreed with us or by joining officials that the state will no longer exist, state institutions will be abolished. the flags wouldn't be the place, but as of right down the flags. and there is going to be reading division of people who are left behind or who choose to stay with either by joining society. this obviously comes with the conditions that other been done. you officials are going to ensure that the safe passage of people with their livelihood and whatever they want to carry with them towards armenia if they choose to leave. and that has been the case in the last few days. tens of thousands of people continue to need more
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than half of the former population off a fund can d r. uh this, the region of car box has left a 120000 people used to live. there were less than hoffer to me now. and this steady flow continues as we've been with this thing in the last few days in the roads that are leading up to the launching corridor and onwards into i mean you have people have evening speaking to have a wide array of opinions about their hopes and dreams for the future, many are uncertain about what the future holds for them. many are distraught because they have to approve their lives and leave their homes. but there are some who are hoping that they will once again return to this land, which they call their ancestral home from a job with the theater facility, either by john a mexican president onto his mind, while lovely salvador says he wants to discuss charging migration with foreign ministers from 10 latin american countries, record numbers of asylum seekers are crossing from mexico into the united states.
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but because of the size, you'll present a plan to address the problem. to us presidents, jo, by all people heading into the us from mexico say they're hoping for back to life, but from many of the future is on sourcing. often they're happy to stay in overcrowded temporarily shelters hydro. castro reports from eagle pass in texas. the river is behind them. they've been processed by us border patrol and now they're released to a shelter run by a local n g o. here we find jefferson macanna and his family of 4. he says he couldn't keep his children fed and venezuela, so they left home traveling one month to reach the united states. he almost died crossing the rio grande. he started convulsing from a heart condition and collapsed on the us shore. he says american medics revive him and he's grateful. i guess, as mckenna joins the shelters, line for food,
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he shows as the electric monitor, immigration officials caught onto his ankle. this was a condition of his release to ensure he'll turn up later when summit. now away from his wife and kids, his confidence cracks going for this, he had a commitment under that in quint, thinking also he hates that. he says, it makes them feel like a criminal and he isn't one of them. the monitor prohibits him from leaving his registered address in the us for longer than an hour, making it impossible to work. he left venezuela because he couldn't support his family there. he fears he won't be able to support them here either the under in, for the shelters. director says many families share the disappointment. most of them believe that they are coming and they're going to be able to go to work. so they come, motivated by live. the shelter focuses on the migrant immediate needs,
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a sandwich, fresh clothes, and a place to patch up moods. the border is lined with razor wire, mostly fast in their arms and legs. and the shelter offers a place for families to wait for transportation to distant us cities most will stay with relatives, as the government decides their immigration cases most. and then the for taishan orders, bosses that have been sent here by the state of texas are now picking up people. a police woman and her daughter perform a final scan before the bus lease. it's unclear what could possibly be hit in. besides those tucked away worries, as they drive off toward an uncertain future. heidi joe castro. l g 0 equal past texas. us republican presidential candidates have held a fiery 2nd debate on wednesday. one of the targets was former president. donald trump was skipped to the lineup. foreign policy border controls on north american
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desk. we're also in the agenda. john henry is get more from los angeles. the inside, thanks for the candidates at the ronald reagan library, showed a new sense of urgency and energy. you hear the fire on the stage tonight? you hear the fire and all of our voices, they clashed over border security foreign policy and the national debt. here and i want to be respectful because i believe you are is the last of it. the background, the swami. double down on his bombastic breakout performance in the 1st debate, i favor ending birthright citizenship for the kids of illegal immigrants in this country. nikki haley was boosted in polls and donors after the 1st debate tried to accelerate that momentum and sharp exchanges with him. another honestly, every time i hear you, i feel a little bit dumb are for what you say it run descent is pulling a distance 2nd. so to make up ground against the front runner. the 7 candidates who took the stage of the rigging library are vying to be the alternative to the over
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whelming favorite. donald trump, in a party that according to polls, isn't necessarily looking for one missing which truck yields a commanding the. despite facing $91.00 charges and 4 separate indictment, he opted to appear at a non union auto plan in michigan. instead, it's not an absence is right. it was pointed out. donald, i know you're watching. you can help yourself. i know you're watching. okay. and you're not here tonight. not because of polls and not because if you're in diamonds, you're not here tonight because you're afraid of being honest agent, defending your record, you're talking these things and let me tell you what's gonna happen. you keep doing that. no one up here is gonna call you donald trump anymore. we're gonna call you at donald dock. who else is again and again, donald trump is missing an action. he should be on this stage to night. he owes it to you to defend his record, where they added 7.8 trillion to the dead. they went after president joe biden for each other. you know wrong. you talk a really good game about cutting spending,
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but you've increased funding in florida by 30 percent with less than 4 months until primary voting begins. the time left to break out of the republican presidential pact is quickly running out john henry and l u 0. los angeles, we are well as we are donald trump, to skip the debate. and instead he gave a speech in front of older workers near detroit, michigan out of the fisheries, got more on that was from came to michigan to show a support for striking or to what goes but states because they've been at a non union plot the what cuz they are not involved in this strike. and of course he's here just 24 hours after joe biden walked on the picket line with striking workers. but donald trump says the jo bikers plans to put more electric vehicles on america's roads with decimate america's auto industry. it doesn't make a damn bit of difference what you get because in 2 years, you're all going to be out of business. you're not getting anything. what they're doing to the auto industry in michigan and throughout the country is absolutely
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horrible and ridiculous. hundreds of thousands of american jobs, your jobs, a will be gone forever because for good joe biden, you're selling outside. i don't think it's him. i don't think he actually knows what the, how he's doing. so this is essentially the unofficial kick off of the presidential campaign. you have the 2 leading candidates to bite in the sitting president. and donald trump, who's in prime position to win the republican nomination. coming to an important swing state to try and win the support of working class voters that donald trump knows that joe biden sipped a large part of the working class vote away from him and 2020, securing his time in the white house. and he knows that if he's to win a 2nd time himself, then he's going to have to win then. but, and he's also asked several times, so the endorsement of the biggest or to union in the u. e double, you know, that doesn't seem to be likely at the moment for a number of reasons. first of all, the unions tend to support democrats, but also in the last 48 hours,
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the president of the union stood next to do a bite. and on the picket lines, and in the last few hours, the chief negotiator for the union has been very critical of donald trump. and what he did or rather didn't do for workers while he was in the white house. one thing it's clear that we're going to see a lot of the 2 leading contenders here in michigan in the run up to the presidential election next year. island for sure, i'll just need a michigan meeting you. i sent it to bob mendez and his wife pleaded not guilty to bribery charges. in a new york court, prosecutors say the couple accepted sizes of dollars from street, new jersey businessmen to secretly healthy egyptian government. but under says the prosecutors of misrepresenting the facts and that he'll be exonerations. still ahead and i'll just say the young people are taking 30 to europe in countries to court for allegedly, failing to protect them from trying to change the
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the the that has been surprised me, significant flooding in central viet nam, that rain started down a bit. now the next phase of the large being me in my, or southern china and then there's a line that takes your trust, the central philippines. what has been some minor flooding as well? this is seasonally correct. a bit more is showing up in the way of bringing stuff in malaysia in borneo, at least and south of that into these in borneo and gallons of java or something have to monitor. it's still read to the dry and dry. isn't really the story everywhere in australia. we've had some pokey little showering up in new south wales damage to queensland. but once they've gone through the temperatures recovery, we're getting more of a recovery in 29, even 30. and sidney is one above average by about 7 degrees, where we have had a quite woman past 10 to 24,
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and that so the heat transfer the east inside of australian, i think you'll just keep coming over the next couple of days, particularly for sydney. whereas mean, usually the weather's look distinct, the lot getting coming, rather vicious spring huge amounts of snow and rain on the west and site the south problem so, so the thing won't surprise just then that keeps moving north, which was very wet to no file. and during saturday went on probably when the so this is pick weddington example for the next 3 days, right? and wendy, then wendy, wendy, how do states console information? how does the narrative inform public opinion? how is this as intended? this and we flaming the story? the listening post, i think the media, we don't cover the news, we cover the way the news is covered. the
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the, the the you watching, i just need a reminder about told. so is this, our funerals are being held in northern the rock house or at least 98 people were killed and dozens were injured from the fire broke out to the wedding. the place is being blamed on fireworks set off inside the venue. a president of the car box has signed a degree to dissolve the self declared for public. all state institutions may cease to exist from january 1st. next year, armenian says, more than half the $120000.00 se come meetings. and we're going to kind of box
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a flight. the president of mexico is calling for a meeting of father ministers from from 10 latin american countries. he wants to discuss the record numbers of asylum seekers crossing from mexico, mtv united states. north korea's parliament has unanimously voted to enjoin each nuclear program in the constitution. it comes off to a leader kim jong and made a speech to the supreme people's assembly. north korea's ambassador to the united nations that his country could be forced into a nuclear war by what he called hostile threats from outside phones. but he's got more from the subcommittee and capital. so a nose quiz rubbish that parliament has penned the country's policy or nuclear falls into part of the constitution part of the basic law of the state. now leader came john and addressing paul them and said his country will continue to accelerate the modernization of it's nuclear weapons, to give it an edge in strategic deterrence. know square considered as the us as his
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biggest security threat and came also denounced the increasingly close ties between japan, south korea, and the us, comparing it to an asian version of nato. now last year, the north korean parliament passed into law a declaration that northward is now a nuclear weapon states. it also officially enshrined into law, giving the country the right to launch a pre emptive new pay strike what to consider itself on the switch. so what the north korean parliament has done now is essentially an extension of what it did last year. and the message here is very clear. north korea has no intention of giving up it's nuclear weapons program. and that's causing concern here in south korea as well as in the wide region and around the world that have much stronger north korea millet millet charlie could also have the balance of geo politics in the region, especially if you take into like recent events on north korea, i'm attempting to joy even closer to russia, closer ties that could extend to military corporation even. and that's why i've
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also seen renewed efforts renew diplomatic efforts to try and ease tensions on the korean peninsula. japan, south korea and china have now agreed to revive ada summit summit that has been suspended since 2019. and analysts see this as an opportunity for south korea not only to improve its relations with china, but also to bring china into the discussion on how best to do with the north korean nuclear threat florence lee, which is 0. so a loss is in switzerland have shrunk more this year than at any time since reco it's begun, according to a glossier monitoring network. glossy is a huge bodies of moving ice created by falling snow. last winter, it was unusually warm, and this was mountains got a lot less snowfall in 2022 classes in switzerland reduced by about 6 percent. so far this year they've shrunk by about 4 percent, and many smaller ones have completely disappeared. that means about 10 percent of switzerland's glasses have now gone,
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and that's nearly as much as all those lost between 1960. i'm 1990 and they're also shrinking faster than before. now i spoke to mock yes course. he's the head of the swiss classroom monitoring network, and i began by asking him how policy makers should use these results. of our study on the glaciers shows how sensitive to our changes in climate it's showing. once again, the climate is warming and questions are just spreading this mess message and making it very clear that climate is having an effect on the mountains, but also was big consequences on water availability and see the rise. so we can say some gracious, maybe not those inputs will not be all but those. and the poll reaches with strong product integration efforts to reduce c o emission c o 2 emissions. there's a little that was planets and will finally also help us to save dividers. clearly
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the evidence like this is absolutely crucial that the same time we've seen similar evidence to this over the last several years. and yet there seems to be very little movement globally to actually try to address those. how confident are you that policy makers around the world, governments around the world are right? you're going to listen and are actually going to do something to reach the point that you're talking about for some of the glossy is, can be saved. i need to be confident, we all need to be confident that we're going to make the turnaround, because this is the only chance we have 2 whites, lord as authors in the future. we're not talking about the draw through mentors from presentations loving but also the riots arrive at schools. hills will uh, put billions of people around the coast and, and big problems. and therefore the result even the choice. so we need to make this turn around and reduce c o 2 emissions globally very quickly to specialize clouds and this will also help our lectures. and so it's one that globally young people
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are taking $32.00 european countries to court. they want to try to force them to do more to tackle climate change. they say they come in, the lights are being violated because of the changing environment for the monks. has the story. are raging wildfires in our regular feature of southern europe, summer season. but places in portugal, 6 years ago that killed 66 people could now bolster a legal case named forcing nations to speed off action to reduce emissions. 6 young people, aged 11 to 24 savings, 32 european governments, in strasburg, from the european colts of human rights, among them. sophia olivera. if you want to take action and show you that you are capable to change the planet and for the generation that is good, you have to act and you respect and listen to our legal team,
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say the current climate policies of those nations will not reduce emissions as much as required to retain the client's quality of life, we're talking about he's extremes, which would impact their ability to exercise, develop doors that would be confined indoors for significant periods of time within their lifetime. so we're talking about concrete time we're talking about emissions from across your impact you if the 6 can prove those impacts violate the human rights, the implications could be very costly for the governments involved. the hearing today could be an opportunity to deliver a legally binding decision that would require governments to act because they have failed to act despite having the resources to adopt more than vicious climate policies. the quotes grand chain but is hearing several similar cases this year. in march, a group of women from switzerland have their own day and quote, 2 people have it in their power to change the course of history. they argue the swift governments fail to act on climate change and so infringe that right to life
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. that europe, human rights convention guarantees the court would likely read on both cases and a 3rd from france at some point next year. but as climate change on its consequences continue to expand. similar cases in europe and beyond could soon do the same. the marks out as era. so down now has the highest number of internally displaced people in the world because of the war between the army and the part of military rapids support forces. more than 4000000 have been forced from their homes . that's about 10 percent of the population. hundreds of people are still in the capital of cop 2. and the con, leave at the log and reports from on demand. when artillery shelling and straight bullets started hitting news for him on his home, she and her family knew they had no option but to leave with 2 disabled children. they ended up in this room in a school which has been turned into
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a reception center in northern, on durham man of this and then how much, how much my son got sold. terrified to the extent that sometimes he cried alone, my daughter would bite her hands and scream because she wanted safety and to feel secure like they used to before the war. it affected them to the point that sometimes they used to hit their heads on the floor. they used to cry and scream. so we left our home because of the terror they lived through. dozens of of a families have also thought shelter at this center. after fighting between students, army and the parent military rapids support forces intensified in parts of the mind . the we're now and it's 50 a month has displaced 1000000. while most have like 2 areas where there is no fights and thousands to remain trapped in the capital. many schools in northern, under mine, have turned into reception centers for those displaced by the slicing and how to tune some are here because they are unable to afford bus tickets to travel to
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neighboring states for refuge for others on the line is home. and they have no relatives elsewhere in the country to take them in the jets all might. it was one of those unable to leave the capital. she came to the center with her 2 daughters after her 3rd was killed in an artillery shelling. but the war is never far well, let's see. at the end, i don't have any money. we've not earned our salary since the war. if we had thought we could have gone to any other state because we are not safe here. they are bullets flying every day. we're afraid there's no organization helping, no one assisting us to leave those who run the center. they, most of their relief supplies come from the community and the army, but their needs go beyond chest. food supplies, the hardest. and so i have a high level, so i will see a whole people arriving tough conditions. there's few, there's tears in a feeling of insecurity because of what they've seen. they're not,
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we try as much as we can to help them get rid of these feelings. so they can settled here, noon says as long as she stays in the capital, she doubts if her children will be able to fully gets over the horrors of the war. but she hopes this center will at least provide some relief after being forced from their home. he but morgan all just they are on through man 5 and some people and columbia have been showing their support for president the cost of, of petrol on marching in the capital. the left as lead has been calling for demonstrations to back his social reforms. all this on the lumps. yes, he reports from bogota, it was a massive response in support of, of presidents trouble. the gym, the 10s of thousands of colombians heaving the call of gustavo k through the country's 1st left at the head of state in defense of his impatience, social and economic reforms. among them, workers,
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labor union students in $18000.00 indigenous colombians from across the country. the reforms are very necessary for the columbia and people like lenders form in the hands of the few and all the other reforms that would benefit the people of denver . we are here to support change a change towards reforms that previous governments owed us so much in terms of labor and we seek to vindicate ourselves by doing so. yeah, change has been hard to come, help labor, agriculture and education bills presented by the government and aimed at changing the face of one of the most unequal countries in the world. have all been lagging in congress a year after taking office. pay throws initially wide coalition with traditional parties as part of the part and pictures plunged to the pools. at the end of the rally, the president himself calling for a national agreements with the confused establishments they proposed level says, i propose to form a president's to the riches, to the parties,
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to the business associations to own of you, to talk about these great issues. truth, education and land reform as the basis for peace in columbia. this riley comes just a month before regional elections that are seen as the rest of random and peter's administration. pulse suggest the majority of both or turn their backs and governments candidates. you're going to spend money 1st best. i think that this demonstration moreland, actually the most important sofa is more than anything and preventative measure against what will probably be an electoral defeat in october. so when traditional policies will families incentive to be part of the government coalition, petra will have this call to play popular support in the streets in the end, the president's got that sir. now, do you have hopes far to reinvigorate this message? by most you believe that without a strong showing of its candidate and the upcoming regional elections moving forward, as many reforms will remain very difficult. i listened that i'm get to adjust the.
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