tv News Al Jazeera October 5, 2023 11:00am-11:31am AST
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is from around the world. if i go quiet, you'd be able to have nothing. there is absolutely no one who's left to the police for the same people, a killed and a 100, missing and movie, send it off. the heavy rains cause a glacial lake to bus the money sites down to their life and death will. so coming up, scientists will in 2023 is on coast to be the office you. this is temper shots is the temperature reynolds to palestinians. occasion is really right and the optimized was fine. we'll have
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a live update. we speak to rebel fights is in me on moms who are pushing ministry troops out of strategic areas. and on this time, the police 14 people confirmed to have died in floods in india, south east, and sick in the states. a search and rescue operation has been launched for more than a 100 people who are missing, including 22 soldiers. evacuations that taking place of a glacial lake has overflowed several bridges. um roads have been destroyed by the heavy rains while the water surge from the intense rain full caused a high altitude glacial legs to bust little knock legs. since the base of peak surrounding the wells, the highest mountain country in june, go to take a look at the satellite images they've been outlined by the indian space research organization. they show the glacial lake busting,
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which eventually led to flooding in the teeth to river. it also shows the lake shrinking, on 2 thirds of its p is now to have been drained of in speaking to come up hall. josie edison, chief of east mosier adult calm. he explains why rescue efforts and 2nd stage is facing so many challenges or right now, the entire focus is on the search and rescue. because uh over a 100 people, as you said earlier, austin is missing. i think this is um, the bulk of the roof that is needed to be done right now. uh, if you look at the notes that came with just being should be any affected uh, small town or 2 times where uh, 1200 uh, mega watch them, the dam bush, the hydro electric, malo project. them both of them. the communication is you have to re establish some of the yeah, many lets back. so many edition has to be established. uh,
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themes are being dispatched. now air se, in headed up to us and all you know, have been very difficult because the weather because i'm doors in these higher reaches, it is still draining. and the weather is difficult for the heavy se or think they saw in all this is the focus. as far as the infrastructure is concerned, about 14 bridges have been destroyed. so it really take some time for us to get him to live back to normal c, a 2000 daughters stranded in different places of uh, seeking as far as the people who are missing, you know, the well, maybe sector allow along the, the stuff that's the main river, that is uh uh, river base. and so what happened is mostly, uh, these are the body forces. uh so the uh, you know, have been reporting about really the army personnel missing. the police got bogged down. this is where the bus are now stop to reach. you were there is
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a small military gap and it's very close to the box. at least a 190 people have been into the off to tie fin, queen new batch and southern parts of taiwan. and brought record wind and rain storms to the island. ghosts of 350 kilometers. and oliver posted for the weather system is expected. now it's the weekend, as it moves across, tie one, millions of people have been ordered to stay home on thursday. or do you think it's reveal that all planet experienced it's whole to september as a recorded last month? september was nearly one degree celsius. how to then average compared to the pulse 20 years, 1.8 degrees woman, then pre industrial levels, the climate and want us to cause it an extraordinary jump shot of the previous record by hoss a degree that's the largest increase, an average monthly temperature has ever seen and follows
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a sum of heat waves. and while flies, scientist say it's now, oh, but such in the 2023 will be the whole to see it ever recorded. the climate service says for the year to date, temperatures of $1.00 degrees hotter than pre industrial levels. that's the closest we've ever been to that 1.5 degree celsius threshold set in the 2015 paris agreement. kimberly reid is an atmospheric scientist at menache university. she spoke to us about global temperature changes over the past years. 2 weeks technically, with temperatures to go up each year with global warming. but the amount they've gone up compared to previous years has got scientist scratching our heads. and it's really quite phenomenal. we expect only know used to be hotter than other use generally. and that's because a lot of the heat that's been stored in the oceans gets transferred to the atmosphere where we as humans can feel it. and so the last few years have been lemme new years,
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which means they've sort of damp and some of the live blooming. and so they've been a bit cooler. so the 1st on the new year after this, lenny, it has been a bit of a shock. but what's concerning is that the amount that this particular new year has worked compared to previous years. it's still much higher than previous only new years. so 2016 was a strong el nino and that was about 1.25 degrees above pre industrial temperatures . whereas was sitting at about 1.4. so, i mean, you alone probably doesn't explain why we're experiencing this rick or world and such. do you have another theory? and that's because of when we released greenhouse gases and through industrialization, we also released what we called aerosols, and these a tiny particles that can reflect incoming solar radiation and actually help cool the planet. so as we de carbonized, which is of course, a good thing. we're also taking out this mitigating fact of aerosols that have been
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helping to cool the planet. so we do expect to see a bit of a jump european lead as a jew to meet in a summit in granada, in spain, in the coming our migration, the cradle and expansion, all to be high on the agenda on your google has more up against the backdrop of the city saying to being one of the greatest centers of european is womach civilization and for fostering a sense of coexistence between communities. european union lead is amazing to discuss ongoing issues as well as leaders from the european political community. but they're already signs of strains of a differences of opinion. the presidents of as life goes on and media have already cancelled plan talks. since buck, who's takeover of the new owner car, about region. european diplomats had hoped that they would be some movement on certain key issues. even fostering perhaps a broad up peace treaty,
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but that's now been postponed. there's also the issue of sweden's entry into nato tacky and hungry have yet to rectify that, tracy, in that respect to parliament. and that's of course not forget the issue of immigration, the italian prime minister, georgia, maloney has been very vocal over this issue. especially over the recent spike of arrivals in undocumented migrants from the north african coast. this has been an issue that schools have been playing out in eastern europe as well with poland, slovakia, and hungry, restricting them to reduce and limits the amounts of on documented people arriving from the balkan routes. the decision to restrict movement between these board as well as the ongoing anti immigrant rhetoric from sudden leaders is costing a shadow over the events, making it more difficult to encourage an atmosphere of tolerance here over the course of the next 2 days. so anyway, yeah, go,
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i'll just sarah grenada to us on you just explained the the as a vice on media conflict is expected to be discussed at the summit. i mean is prime minister and nicole percent in will be to but as a by john's president has cooled off his visit, european lead as well hoping to broke it talks between the 2 leaders as union is hoping for. european supports us as a by john took control of nicole in a kind of back following on offensive that last month. ben smith has moved from me yet, yvonne, where many say they were abandoned by russia. these are the last men who have been killed defending the. ready you know, kind of a back in a conflict, but it's cost tens of thousands of on media. and as a by johnny lights was by, john became much more powerful militarily over the past 2 decades. it was the changing priorities of our mean is traditional. suppose that, that allowed back to, to make its final move to captured camera back. russia wash washed a. it's has to be a little more in ukraine. so cells colder those colorado ball,
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cetera. all this is not said 0 russian thinking they guys are, these guys are busy ukraine. they are busy both technically for example, we don't have weapon from that which we had before. politically, of, you know, put in every morning doesn't look at the map of the kind of box, the looks of it other maps. and although our media has recently tried to strengthen its relationships with the us and your p and countries, not a bad rush to stand it as a by jones way, either media or is a small country surrounded by much more powerful neighbors, took it around and now oil and gas rich as the by chance. the government here says one of his priorities is now it's relationships with those countries. and all media has on good russia, by his decision to join the international criminal court,
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which is issued an arrest warrant for funding it booted, making euro bonds, regional diplomacy, even more important. the media feels a bit lonely in this part of the world at the moment. you know, we never felt ourselves slowly because we had a lot of, you know, congress which are supported us before the single tenuously. we understand perfectly well then for solving color problems, we are alone. the jump hold, things actually change the region, joe, positive, change the, the euro joe volt, exchanging the situation in the world. so uh, in this very alarming quote, you should find the proper ways of defending your silver into your 3rd total integrity and building new kinds of relationship with your neighbors. thousands of lives could have been saved. it varies. it tends to find common ground between media and as a by gen over the last 30 years. they've been successful. now,
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the acne comm meetings, dream of self government, or their own state in the going to kind of a back is a bonus smith. i'll just say that, yeah, and these 2 palestinians have been killed off to being shown by his already forces in the own coupon westbank. this follows on confrontations in the to cause i'm refuge, account local, say ambulances were prevented from reaching the scene. is ready, forces have killed 204 pa the students. and the okey pod westbank just this year alone. meanwhile, thousands were also wounded. east of knob, low, softer as rarely forces. find take us in sound forms at the palestinian youth. the palestinians built roads as soldiers, escorted hundreds of settlers to perform rituals as joseph to let's go to need to. abraham was law for us in ramallah in the o. p pond west bank. neither. what more can you tell us about these raids into crim? so let's 1st say that these rays happen very occasionally
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here in the occupied with the bank and they've been happening more regularly in the past 2 years. specifically, we're talking about more than a dozen raids per day in different palestinian towns and cities. now this time it was in total cutting, but if you do come on and told cut them cities, usually what's happened by palestinian fighters when these really forces that have some kind of is that they should towards and illegal is really supplement that is nearby this time witnesses say that they've salt the words and it's really stuff there who was writing a motor by leaving foot on the confrontation with these really forces. that's where it's re thing from the area now they've been shot to palestinians identified as 23 and 27. and these really forces prevented any magic an age from getting bid from helping them. then these really forces wednesday with died basically on the scene.
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they took the bodies as part of in his way the policy to with full bodies of palestinians is relieved. have committed attacks against this great. neither what happened earlier and then upload what happens is that is really subtler. rave is a site that they believe is ridiculous for jews in the north of the occupied west bank in the novelist area happens very often. we can say around every month, some palestinians try to be sure those subtler this comments are the sides with the protection of these radio army. usually what happens is this is real and is ready for says use force against those palestinians this time they fires to guess have really we're talking about more than one has an ac palestinians with hits by tear gas and suffered suffocation according to medical reports and 3 other palestinians
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have been hit by bullets. we're talking about 10 injuries. so as you can sense the tense situation all in all and let's not forget the this year in the occupied westbank has been as a business in nearly 2 decades with that to kill this morning. and so we're talking about $206.00 palestinians killed in the west bank by the way, the forces since january. thank you for that. need it for him in ramallah for us. still has on out is there a ocean water is creeping up the mississippi river, the source of drinking water for more than a 1000000 people coming up the u. s. government efforts to keep the salts at bay and how israel's locate of golf is making excavation of roman ruins difficult the
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the hello that will start in europe and the new climate absorber tree says that 2023 is set to be the hottest you are on record that's off to a record heat in september and october. it has been the same. you've already seen. record is broken in spain from austria and poland, and that heat is set to continue over the weekend. it will start to rise up at the end of the week, fueled by those southern, the wind. so lots of settled and fine weather to be found in the south as you a few spits in spots of rain affecting the southeast and some southern areas. stronger winds as well across the edge and see the we all guy said it was the unsettled weather. however, affecting the north with more heavy rain, putting into northern areas of the u. k. we've got yellow warnings out for western parts of scotland on friday, and is a bit of a wintery mix blowing across into scandinavia, norway and sweden on friday,
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strong winds as well, sparking those warnings for coastal areas of poland friday into saturday. lots of clear skies to be found west of weather for the east, west and pots of russia, rolling its way for the east, but lots of warm sunshine it to come for the bearing peninsula and the nose if we have a look at the 3 day full powers is looking like a raw, the pretty we of the gm's to a v e. usually just somebody just said to take place in canada as the book looks to make itself more, we will have somebody to help with the just unite on the many challenges they face
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on the the welcome back to watching out. as a reminder, thought top stories this hour, at least 14 people are confirmed who have died in floods in india is northeastern sticking states. the search and rescue operation has been noise, but more than a 100 people who are missing new figures from the reveal offline at experience. it's also september ever recorded last month. that's dangerous to be close to the benchmark of $1.00 degrees celsius above pre industrial levels. on the scientist, 12023 is on coast to be the office. at least 2 palestinians have been killed off to
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being shot supplies ready forces in new york to pod westbank all those on confrontations in the tool crime, refugee camp to todd's new prime minister as being urge to revise its policy towards me on more of 2 recent fighting between rebels and me and most ministering government, there's been a shift in palla in kaya states along the border with thailand. rebels have managed to push government troops out of some of the areas. tony chang reports, rebels, places in the jungles of se them in the unseen enemy ground troops from brigade, 651 of the most notorious divisions, mazama. but the rebels have had some success in recent months in our dinardo. yeah, you want to check out unity among the resistance forces, right. important. now we have it, and it's the 1st big winfrey. this includes a model we believe we can achieve independence for creating state. us off is that we will also try to help fight for other areas and already across kaya state,
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also known as currently, the harassing me and most military. this tom act road is one of the main supply routes for the army. now it's being mined with improvised explosive devices. oh, i d's this simple but effective rebels have had to none fost uh, military background and loc. and we don't have any military background in talking to said the people involved in the spring revolution didn't come from the military background. everyone has different experiences and different ambition back on the line. we had to take above. because we cannot tolerate the situation long as she did strategic areas close to the board with china are also pulling under rebel control. over the summer, baffled, raged in the town of mess safe and nearly a month before the military withdrew. now the boat is of government soldiers lie where they fell in the dead. but those successes who created another problem. this was the police station in messy with the government forces took the law stand. now
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the rebels have to maintain law and order where we control. we have more than 200 balls of people around including idp and these people, i'm going to go not doing their own business because then they are living. they've who loved the home and uh, based on that we have to provide the rule of law. and there remains a constant threat from the with control slipping on the ground. yeah, most military is relying on the app, how helicopters and fight the jets. i'm challenged in the sky. mean the tactical gains are difficult to hold. strikes the don't discriminate between rebel fighters and civilians. tony chung, out to 0 to you and box pro. but if human rights abuses in ethiopia will be disbanded when it's mandate expires this month. no country step forward to seek an extension because despite repeated warnings and violations continue almost a year since a c spot ended and on conflict in the countries to gray region,
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thousands of people were killed when the therapy and ami let a 2 year war against the grand rebels increase its control in the region. the united states says it has transferred 1100000 rounds of ammunition to ukraine, which the u. s. navy sees from iran last year. posit, go head reports from washington, dc. more of the forfeited weapons could be headed to keep soon, a to do is maybe made it clear they wanted everyone to see what they said were rainy and weapons. men for who 2 fighters in yemen and seized from the stateless tao. they now say they've taken the more than 1000000 rounds of ammunition found on it and sent it to ukraine. the white house and state department repeatedly pressed on whether they have the legal rights to do that. the secretary of defense is authorized with the concurrence of the secretary of state to make available to the
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government of ukraine, weapons and other defense articles from the united states and other sources. and this obviously is one of those other sources under us law. but summer question is this violates you in agreements or international law. let's just put it this way. a given the fact that the who these are not technically a state, there is a a rightful case to be made for the confiscation of these weapons. the us has also seized thousands of or any and guns, almost $200.00 rocket launchers and dozens of guided missiles. it's not confirmed, but those are likely headed to ukraine soon. the forensic on so is it still has about $5000000000.00 it can use to send weapons to ukraine, but us presidential by his asking congress for $24000000000.00. the majority of people in congress say they want to see that a sense, but it could come down to just one job who becomes the speaker of the house of representatives? one of the candidates so far jim jordan says he is against any additional aid and
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control, he would control what bills go to the for the other representatives, police says he is in favor more 8th grade. so you could imagine capitals all over the world, are you watching to see who wins the speakers gabble? particle, hey, elda 0. washington. a mass of salt water from the gulf of mexico has been moving up the mississippi river for weeks. it's a threat to communities who depend on the river for safe drinking bukasa. i'm to farmers who rely on it to irrigate that crops. the mississippi is the 2nd longest river in the united states. it flows all the way from minnesota to louisiana and out into the gulf of mexico. us army engineers say the salt was a winch, has already moved over a 100 kilometers up the river. they estimate the by the end of this month, it could be as far as a 160 kilometers in land. how did your counselor reports from new orleans
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rivers normally flow into the ocean? the drought has weak into the mighty mississippi so much that salt water from the gulf of mexico has creeped more than 100 kilometers up stream. already sold has contaminated the water supply of rural areas closest to the rivers, mouse within 3 weeks. it's projected to reach the new orleans area and it's 1000000 people. mobil desalination machines are not enough. the us army corps of engineers is moving fresh water to impacted communities. this barge is essentially a floating, movable tank that brings fresh water capture from up the river to the side where the river water is already too salty. pipes transfer water from the barge to a water treatment plant were able to provide up to 2 and a half 1000000 gallons a day of river water for them to actually treat and be able to actually send out to all the area residents. engineers are also raising and under water dam to slow the
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salt water is advanced toward new orleans. finally, as its last defense, the city plants to build 20 kilometers of pipes to deliver fresh water from upstream, russell monterey, the retired general who led the emergency response to hurricane katrina in 2005 says new orleans must adapt to climate change. we're not going to leave the city as i don't think there's no need to talk about evaluating the city. we will fix this. all industrial base will stand up and we will get this done wherever ice machine. but we can use down river of new orleans, restaurant owner, byron, the rid of it is into convinced he says his water has tasted salty for months. very, very frustrated, very frustrated. i mean, it kind of makes everybody feel a little of band and his neighbor, 83 year old, new employment has spent a small fortune on bottled water for paying for drinking. i. i might go through
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all because the, the water not, not to go ultimately rain is the only thing that will flush the salt back to see until then people are left to make do, and pray for the drought to end. hydro castro alj a 0 new orleans louisiana, a residential construction project in the hoss of gauze that has led to an archaeological find a roman cemetery, dating back to 1000 years about the is riley blockade is making it more difficult for all keyona just to access the discovery, you know, i'll said before it's from gaza. it all started as a typical building job. bulldozers were working on the construction of the special project in the jamalia neighborhood of northeastern gauze the but as construction workers, doug to laid the foundations,
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they soon discovery the piece of history that has the spanish or colleges, and historians or roman cemetery believes to be more than 2000 years old, although not the 1st, the historical context of this findings makes it extremely remarkable. so far, $134.00 tom's at least 2 leads or cough a guy. and very mature burials has been discovering the discovery of the lead. so tough a guy is a rare case of its kind, and a 1st gossip french archaeologist, renae alter, believes more, could still be 1000, seemed to be put to spotty. the cemetery is a small part of the entire archaeological heritage because of straight because you have to imagine not being tired. gaza strip, at least along the coast, is a huge archaeological site, which means not today, that is
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a real danger. as soon as the is a new construction site, we risk coming across the archaeological remains to us into the presence of the romans cemetery. and godsa indicates the once thriving commerce and cultural ties between this region and the roman empire. this discovery is more than just an archaeological achievement, a window into a world long gone. and the testament of the ancient history of the gaza strip and the people who lived here for the whole time is a palestinian archaeologist, who leads the excavation team. it's a project funded by to purchase government and implemented by a global n g o. but he says the team is severely lacking in resources and financial assistance. this presents a huge challenge from basic excavation gear to proper preservation facilities. how know? because the in gaza,
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we are facing great difficulties due to the lack of continued financial support for our to logical discoveries. because because that is a rich historical city. so this area must be taken care of. but these really occupation and the lack of financial support for our geological, excavations, limit the ease of access to it. so this is the question sasha, or the pasha palace for all the artifacts and top findings are being preserved and displayed. but ease, rails years long. locate of golfing means not many outside jury, so we'll get to see it. it also presents international archaeologists from exploring and learning about it's rich history. unit c, l 20 goes to strip the this is out is there are these your top stories and these 14 people who've confessed.
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