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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  August 23, 2024 12:00am-1:01am AST

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the, the safe them even come in as an international anti corruption, excellence award. denominator hero. now the, [000:00:00;00] the either on or call this is the muse, our life from doha. coming up in the next 60 minutes, homes destroyed and families torn apart in gauze and is really strikes of pills at least 4 to 7 people on the 1st day of the year when the security council has caused for a safe spot and goals, or as the us, i'm vast, so the says
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a deal is now in sites. also it has will be live in chicago when us presidential pounds of color harris is due to address the forces on the final life of the democratic national convention. basses as her republican vive, old donald trump focuses on immigration as a company installed on the us, mexico, bulls and rushes presidents. a curious as ukraine of trying to attack a new pay of phones in the cost. clinton the begin this news out and gone. so we have 47 palestinians have been killed across the strip since early on thursday is where the forces continue to strike. heavily populated areas have been devastating attacks on homes and bait law. here in the north of the strip for the south. it's a similar story. some of the binge i've had reports, the theme repeated many times in gauze. more than 40000 palestinians have
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been killed. the bodies of the dead are taken from alexa, hospitalized for burial. afraid is really a tax in the black. the world upside down and say these parents as the old continue to bury the young fellow a bit lot of those people decided to return to their homes. think of something that you sorry. the army saw them walk in on the street and executed the parents a motion to the the smallest coffins with the heaviest as increasing numbers of children are killed in this war. as this all. busy well, but if you are the, the owner, i'm sitting on the rubble of my house and the remains of my children says this father, the 70 year old, has lost several family members at his home in bibb, last year, or the dresser. we were at the school, the whole family when they began to hit schools, the children and my grandchildren came to the house to sleep. i was sleeping outside the soft and midnight. we heard a sound. and the school is mia. we looked over from the school and it turned out to
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be our house that we came to what you see here, rebel with us in the body, parts left of some others. i enjoyed the health industry says at least 11 people were killed by is really strikes here. as the forces continued to hit a number of neighborhoods in central and southern gaza. hospitals, schools, muskets, churches, everything has been attacked all over the receipt strip and no very safe. 1 it's a vicious cycle for many civilians and survive each night strikes wake up, carry the dead crate. and then once again, people don't have enough time to warn. as they receive more is really orders to evacuate. some have been forced to move dozens of times since october. is there any tanks of also pushed for? are there any areas of hon, eunice and here say, is really gunfire from several friends herded them to work this area. and there's
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a honda because it's not bad that it just broke off displacement cost as humiliation and suffering. we spend our time on the shelves and gunfire and moving from one area to another and we see no benefit in the negotiations. no, but talks on a possible ceasefire set through zoom in egypt from the wounds of his house. i'm just trying to remove that says he has one message for the world. it's enough. have mercy. so i'm, i've enjoyed, i was there as ready negotiates as a reported to have arrived in the adoption capital, cairo with the next round of gauze a ceasefire talks is due to stop. meanwhile, at the united nations, us in boston has told the security council that how must must be pressed to accept to cease fund proposal. then it's almost greenfield told the security council that a deal is now in sites. i'll 0 is christian salumi has moved from the united nations. there's growing concern on the international stage,
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a mid faltering cease fire talks that war will spread beyond garza despite mountain criticism. that is, israel's government that appears to have been stalling. the united states called on him aust to accept its latest ceasefire proposal. thank you. prime minister netanyahu confirmed that israel accept the bridging proposal that the united states guitar and egypt put forward last week. the proposal is consistent with the principles outlined by president biden in may 2024. and that this council endorsed in resolution 2735. and this bills on areas of agreement from tops convened in doha last week. but russia choose the united states and changing it to terms of the global disliking the security council. never bless the deal formulated in this way . and why, when you called upon all of us to exit pressure exclusively on how much leadership to make sure that the movement accepts a new is ready when you consistently refused to work with weston jerusalem,
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which critically depends on you for weapon supplies. but it is something that the well intentioned and impartial mediators do. unfortunately, conflict isn't the only thing that spreading. the polio virus is now circulating in the occupied territories, prompting concerns of an outbreak of this preventable paralyzing disease, $50000.00 palestinian children born since the start of the conflicts have not been vaccinated. the world health organization and unicef have 1600000 doses ready to distribute. but 8 agencies say it is impossible under the current conditions. and that is the key. we should not need negotiations, special permissions to bring a lot of sending medical supplies, particularly. she might have pairings and medical teams like my and she's not spend on is the leading to the rules to be is how i talk to the company. it's a letter signed by $28.00 organization says they'll need at least 7 days with no
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fighting to administer the 1st dose to children, but also called for a permanency speier. christian, so me, me, i'll just here on the united nations on the shaw is also a senior political analyst and joins us now from london. so long we have to us and best of the you when the saying that the deal is insight on how much must be pressed to accept it. what do you make of that statement? or you know, i've been saying for the last number of days, but there is a better chance for a deal done that has ever been the past several weeks and months but for different reasons, from the one that, that invested that mention it is besides, since july rather since may and through july there has been a lot of progress and a mouse made a lot of concessions and pace. we were really at the point now at least a few days ago when or the bucks for lined up. but the international community at
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large have agreed to american vix that so this version of us to provide a cease fire that's not read us. use fire are defined, a city has accepted the world accepted. basically everyone accepts it except nothing. you know, who gets shopping in new conditions accepted by the americans each and every time. up until last week, when have i said, you know, if there's, you know, we cannot, every time we accept something that the american propose, these really starting around and put new conditions. so we are really at the junction now when by, if not, then, you know, pulls up, pulls back, and just relieves the, the proposal from his you. what are the lines of basically military deployment in various parts of god. so we could have a deal tomorrow, but if he continues to insist on re i'll q by and guys all we probably once have
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a deal because was destiny. all who wants is continued is riley troop presence in the philadelphia car, adult border in egypt and the net serene cordele slicing dollars a in to i'm not sure i can. i'm not sure i hear you. oh, can you hear me now? my one of we lost you. oh, apologies. 12 us. there's a seems that we have just lost. i'm sorry, i connection with mo, i'm no problem on that. we will move on many thanks indeed for joining us now need to abraham is in to car um with more on and his rainy rage in the occupied westbank the other day in the occupied westbank. another is ready read this time to the toys, cutting refuge account that has seen a lot of destruction through the homes, but also through the infrastructure. we've been speaking to people who say that these really soldiers set homes on fire on purpose and we were talking to them as
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they were trying to put all the fire. also another is really air strikes that left, 3, palestinian, that we're talking about in increasing the use of is really area and hits against palestinian targets since the war started. then you wouldn't figure speak about 50 is really ariel targets an area and hits against palestinians that left $113.00 that. but since august as of august, we can report that the on average one, palestinian is kills per the due to these is rated airstrikes and we've been hearing these really defense minister view all going on saying that he is re lighting the use of aerial strikes against palestinian targets to combat the palestinians. use of a i. e. d. 's, which are the improvise exclusive devices that they're offering through the is really ministry vehicles when they read how to simeon villages and home and refugee
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can do that. but he just need all the occupied with bank policy. okay, we can now return to mamba shaw, who is talking to us from london. mon. good. have you back. we were just talking about ongoing is rainy troop presence in garza. this is nice. neil who sydney new red line was being what he's been pressing full for the last week. also with this new face fly tools underway, guessing underway in egypt. this is going to be a hard sell to homeless if not impossible, isn't it? you know, it's also hard sales to the judges. believe it or not, because in the end of the day what nothing else demanding is i might have to mention the presence on the different border. and that's basically come through the, to the camp david accords to various understandings over sense. so also, egypt does not accept the fact that nothing now would dictate after general side,
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the war where he's going to be, they say, you know, he's off to find forces on how he's going to be taking over, you know, international crossings as the one between for example, a guy is i need you, but i think much of the out of will just not going to accept. and it's really real traditional guys because that's what the end of the, the deploying is really sold. just mean in, gosh, no one, the one that nothing you know, i'd still demands which is the presence and the new studies quoted or which is right smack in the middle of guys. so imagine after 10 months, 11 months, a year to general. so that is what i was going to insist on having its soldiers deployed at the heart of gaza. there's something sadistic, there's something, something, there's something human the, i think i'm totally, i'm necessary in all of that. it's all just because nothing, you know, once to maintain the off at home. and he, if you do that, by the way you do that, the pony today,
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it is rare. he's re getting popularity. so he seems to thrive on the fact that the longer the stakes, the more he thought that he had, the comment is okay. long shot many things and data pertaining to his head on out his era. the to now is the full final day of the democratic national convention in chicago. pamela harris will deliver the biggest speech of her political career. she accepts the democratic presidential nomination. she's making history as the 1st woman of color to be nominated for the job as will be one of many speaking to the final night scene. for all future. all team is dining by in chicago in just a moment will speak to gab does on day he's outside the union center. that's what protestors have gathered in support of palestine every day of the convention so far
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. but 1st, let's go some like kind of, he joins us from in side the venue, and mike set the scene for us the on this final day slow. this is going to be the most important speech of kamala harris's political career. the conventions being on the way it's being billed with celebration and even joy. but now in her speech, the rabbit is going to hit the road because people are going to be looking for a substantive outline of the policy that she will be applying. but she will be following as she fights this presidential campaign brought to talk about this. i'm joined by democratic party strategist angela greco angela. it's been very much a convention of joy. that conventions always do tend to be towards the separation. right? that's right, mike. thank you for having me. as you've seen of the past 3 days, this has been at a convention full of energy. we've had democratic artic leaders from across the decades come and speak, talking about the history and legacy of the democratic party,
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the from the 1st night with president fight. and then the next night with the president obama and michelle obama, former president bill clinton and all the way to the future, vice president being tim walls. and tonight we have a event which will feature combat harris for vision or history and the work that she plans to do to continue the bite and harris legacy. now. so did it gets here, but particularly the voters outside the will be listening closely to her 2 kids to substantively outline the kind of vision that she has particularly a met most important element for everybody to be caught on me. that's right. and i think you've seen in the past 3 days, we've seen a lot of excitement in energy. the spotlight has been in chicago and on this new change of candidacy with the vice president. the top. what we'll hear tonight, and what we're hearing from the campaign is that she will spotlight her history. growing up in a single family household in the middle class family,
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those values will be what she'll use to contrast against her opponent donald trump . someone who is a billionaire who's always spot for a court, is the democrats for the rich for billionaires, for tax breaks, she'll outlined her vision for making sure the economy is fair for the middle class . and for those were in the working class as well. now she also having to be looking towards the party as a whole any potential divisions within the party. she has got to basically get out . now in order to run a unified campaign, would you agree? well, i think you've seen a broad spectrum of democrats, some all ranges of the party from the left to the center to blue dogs, even had some republican speak. the work ahead of us in the next 70 plus days will be making sure that everyone on the district trans umbrella feels represented. we have the at least the plan that was outlined by the vice president of 2 days on the economy. is one that is broad base one that supported by most people. we're talking
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about tax relief, paid family leave. these are policies when, when tested by the polls and in focus groups are proved widely by all workers by all um slots of the population because they're working families issues. now one issue that to be bubbling on day is the democratic party. so on somebody's happening in gaza and you've got the group of uncommitted delegates 50 of the amount of 74000 and said very small in number, but quite heavy in, in fluids. is this an issue for the party? do you think? absolutely, and i have to say that it is an important issue that the democratic party should be paying attention to. we've seen some moves being made by the campaign by the administration, by advocates and having a conversation with uncommitted voters. i think that we have an opportunity as a party to bring that in. have them understand the stakes and also maybe grow in the, in the way that we approach the uncommitted voters to make sure that they feel like they have a place at the table. a more relates to be done, but i'm hopeful,
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optimistic that it will be the case. the last question, and that is the a sense of come on. the harris seems to have encouraged a part of the democratic part sees that had been previously silent. you've got, for example, progressives, you will seem to succeed progressives moving main stream in terms of joining a constant common flow. the party is this a real movement it to and so, of a blending of the progressive markets and conservative sections within the pocket. i would say yes and in some way, this is the harris effects. when probably harris ran in 2020. she ran as a very bold and strong progressive. you know, when she joined the v. p a when she joined is the p under the bite of harris ticket . obviously she was 2nd in command and her role was more and governance advice and working as a team member 2nd and come out as the 1st partner on the president's agenda. now we have an opportunity to see her vision and what she plans to do for the next 4 years . and we'll see a lot of those issues and policies play out. i think we're seeing a nice mix and
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a really nice move for her to bring in some of those progressives. um, uh, the section of the party and the group of party members that she has identified with an always has been angela greco democratic party strategist. thank you very much for talking to us and outlining what we can expect to hear in the next few hours. when coming to harris concludes this convention with a speech that is going to be absolutely critical in terms of both to future leadership up the party. and in terms of appealing to all the voters come november and it will, we will, we will be bringing it to all those to all view as well. but in full, many things in day. mike, a well protest by groups angry with president terabyte and stones on the wall in gauze that have been taking place throughout the week. it is on the joins us now from one such protest outside the venue. ok, what are you hearing from protest is that today? well,
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this protest is about to kick off here in about an hour or so. so we see several 100 people here starting to gather this will be the last major protest and we expect for the week. so as the next hour it goes along, we expect more people to be arriving here. we're hearing a lot about the uncommitted movement that mike was just talking about talking about how there are no palestinian americans that had been invited to speak at the convention. even though, listen to this more palestinian americans live in chicago than any other city in america. so that is certainly upset quite a few people, including protesters and uncommitted voters. let me actually introduce you to one step in larry. i'm sorry, sidney larry or you're from uh, pennsylvania outside of philadelphia. yep. you are not officially part of the uncommitted movement, but you are an uncommitted democrat boat or meeting. so how does it feel for you
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that no uncommitted delegate is being allowed to speak? no palestinian american? yeah, i mean it's, it's quite upsetting, right? because i, i pay very close attention to the rhetoric of the, the harris campaign of the democratic party and, and how go by didn't even, has talked to by about how much you support to cease fire. and then to see this celebration in this pep rally over the, the neighborliness of 10 malls, and then there's the good vibes of tomlin harris. it's just, i can't in good conscience reconcile that against the bombs that are being dropped in our name every day slaughtering families and children day after day after day. and you're a democrat. would you vote for cumberland harris right now if associates the election day was today if the election was today? no, i would not. i want to be clear though. i am persuadable i. i do recognize the reality of 2 party politics in america and, and i do want to defeat donald trump, i, i clearly see the threat that he represents. but again,
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i cannot prioritize the needs of myself when i see what's being carried out in our name with our tax dollars. and i understand how those resources could be used to help american voters and just the american people more broadly here at home. and what do you, the top issue for you, you are telling me, is israel's, or on god. so that is the top priority for you. what do you want to hear from kind of a harris? what i want to hear is that she, i want to hear her come out and actually utilize the bully pulpit. i want her to use the power of the vice presidency. she is the current sitting vice president, not just the candidate for president. and she absolutely could not only publicly endorse to cease fire, but publicly endorse in arms and bar go. and what the income committed movement is asking for of a 5 minute speech from a us pre selected candidate and a highly vetted speech. that's a litmus test, right? that's, that's just seeing how willing the hair is. administration might actually be to listening it to palestinians in,
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to fighting and moving the needle into favor of palestinian emancipation. so i want to see her use the bully pulpit come out publicly call for in arms and bar, go and start putting pressure on the current president of the united states, joe biden. in the same way that the party did to convince him to make the decision to step out of his re election campaign. they need to do this when it comes to an arms and barto for israel. if, if they won't see the moral argument at least see the electoral argument that they can and will win this way. well, action in a land side, if they're able to pull off a ceasefire, if they cannot. i'm very skeptical of what they might be able to accomplish in november. sidney, thank you very much for speaking out just here. we appreciate your time and your, your thoughts on all of this. thank you so much. yes. so you heard it there. that was one opinion there that we got, but i think of what you heard there was that goes the opinion and views of many of the protesters hundreds if not thousands that have been out here all week, making their voices or they want. number one, a ceasefire. but beyond that and arms in fargo,
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and they want to be heard by the powerful democratic party officials that are just about a kilometer down the street in the democratic convention. there will also be gathered here in a few hours. it is on the many thanks. indeed for that full. that's the scene in chicago with the democrats. meanwhile, republican presidential candidate donald trump has touched down in arizona to visit the us mexico border. immigration has been a hold of some issue. this selection with republicans identifying it as a key weak us for coming to hire us. thinking next we are part of muscle of his border will trump blame democrats for failing to finish it. if you take a look interestingly at the all of the wall that's lying on it side, that could have been put up in a matter of weeks, it was all set to go. it was all cut out. and if you look at the top of the mountain behind us is all shaped all ready to go. could have been put up in
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a few weeks. much of its been sold for $0.05 and the dollars very expensive. of correspondent rob rentals joins us now from cookies. county, arizona, rob integration, a cornerstone of trump's campaign pet. she was speaking for a long time, the at the board of what else was he said well i'm here near the border wall not far from where the president of a former president trump was speaking in coach, east county, and i lived up. it's begun to rain rain in the desert who knew it's kind of refreshing, actually. so the trump seems to have latched on to a new nickname for his opponent, commer harris, calling her comrade com a dozen or more times during his remarks, saying that she is a radical left marks as who desires and actively wants to promote open borders. in between the united states and mexico, and he said that the millions of criminals are streaming across the border, unleashing a plague of migrant crime. he said that the,
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these migrants bring narcotics, fentanyl and other things. and that a couple of harris who was given some responsibility in the bite and administration for the diplomacy with central american countries to get at the root causes of migration and try to stem it at its source. was actually those are the borders are uh, who was responsible for all of this that you see behind me, which was actually not the case. so there were a lot of claims here. a lot of rather bruce and stories of migrants having attacked, or a saw. busy that or murdered or raped a us citizens. and in general, out of the sort of other than appealed to some base fears and with a lot of facts that, that really are quite questionable in fact. and data. trump does love a nickname. how does his rhetoric compare with reality as
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well? for one thing, as i mentioned, the cause of a couple of years was never the boarders are she had a role in diplomacy in countries like guatemalan hunters. another thing is narcotics and fentanyl. we talked to the mayor of busy, which is the county seat here in put cheese county. he said that it's well known and that there are government statistics showing that the vast majority of fentanyl is brought into the united states from by us citizens. and most of it comes in not across the wall or across the rio grande river on the backs of migrants, but in trucks and other forms of transport at border crossings. places like, uh, tiquana or uh, san diego or, or uh, el paso, uh, in terms of the flow of migrants which trump describe this as a kind of flood saying, you know, millions without being specific about numbers. in fact, the border crossings have been full and sharply for the past 5 months and
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a border of 40 say that in july, last month they apprehended or encountered 54000 illegal border crossers. that is more than 30 percent less than the previous month of june and a 4 year low in the total number. and a lot of this is attributed to stick stricter rules put in place by the, by the administration on asylum seekers as well as a crack down on the mexican side of the border by law enforcement there. so there are a lot of things that are at variance with with mr. trump's rhetoric. i could also mention regarding crime crime has been decreasing steadily over the past several years. and in fact, in fact, the 1st quarter of this year, homicides have dropped by more than 25 percent. so there are a lot of a lot of conflicting facts, conflicts, springs, facts, and rhetoric. but it does not seem really to um,
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to face mr. trump very much. and finally i'd like to note that this is the key sunbelt state for winning the election. trump has been here many times and he will be addressing a, a rally in glendale and their phoenix in the same giant, a rena where just a few days ago, campbell harris address, 15000 people. so we'll see that on friday. okay, well, we'll leave that for now. we'll let you enjoy the rain and that some of those things. thanks very much. oh, the us supreme court has revived in arizona law, requiring pages to show proof of american citizenship to register to vote. the quotes routing follows an appeal by the republican national committee on the state legislature was there was a key battleground phase in the us election, and the republican policy is pushing for nationwide proof of citizenship. bill republicans argue this is necessary to prevent non americans from costing the
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ballots is still a head hair on al jazeera. so dawn struggles to contain a color outbreak because we can monitor in crisis continues to west some of the conflict wages on campaign is a cooling for urgent action on suspect solution of trust study from microsoft sticks in human brain the the hello more that was sent a sunshine, hot summer sunshine, if the truth be told across central and southern part. so if you're a but it's a little more like autumn up towards the northwest side, they pack the ice above rolling in across the partition. also that means when we have some very strong wind skilful swings for a time event, when the weather weather will sweep is way up across scandinavia, as well as a lobby down pulls that pull the north west of europe,
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some really heavy rain coming into a norway and on into deposit, sweden, what's the weather actually stretching his way over towards the western side of russia for central policies, hot and it's dry. 29 celsius in lane and rising. could touch 32 degrees here, the sas they off, they rented us to cease the central and southern areas just you can see the possibility in a book or us the shelves that we had into a central met, that me for the race was the week and the little bit, but they all quite lively. some live you ran to stretching down across the like countries into central and southern positive fronts. by the time you do come to sas, stay for the south. as long as you drive with northern parts of africa. well have you write more flooding rates by spilling out of northern parts of nigeria, easterly by pushing them all the way into became as i fast. so i'm black be area by saturday afternoon the
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us and to develop the success. ethan is getting my system and the every day he wrote, keeping communities together. a bunch of dental just 0 visits for kenyan town of peter that produces some of the worlds fastest runners. and where a terrible crime has led to a reckoning with gender based finance. a sense of community on a jersey to the cloud of nuclear war wounds have a press. what if this is the beginning of one of those accidental wars? what is this is the beginning of the end of life? because we know it from the horrors of recent history to the rising card threat apocalypse maybe discovers the impact nuclear weapons have funky vanity. our failure to keep humanity safe is by sitting down to the individual on the street. this is not to drill on out to 0.
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the, [000:00:00;00] the hello again, you are watching out. is there a has reminder about top stories this i'll, is there any strikes of tons of heavy populated areas across the calls that come in at these $47.00 people since the one on the 1st day plane surrounded homes and bait la here often a series of overnight raids, you and security council is had calls for a cease fire agreement in garza during a briefing on them. at least you have some passes with you and told the counsel that a deal is now in sites. i've come to her, it says that to the level one of the biggest speeches of her political career so far as she except for the democratic presidential nomination on the final day of
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the policies convention. she's making history of the 1st women of color to be nominated for the job. the russian president vladimir putin, his acute, recreate in forces of trying to attack the cost nuclear power plant. the talented, located inside rushes west in cost region, which has been the target of ukrainian incursion. facility is around 40 kilometers from the city of costs, can some 50 kilometers away from russian territory that's being held by ukrainian forces and houses to what can react to is power in 19 russian regions. many assistance is the enemy trying to strengthen the kids can nuclear power station. the international atomic energy agency has been informed the promise to come themselves defend special is to assess the situation. i hope that in the end
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this will be done on their part. are you a nuclear inspectors say they'll visit the cus plum next ponds next week? keith has not responded to pretends accusations, well, it's been, she says it's taking another settlement and cost region. april. the been forced to flee that haines. those of already spent the day in shelter the on sent this report saelens, you know, used to live in the la sky region and course now she lives here. a private blocks in club turned into a shelter. she is one of more than 50 people forced from their home since ukrainian forces launch that incursion into russia along the border with the curse region just over 2 weeks ago. you know, how does she kind of use nicer participant? i'm grateful for the health we received, but i feel bad that i'm here. i would prefer to be my own home. i want the war to finish as soon as possible. there's nothing else i want more than for this war to be over the 9 year old gladly be too young to fully understand what's happened. he's passing the time perfect thing, his gaming skills,
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others spend their days fine tuning their boxing techniques to grow for a little while i had no option to help the people who were affected by the ukrainian armed forces invasion. people here all stressed or frightened, they didn't understand what was happening. i feel i have to help people in every possible way to say most people in this mix of shelter have been here since the incursion started and say they are hopeful, they will be able to return to their home. so this is their reality for more than a 130000 russians, forced to flee their homes along the border with ukraine, and the 1st screech of the front lines maybe about 90 kilometers from here. the one consensus to shock and hardship, big lift through across town. katrina and the latino is one of 200 volunteers who come here to help distribute aid. they lost their cheese houses. they lost the old . and i think that many people overcome. uh the deal. not
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that bad, but uh they cried. this facility assist near the 1000 people and gives out nearly 15 tons of 8 every day, with no sign of an end to the fighting between ukrainian and russian forces. they expect to see more looking for help. very soon. door safari out 0. kirk city, russia or you claims president for them as landscape visited, the country's top notary come on in the northeast so me region has to be in the launching pads. so you cranes incursion into russia now and that's the week that is good. helpless has more from keys president below to me is it. let's keep visiting the border region of see me early on says day soon, the board as course and ukrainians have been really advancing in the course region in russia for some time now. today they announced that they took a new settlement, so this pockets ukrainian populace slowly advancing and growing within rusher itself. he went to praise, come on, does then tell them what a great job be done,
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but he reserved the most praise for these commander in chief serious kate, who he said, had done a great job. this has been a great boost, not just for the training people, but also for the ukrainian military who have been receiving nothing but bad news. as russian advances in the east of ukraine, russian forces have pushed back the training defenders again and again and again in the east of the country near port croft. so this was just the news they needed to hear, and just the praise they need to get from the president's colleagues could topless out to 0. chief russia says ukraine has attacked a fairy and a cuss straight ports near crime in the ferry was loaded with up to 30 fuel tanks. laws 5 that broke out as a result could be seen from the beaches of crime. man, like little,
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far to say the fairy sank. and the 1st thing in northern nigeria has kills more than 100 people. local media reports that at least 40000 households have been affected by heavy rains. tens of thousands of heck to the farm land have also been damaged or destroyed, and houses washed away. people in several areas of chicago, a state the board is nisha, a completely cut off. well stools and heavy rain are expected in the coming days. when it just has moved from cancer in to a goal of state of the extent of damage and the galleries must safe uh, earlier we spoke to the local church. if you told us that you have never seen anything like this, and the safety emergency operations are saying that this is not even the peak of the rainy season. we're talking about thousands of farm lands that i've been completely washed away. and the problem now is not what's happened to them immediately the waters were sent because we're talking about life investments and
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fort stalls for many people means of live root completely gone. so the problem produced may not work at the end of the day. and apart from that, that also concerns of the outbreak of what apple diseases you also find community is completely cut off and people don't receive aid as much as they can because beyond us, yeah, there are several communities what you kind of go basically, you can go where i am that, that i know into boats and you cannot even navigate the waters. they continue to rise every now and then one man i interviewed a short while ago. he told me over the last 10 days he has only received a small measure of rice and that's it. uh, sofa. we spoke to emergency officers. yeah. who continued to tell us that yes, they're doing everything they can to accommodate people and also give them food. but that seems not to be you know, what we understand right now is that people who lost their homes. i've been transferred to schools that i know that are currently on vacation. primary schools, buildings on secondary school buildings,
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and one score and resumes. they are expected to reckon the question is, why are they going to health work has ensued on a struggling to contain a color outbreak. the world health organization says around 300 people have died from the disease. so don't civil war has for millions of people from that homes and spunk to humanitarian crisis. and, and one of them has more colorado spreading and eastern to dawn, the health ministries declared an epidemic with hundreds of new cases firmed in recent weeks. health workers do what they can to save lives, but their resources are limited. but finally, what had the doctor's classify, the case and stabilize it. and if it is proven to be a case of infection, treatment begins immediately. if it isn't, the patient returns home and also being stabilized and has the hospital here does not have the capacity to accept. in many cases, millions of people are fleeing the violence of saddam civil war. a boarder regence like a solid and i'll cut their wrists are being overwhelmed. as public services come
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under increasing strain, water and food supplies are becoming contaminated. hastening the spread of disease . flooding has made the situation even worse. color. i cause a severe diarrhea and dehydration and can kill if left untreated look that i mean the, my name's in me was an 80 percent of the diseases we are facing ones related to the deterioration of the environment. for example, diseases that spread by insects diseases because of the water quality. well, disease is related to the lack of purpose, sewage and the unavailability of suitable toilet that the outbreak comes as millions of people are also going hungry. will part of what the un says as well as the world, the worst humanitarian crises sparked by saddam civil war between government forces and the are a south power military group. both sides have promised help get a to those in need, but if case numbers continue to grow contagious diseases and to don may become even
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more difficult to contain. since and well then i'll just be your campaign is cooling for urgent action on plastic pollution after study. sounds like career plastics and human brains research found that very point. 5 percent of the total weight of the brainstorm pulled was plastic and also found the tiny plastic pascals in human kidneys, lungs and bone marrow plastics. in the environment, including the oceans, have long been a source of concern for environment less. that's brand delta bar at pine, katia, he's a senior clinical director of the university of exit to medical school where he teaches public health met. so then joins us now from both the have you with this now we've known for awhile about the presence of mike for plastics in our bodies. but that's being especially uncomfortable about knowing that that you know brains. what does it mean? it is very disconcerting. i agree with you on what it implies is that the
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blood brain barrier that we all have, which we've always followed that the blood brain barrier keeps things out, is not as effective as we thought. and these micro plastics are getting through and then lodging in brains, all humans and the standard logging in brains of humans. i would concur that they're probably logging in, brightens all of the most as well. do we have any idea at this stage of what impacts that might be having? i know that overall we, we know very little about the long term effects of having plastic and not bodies because it's a relatively new phenomenon. but if we're looking at it in our brains how concerning us past it is very concerning, because we don't want these foreign entities large in our brain and then slowly leaching it, chemicals. now at the moment we do not have a direct correlation between the presence of plastics and the brain disorders like
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dementia. having said that in time we may find a possible tentative link that the presence of plastics, certain types of plastics gives you a great the chance of having a brain disorders such as the dimensions. this is of the day, but it is never, that's concerning that and that probably that in all of the mammalian brains as well. the study also found that the brain contains $10.00 to $20.00 times more might create plastics, then was found in other organs. why would that be either the brain blood brain barrier is much more lee or that as of course, the end of the brain is always the engine that is running at full pallet. and therefore it has a large large uh, um, circulation of blood compared to other old and live where it has a lot,
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lot blood to say case, you too. we go. no, we don't know, but i would conjecture that blood supply a very active holes in doing a lot of things. and therefore it's not surprising that these icons which are in the blood that eventually lost in the plot in the brain or the liver. we know that the amount of micro plastics in our environments has been increasing and is continuing to increase how best to avoid them as well. i think we should be careful about the use of plastics. i always say prevention is better than the kill . we have a expensive pollution with b spastic switches that break up and they're going to smaller and smaller particle . and then we inhale that and then they enter our body and then they stay that. so i would say really reduce our caustic use, manufacture and consumption. and the one thing that is also easy for most people to do is uh, for example, plastic water bottles, you ought not to keep one,
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reusing them. and of course, reduce the levels in your code because the diesel stuff levels that you inhale, which will then eventually have some particles which made it on in your body. holden's, you know, making me want to hold my breath right now. don't to by right. hang tiny, a thanks very much for joining us though on this here. all the concerning subjects . a thank you. still ahead, hang on. i'll just there on the british or giving less of that time and money. why?
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house, the you credit you k dropped out of the top 20 most generous countries. the and savvy and thousands of people have been detained off to protesting against the planned opening of a lift in mind, which they say will damage the environment license granted to mining john we are 10 . so it was were a boat 1022 inches to following nationwide process. and the project was we started last month following the government, utah, michael apple as well, or off the days spent in detention and then in prison. the 3 active is so welcomed as heroes. by the support as they were arrested off the blocking the main railway station in bel grade in a protest against the plan opening of alysia mind. they have been demonstration since december active of say they are being intimidated. boss ortiz possible is supporter, squeeze back to more, they sent a tax, inspect it to my company,
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they intimidated my family, they send and emergency response team and full come back here to my parents apartments. i received a call from an unknown number saying how they would find me. so basically i have nothing left to fear. many, several dozen environmental activists had been arrested in the last 2 weeks for protesting against the opening of alysia mine in the door valley. a crucial role material for electric vehicle batteries. they say the mind will contaminate water sources in deplete the green of its own. rio tend to susan environmental damage will be minimal, active of say that being targeted and actually so set them would say that if they found 7 people who will probably be bribed, we will not reveal the names, but we know that, i mean, they came to the police to report that they felt panic off durham, i'm cold for a blockade of the railroad, and he was taken into custody. on august, the 11th the morning off to another protest in the capital bell grade the minister of internal affairs. if he had said that to,
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to announce the arrest of 19 people and said moore would be detained in the following days. fully to the police are working on identifying other people as well . criminal charges and misdemeanor charges will be filed for all the crime scene falls to the but of the ministry of internal affairs did not respond to elders. there was questions about the arrest activists. we also summoned by questioning for legibly calling for acts of violence in breach of savvy as constitution lawyer. i don't know of your shop, it's says the arrests, all political safety. definitely people in all of these arrests, choose confiscation of phones and so on. we did not receive any notice of anyone being found guilty, nor any proof or explanations of those arrested was sent to prison under an emergency procedure, but have since been released, although free for now, nikolai, the stage, yvonne village and you have jenny julian, do me 3 of it will soon face trial in court,
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but they say they are under ted mike level, which is era kind of the government has intervene to stop an unprecedented rail, shut down less than a day off for it began. is owed to the country's top to well companies to resume services and to enter into arbitration with unions to stuff all the disputes. workers have demanded back to working hours and improved benefits. the disruption. holt is all freight shipments within the country and to the us. it's not my job to pick sides here. we're interested solely and making sure that the labor relations in this country remain on assure funding. and that this very unusual situation where we have 2 national railways, who have suspended operations, and that, that situation not be prolonged, unduly, the people in the u. k. are less charitable than they used to be. that's according
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to the well giving index. one of the biggest surveys tracking donations and volunteering globally. well, there are you because the world 6 largest economy giving by individuals has full and push the country out of the top 20 down to 22nd place on the index for the giga has moved from london. in a world of abundance and won't, there were those who have and those who do not. but in times of prices, those you can lend a hand often do whether it's natural disasters, such as the 2023 us quick and morocco produced an 800 percent rise and donations within the country. a conflict that also so a rise of a to countries such as in crane, whether it's down to a deterioration of social safety nets. as a result of policies opened up, makes many step in with a state has founded this see the 5 most generous countries are indonesia, kenya,
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single, pull the gambia and side area that's based on donations volunteering, and how often people help the strange up the u. k. is among the top 10 financial donors to charities in the world, but only a quarter of people. polls said that they volunteered to help others putting it at number 22 on the world, giving index a. it's part of a trans during which the u. k. has study reduced it's spending on overseas age as part of the previous government's policies. the new government has promised to reverse that. but that's also down to the you case, own financial constraints. i don't think it's particularly surprising when you think cook some of the social and economic challenges that everyone's been dealing with with the cost of living. what i do think is important is we put a policy level lead to find really effective ways. how do we need to knock down the barriers and support people to get more of a full in the u. k,
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his generosity may reflect a relative pass and of economic decline. there's still a sense that contributing time or money to a charity is very much positive, being in the society, especially when there's a local need. where i moved to south side move london. i said we're going to close the library together and we, we now run it as a community library about done traveling. done a couple of uh, uh, it's like any events. so photography betrays quite a bit of money. i see a trustee attached which helps to exercise to women phone little women and women with multiple disadvantages. so i get my time and helping that way. well, the index reflects so, so the increasing soft power of nations growing wealth such as china. there was also a need for most people to get back to those who need it most for the greater good.
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so did i go out to 0 funding? come by the is celebrating the return of looted antiquities taken during some of the countries must have been at times in a box of trend once called nice countries guessing back the also fax for the a call reports and this solemn sir, money into non pen cambodia. is smiling statues returned home for the 1st time in decades. prime minister hung money like flowers, to honor these ancient hindu and boldest artifacts to the government. considers that the return of antiquities to cambodia, the rightful owner is a show of respect. they are not only showing the morality by promoting the value of the culture of a nation, but also preserving the culture of humanity as well. among the 70 artifacts, 14 have been returned from new york metropolitan easy and the rest from private collections. their return marks the latest in a series of relics repatriated from western institutions. after years of
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campaigning, nigeria, i secured the return of several vin in bronzes 1st looted by britain in the 19th century. in december, the netherlands returned hundreds of artifacts taken from she, blanca and indonesia. those are just some among hundreds of steel, the speed of ancient treasures held by former colonial powers. most of these come voting treasures polluted smuggled and sold off during the break reign of the commander roost. government in the 1970s. and the return is another powerful reminder of what was lost during a genocide. the killed an estimated 2000000 people in the country. sort of piece is the most important thing, not only for normal human beings, but also for the family of the gods. we also need peace, the decades on from the countries darkest periods can bodya has finally recovered
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some remnants of its golden era. pretty a car, which is here. you can find pine people on our website. the address devices out there a dot com is not fit for me at laura kyle full. this is out the back in a moment of today's the a nation in coast and it boots our civil war, the resistance taking more and more territory, the winning, they found one and the see how soon we saw it to the power, but into chaos and use threats has emerged under the fcc then what became pump parts of the region. cyber crime was taking place in new i. you certainly indicates that it represents one of the largest prime hops in the world. the full reports, the pads before the gateway to me in march on now, just to euro and the still in the shrink them. documenting 2 decades in one of the
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most in baffled coolness of the globe. child of afghanistan, 20 years of war follows me from boyhood to manhood. a life that has no no peace shaped by hardship, resilience and adventure. the unique zoom, the cap just the complex in a way it has never been seen before. witness on tuesday or at work in that confection. we store my c, u. p. in the sun. she can you connect to the front of the business that's being in the village. you've done bunker for a 140 s dash sharp is all what was once the bustling high street. they used to be about 40 shops along the streets. now there are only feet, businesses left japan to cheat the landmark last year with the number of its citizens being over 18 topping 10 percent of the population for the 1st time, which is one village still holds the record for having the oldest inhabitants. the
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neighboring town is kinda its luckiest thanks to the discovery of a dinosaur. footprint. it revealed the rich source of fossils on which its bill to visit a center with a thriving to restrain sugar yuki hopes the place can be turned around. it would be nice to have pulled life we to and he says, have full house, easily to put nights. the vicious cycle of death and displacement in garza is where the forces kill at least $47.00 palestinians. tens of thousands of people are again, forced to move the around or kyle, this is out. is there a life window? how also coming up? kind of a high so set to make the biggest speech as

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