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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  September 11, 2024 1:00pm-2:01pm AST

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sally says it was, and he's the people who allow us into their lives. they gave me 10 to minus. he asked me to tell the story. the, [000:00:00;00] the, you're watching the news, our life from headquarters, and i'll find daddy navigate. here's what's coming up in the next 60 minutes. a heated showdown, donald trump and campbell, a harris face off in their 1st presidential debates with the economy emigration on divorce, and the main issues. and john henry and in detroit were we were say to one the palestinians in gauze,
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i pray for their loved ones. 13 members of the family are among dozens tools and is released strikes more than a 1000000 people are left to displace the north east through nigeria. floodwaters have spun dangerous reptiles into some communities. i'm ottoman tests the ins and bob way over this is that be behind me is lake cree by which both countries shape. i'll tell you why severe drought is a big problem. to have a nice with the sports, including defeats the, to south american footballs, how houses argentina, at least she wanted to columbia. well qualifying, and brazil abuse. and by power wise for the last and 5 matches the color we begin this news. our in the us were both donald trump and kimberly harris
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are declaring victory after an a b. c. news presidential debate on tuesday nights. the democratic and republican nominees squared off for 90 minutes. and as she did debates in philadelphia, they faced off on a range of subjects including israel's, were on gauze of abortion on the economy. it's the 1st time that trump and harris has met in person. kimberly how could begins are coverage. a couple of harris septic bases, their initial handshake was somewhat awkward with comma la harris, appearing nervous at 1st soon found her stride less attacking donald trump for what the bible administration inherited. donald trump left us the worst public health epidemic in a century. donald trump left us the worst attack on our democracy since the civil war. and what we have done is clean up donald trump's mess. the hair is also hit, the former president, hard on his abortion stands
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a critical issue for millions of voters. i think the american people believe that certain freedoms, in particular, the freedom to make decisions about one's own body should not be made by the government. the place her tab seem to trigger the former president, especially when she claimed people start leaving his rallies early out of exhaustion and boredom. people don't leave my rallies. golding trump, to appear angry and unstable, was the strategy harris used throughout the debate? will answer the question on emigration. truck mused in the city of springfield, ohio figure this nation migrant started reading people's pads for it's a claim that city denies. they're eating the dogs, the people that came in there, eating the catch, they're eating their eating the pets of the people that lives there. and this bill, trump wasn't able to hit back and harris on one of her biggest vulnerabilities was
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who was that her policies keep change a half and don't represent the change. and voters say as they want, everything that she believed 3 years ago. and 4 years ago is out the window. she's going to my philosophy now. in fact i was going to send her a mega hat. cala harris's campaign has extended an invitation to donald trump for a 2nd presidential debate in october. the trump has responded that hill. think about it. kimberly helped get al jazeera philadelphia voters held watch parties in battleground states across america, john henry, and has more from detroit where there was mixed reactions are in heavily democratic detroit, there was little doubt who they think won the debate. i saw her just to him and he's, he got caught up in a couple of stories and he really didn't do good at all. she definitely has
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shown himself to be of quality and experience to me. and i just hope everybody else thought the foolishness that came from the opponent, who never answered a single question. do you think she's going to walk away with more support after this debate? definitely more support and i'm also going to go out and work hard for her. at a debate watch party hosted by the detroit association of black organizations, the crowd cheered for cumberland harris in june that donald trump is one of the handful swing states that tends to decide american elections. michigan is closely divide largely democratic in the cities and heavily republican in the vast rural regions with the business connection type, rigorous or yes and it is he's doing that. as michigan goes so often goes the nation. donald trump won the state in 2016 and the national election. joe biden did
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the same in 2020. this year po, suggest the race is closer here than ever. in both are fired. the view, the debate was dramatically different in trump country 300 kilometers away in pittsburgh, pennsylvania. we were waiting for kamala harris to come out and talk to the american citizens for 3040 days. now, when she finally did talk to still talks in privacy, i think we did pretty good. not a students, i think across the u. s. there were still undecided voters at the end of the 90 minute, based off with a fair amount of head shaking. and i rolling in between with fans of both candidates, found reason to claim victory. john henry and l g 0, detroit a. okay, let's get more on the debate now with natasha le instead, who is a political scientist and the professor of us government at the university of essex joining us from coal,
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chester and the u. k. thanks for your time. so let's look at the big picture here. i mean, it was a high stakes debate for harris. she'd not been on this type of stage before where his trump has been democrats seemed to be pleased with her performance. what was the takeaway for, you know, the democrats should be pleased to me. it was a really disastrous performance for trump and the moment calling harris took the stay in you. she went over to shake his hand. she demonstrated that she was in control. she was dictating to the prosecutor making the case. she had in a corner, she had all kinds of attack, whether it be on his record on managing co bid or his role in january 6 with the fact that he was a convicted felon. and if he's already mentioned, she did a good job getting under his skin pretty early on in the debate, pivoting from a question on integration to talk about his crowd size and the fact that his rallies were just all the people were leaving. and, and that really got to him, he was roused from that point on. and the debate was pretty much over because he
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couldn't get back his composure. and so he starts going off on different tangents and nothing really, really landed for him. and so she was able to, to hit him where it hurt many, many different times. i think that was one of the key strategies that she had going into this debate was to try to get under the skin. but the thing is how, how does that resonate with the, with his, his sort of base and his friend base because like one of the claims that trump repeated was, it was a fact check post debates. and it turns out to be false, of course, is that the haitian immigrants in ohio have abducted in it and their neighbors pets saying all of this without providing any evidence, i mean, do these types of claims resonate with his base. and so the one thing we know about is pages doesn't seem to matter what he says, right? he does use b is just completely resilient. it just hasn't much whether he was convicted of crimes, he's a felon or whether or not he uh,
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it says something is completely out landis or sound incoherent. his support base does not waiver and we, we've also seen this with pulling from 2016 that those that supported trump didn't really think that the debate matters very much. so for him, the stakes are kind of, well, if people already know who he is and his base isn't gonna change, he's still trying to get an attract more voters as she and it's not clear what he did last night. that was going to attract more voters. i mean, she definitely made the case that, that he is on presidential, that using coherence. and so he'll, he'll have to try to convince those that are undecided still of that, that he would be able to make good decisions. that's exactly it, i mean that is the question. did you see anything from the debates that will help change the minds of these undecided voters as well? a recent new york times full revealed that 28 percent of americans still don't feel
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like they know cala harris very well. and i don't know if she did enough to clarify what her policies where she was specific enough to to talk to those points. but she was very presidential, she definitely appeared to be in control of that already mentioned. and she cast out on his ability to, to reading for him policy, talking about having him for, for lunch. really putting him in a corner on his support for, for russia in the war in ukraine, saying that his own military advisors called him a disgrace. so she did about a good a job as she could in, in casting doubt on his abilities. and i think that's why she's up for a 2nd debate. well, that might give her the chance to clarify what her policies are for those last undecided voters that feel like they need to know little bit more about how she stands on specific issues. how does this debate impact the next few weeks ahead of the election in november?
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and so she had been doing really well in the pools. and then after the dinner credit convention, she didn't get much of the balance. and then the pull started to really try and so i think she's hoping that this is going to give her a little bit of a boost, particularly in the swing states where, where things just got incredibly tightened and became a, just an impossible to predict what was going to happen, she's hoping to ride some momentum with the booze in the falls and continue to get trump on the defensive. when he is on the defensive, he gets in a corner and then he starts saying ridiculous things like the, the clint mentioned that people are, immigrants are eating cats and dogs. these are the kind of things that are going to resonate in voters. and she's trying to make the case, the trouble and cares about himself. and that she cares about people like you and me like everyday americans. that's the one area that she's doing better than trump is. and she's also trying to cast her so as not be incumbent, but the challenge here because that's another important thing in the selection that most american voters want change. okay,
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thank you so much for speaking to us from the u. k. thanks for having me. the . well, the to us presidential candid as present a barrier views on the were on gaza during the debates. this is what they have to say. israel has a right to defend itself. we would and how it does so matters because it is also true far too many innocent palestinians have been killed. children, mothers, she h is real at the same time in her own way. she hates the arab population because the whole place is good to get blown up. arabs. jewish people are working mostly to my rob sunshine, who's the senior is real analyst with the international crisis group. joining us from tel aviv, thanks for your time with us. and i'll just share a look,
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a lot of people are saying that with respect to foreign policy and is really both candidates seem to argue on who supports israel the most. during the debates, what do you think the difference will be between a harris and a trump presidency on israel along garza? well, the role of israel is domestic because the american politics has for quite a while now. and certainly since that is true term been to kind of weaponized both israel and anti semitism for each candidates benefit in terms of what we expect. i mean, we currently have a disaster on the ground here with israel's ongoing on slot and gaza with no n game, and no us administration using real pressure to change the situation and the regional war risk of regional war happening. and i'm not sure either candidate is really prepared or, or able or willing to use political cap a little to change that situation. obviously we have to wait and see what happens with the trump. uh, you know,
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in some ways we have no idea of what could happen. the keys also said similar to what harris said last night at the end, such a is around is to wrap it up. so, you know, for all we know, he could uh, accelerate the end of the war more quickly than the harris administration at this point. harris and trump are both pro israel candidates who have not said that they would use leverage or pressure to change is really actions, right. in the 24 hours, what we saw out of israel is that israel admitted to killing an american and the occupied westbank. and the bombs that the us apply to israel are killing people in gauze as well as the occupied westbank. but this issue was notably absent in the debates and neither candidate was asked about this. are you surprised? what would you have liked to hear about this? and i'm not surprised, you know, the issue of what's happening in the west bank and the ongoing occupation and israel's open agenda and to continue to deep and it's control. and next the westbank has been the case for quite a long time. i'm sure there is
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a constituency of people in america who would like to hear paris talked about that . trump, i, you know, i don't know if they really want to hear trump talk about it. but the fact of the matter is that i don't see a shift by either administration at this point. if we look at how harris has talked so far about it, the one difference we can see is that she acknowledges that there are high, posted in casualties. that is certainly an improvement from biden. but again, i don't see the political will right now in either camp being very different from what we see today. look over in the u. s. i mean, the polls suggest this appointment for the biden's administration when it comes to the gaza award. did harris's messaging at the debate signal that she's trying to win back the air of american voters? and did she show any resident reading the readiness to depart from biden's dance and your opinion? i don't, i don't think so. i don't see a big change. i mean, if she calls for an end to the war, which is
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a little bit different than call buying for a ceasefire or a hostage deal. you know, that kind of rhetoric is not something we've heard that much for binding. and certainly not. you don't hear that very much in israel, you hear about the need for a hostage deal. so i do think that that is in a rhetorical change from biden, and as i said, the, the issue and bringing a passion posted in casualties. otherwise i don't think so, i think she's trying to win an election. and the big question will be if she does win the election if and what she would be willing to do to pressure as well, to change the policies and just a final and brief thoughts from you on nothing. yahoo and has coalition and who their preferred candidate would be and why? i mean, let's not forget a lot of people say nothing, you know, who benefits it tremendously from a trump presidency. so is he waiting it out for another potential term presidency before agreeing to any ceasefire? or it seems to be the kind of the notion here in israel that that's and yeah,
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who is not interested in the ceasefire. and he's definitely not going to change his position in the coming months. and he's waiting for the election. there is, of course, you know, it's everybody understands and it's him. yeah. who is, is a republican, he likes trump. trump gave him a lot of what he wanted in terms of settlements and station. and recognizing is rose basically a composition of land through for us. so you could expect that to continue at the same time that some yahoo and trump since, but have had some followings out. and i think the reliance that, that to me i who puts on trump, giving him whatever he wants to be a little bit off base will have to see. but i think it's pretty clear nothing. yeah . who is hoping and banking on a trump presidency in 2025 to help him continue his agenda of full on control from the river to the sea. okay, we thank you so much. my rob is i'm trying for speaking to us from tennessee. thank you very much. now in gaza wave if is really
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a tax. i've killed at least 20 palestinians since dawn on wednesday and 13 for from one family. they were killed in the southern city of fine eunice officer and is really air strikes, targeted their home violent gunfire and arts and re shelling were reported in central guys on that's where the state off, comp and, and put a refugee camps were head a tiny muscle joining us from data by reference central garza honey. what more are you hearing about this and particularly about that attack that killed 13 members of one family during this is such a tragic, a story of the family, really displaced in many parts of central and what part of hon. you and, and city. and what we learned from that very close family member, the only surviving family member of the whole family that was killed in over not a talks and isn't honey. and this is one of their daughters who was a really displaced in what from part of it,
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of con you and is mainly another loss of that because of the many people have been pushed into that area. she decided to go to stay with her family who are really display as inside a residential building that they've been seeking children and protection. and it because their home in eastern honda and it was completely destroyed. and the initial weeks of this genocide, the worst she arrived yesterday in the evening until overnight at that, talk that past midnight along with her children, the 13 people from one families. and this is only an example of how many families that were killed in the past months, entire families, sometimes a 2 generation to 3 generations in one single ad pods, you know, look, rated completely out of city and families are the core of the social fabric of the socialist structure and from the, from the systematic patterns of attacks and family is really military is conducting what seems what seems to be at the something that will posit change in the
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demography of the gaza strip. just within the past few hours, just a couple hours ago, another attack and they were stripe targeted, a home in western part of the city in but i'm off the roof. i city and the initial reports we received from people to close to the area that the house is, was full of people, including a whole family display sally, the silver ring inside the house. these examples keep repeating itself over and over. but more recently, in the past couple months, these attacks are happening without any prior warning whatsoever, which means people are inside their homes or inside there's tens or evacuation centers. and they're being attacked without any warning without being given the opportunity to seek filters elsewhere for safety. thank you so much money for that reporting from god. so one is really soldier has been critically injured after being rammed by a truck near the settlement of give us us off and they occupied westbank. the is
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really army says the palestinian driver was taken to hospital after being shot. emergency services are at the scene. need that, but i am joining us from data and the blonde that's near it. i'm a lot in the occupied westbank and is that what we're going to tell us about this roaming incident as well that he let me show you what we're looking at. this is the scene that these rated forces, say, is a rodman attack. and the vehicle is still there, it's a petrol vehicle and we see it's being surrounded by is really soldiers. and it seems like they're trying to take it out of the sea right now after what they say is that the driver running into a soldier who is in a post over the know the soldiers did not used to be here in the, let's say, past 10 years or so, but after an attack that happened in the past few years, we see and is really a soldier who is almost there. 247, it point thing has gone towards palestinians and it occurs that they're moving by.
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and now we see this incident that these really forces those say is an attack. now palestinians are also saying, you know what, if the driver has just lost control over the vehicle. he's a 58 year old. and these really forces have rammed, and a storm. his village of the 4th, which is between the law and jerusalem. and if indeed this is, has proven to be an attack, then the weeks like these really forces to be the monitoring his house. now we are talking also about this area which is near the illegal is really supplements. so this is a road that is often used by is ready to be settlers. and this is supplement that you can see now is built on palestinian lines. now what palestinians are fearing now is that these rated forces is, or is that these really stuck to their surrounding this area might be committing attacks against palestinians. this is something we often see as part of what's
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called here as revenge attacks against palestinians. so that's. 5 the villages need advice of getting up force that the attacks that have already that in been on the rise since the war started. uh, weird palestinians are telling you this is ready. settlers enjoy impunity as they are often held by these re the army who accompany them when they read and storm palestinian villages here and the occupied west banks and the that thank you so much will keep us across the story. need that. but i am reporting from the occupied was thanks, it will go to southern 11 on now where there has been heavy showing the the is really armies as it struck 30, has been the launchers and military infrastructure overnight. several villages and towns in the south were attacked near the border with israel. the latest round or showing comes to is really defense ministry of go on says his country is moving its
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focus away from gaza until 11 on the it isn't much. are you in, in southern lebanon so you know, so what's been, this has been the response to these attacks as well as by law has since launched a number of operations on military positions in northern israel. so the tit for top exchange of fire continues overnight. they were heavy and expensive, the strikes across, so their 11 on huge explosions were heard as of late as well, has intensified. it's a, it's strikes across southern lebanon on what it appears to be doing. its strategy is to degrade the military capabilities of hezbollah, not just along the border, but a few kilometers deep up to the little tiny river, which really runs through a side to 11 on to the border with its deepest points being approximately 20 a kilometer. so as round intensifying, it strikes it's officials as well,
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increasingly using inflammatory rhetoric or making warnings and threats that they intend to move the focus from garza to 11 on with this really prime minister benjamin. nothing. yeah. who a few days ago, telling him to saying that he instructed the army to prepare to change the situation along the border. now this is rhetoric that we have been hearing for in, in, in recent months now. but as well, maybe using this as a form of pressure in order to get hezbollah to agree to pull back from the border . but the 11 on front is, is really linked to what is happening in garza and has below reiterating its commitment that it's will continue. firing app is really military positions as long as the war on garza and so no diplomatic initiative can achieve progress. so in the interim, what we are expected is that this forensic escalation will continue. this really has been the nature of this conflict, but many expect to really more intense confrontations in the hours and days to come . ok, santa for the reporting for measurements, you know,
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thank you. of the most coast as its forces have recaptured around 10 settlements from ukraine's military and restless, cursed regions. a russian commander said that happened in august gave launch the surprise incursion into russian territory on august. the 6th, more than 2 years after moscow invaded ukraine, you'll yourself, of all of us joining us from moscow. so what more are you learning about this counter offensive? so basically what we're here now is more like the news published by an official ministry of defense channel and actually saying that the counter offensive had begun that in the coast region. the reports like marines of the black sea fleets have captured 6 to craig. i talk, i've talked
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a croft during account based counter offensive and the course, but also there is a number of i'm very find reports from local sources close to the ministry of defense, say about russian games in the course, granger and i also try to come on the up to you hello, dean of said, the russian troops have captured several supplements in the course region, but he didn't specify how many of them oh, which ones. and some say that the situation on the left flank of the korean on for his group in the course, the regent has worse than the the defense ministry has transported um with vehicles across the same rate by the end, the number of other rivers. also, the school districts and some of the regions and also have been liberated as they say from the ukrainian forces at places like or dave cross, ms up. know, yeah, i think trust cotton's,
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a number of other assessments have been captured by the russian forces regains rather by the russian citizens. so why did it take russia more than a month to start fighting for its territories and to re getting them of the russia has made many attempts to retaliate, a being cousin of the premium main to the coast or region of cruise as since it cuts a as you said a month ago, but it failed to push them back. now it seems like russia has accumulated enough full, so just trying find when the ukrainians percentage, the cost regional know was the 6. there were many voices. assuming that's now russian would pull out some of its full says from how to calls and don't ask directions, and that would relieve some tension in those areas. but that never happens. and the budget piece and said that,
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that was out of the question instead of russia made some gains in don't ask and that it's still to be seen how this new round of events is going to play out really . but we know that you're a secretary of states and we're just for an office that cheap i arriving in kids as a, as a couple of ukraine today on wednesday. so your 6th trip stays on sunday, blinking on british foreign secretary. david's law me, i'm making joins visits to ukraine, allegedly, to discuss further support for ukraine's defense against russia. and also the visit comes at mid report at washington may live restrictions on kids. he gives use of little range american missiles to strike russians, however, trans even us present joe biden can find that it was being discussed in the white house. ok, it's criminal, of course, once again says that at it talks about the red lines and it's going to retaliate. thank you. you're thank you for that reporting for moscow of a vision. workers have
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gone on striking the canyon capital to protest against a government plan to lease the airports to an indian company. hundreds of travelers have been left stranded at night, rubies international airport, after flights were delayed or canceled. stuff save the controversial plan with the identity group will lead to mass layoffs and it'll worse and working conditions. malcolm web is joining us from nairobi at the airport. i believe, malcolm, what are you seeing there? well, there are a few people here to know more than hundreds us trying to do to this time in a closed unlocks. let's take a look around for hundreds of passengers here trying to reach destinations live at your asia and africa. uh we know where to go, but the work is here say that jobs are risk because of trying the government's plan to lease the apple to
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a dining room facility. yes. the government initially denied that there was any do taking place. lead documents showed that there is a deal on the table and those leaks do show that the company can really get a shake contracts with workers and that it can employ for them where it goes to the people working. it feel that that job's that are on the threat, but they don't do any critics. but this proposed deal in anti government protests that took place across kenya in june and july, against the plan tax increases and against widespread corruption. a one of those demonstrations processed as tried to march. he will say, protesting against that deal with a donnie group that they say is going to be a deal for kenyans. okay, thank you. welcome. i have a forwarding from the airport and i will be the still ahead on the, i'll just there is our why protest against israel's world garza and the arms industry has australia,
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2nd largest city on edge shooting out test. we looked at why some schools in finland are ditching screens for pay for the and england. captain harry came scores a couple of goals to campbell from landmark night for the striker. gemma will have a nice story and sports the matter. we haven't even had the time like for knox yet, but tell europe that there was this to and quite quickly from most of the son to quite a lot of right, significant thunderstorms along this line. and then more consistent rain coming in from the atlantic drug with the else still halting places, but not many. in montenegro, 36.3 is 8 above the average. that's not going to last because as the clouds come
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across here, the full cost, the rest of wednesday, he's robert or well, particularly romania, but montenegro $70.00 to dine. but then this will tell them to live is, is bringing much cooler airing ramp against the out. so that's going to to essentially, i think, to snow on the 9th and tops and use much cooler air to virtually every, not absolutely everywhere but virtually if it were the cost, the orange tops suggesting heavy rain in slovenia and pops eventually. i'm property croatia, vienna's full cost reflects the change now has been up in the cities in canada and then be dropped down to 13 on thursday down to about 10 for friday as i say 3 or 4 continuous rainy days. yeah, i'm just 24 to give you a comp trust. right. jumping down to north africa now we still got rating 40 occasionally in the middle of us. uh huh. that rare event. but the majority of heavier in is for the science that still is producing feds in nigeria and adjoining countries as
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the, as the world economy. those struck those with a strong result. indonesia is where such resolve about the right place for your business to get off the brakes. otherwise with the strategic downstream industry on decline,
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your better tomorrow. so in the, [000:00:00;00] the here with the news our analogies 0 here at the top stories. the u. s. presidential candidates, donald trump and counselor harris have held their 1st and possibly only debate of their campaigns. the televised showdown took place in philadelphia, pennsylvania, a swing state that could prove pivotal on an election day on november. the 5th one is really sold her husband critically injured off to being round by a truck near the west bank in legal settlements of given us off the as really
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aren't assess the palestinian truck driver has been taken to the hospital after being shots. emergency services are asked to cease in gaza. the wave of is really attacks of killed at least 20 palestinians and so on. on wednesday, 13 were from one family. they were killed. fine is really here strike on their home in the southern city of fun. eunice, more than 30 people, had been arrested in the australian city of melbourne following violent confrontations between police on for testers opposing israel's war. on garza, the, the demonstrations are being held outside in major weapons convention activists say they want more people to be aware of the role of the defense industry in the killing of civilians and gaza. marrying for ruki as an australian senator and as the deputy of the green party,
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she says australia needs to sanction israel to stop its arms exports their. that is why it is being allowed to run riot is right. is being allowed to commit genocide with fully impunity and unfortunately you'll scream, government is one of those governments that is allowing this to happen and not taking any concrete action. we have seen a lot of follow with that sort of the stream government we have seen had ringing. we have seen phone calls, but none of them actually make any difference. so we want to be of state and government to take some concrete action to impose sanctions. i'm to actually stop old military exports to is right and stop the 2 way straight to is right. and we, we keep pushing for that. i think the australian government should take a leaf out of the u. k, who is suspended some spring trade to is right. but they have that they he using i'm and i'm not moving at this point in time. and that makes the australian
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government complicit in this rise genocide of palestinians. more than a 1000000 people have been displaced by flooding in north eastern nigeria, a collapse down on least an overflow of water and bore no states. emergency workers say some bodies have been retrieved as rescue operations continue, homes, roads on power lines, have all been submerged, and deadly. reptiles have been swept into some communities. the united nation says it's my degrees, worst flooding in 3 decades. and 3 is a magical re northeast nigeria. ashland update us on the situation and what you've been seeing. the weather. and i said yesterday, there was a half a 1000000 people raised quite easy to use us this morning. we understand that the ticket has risen to 1200000 according to an official production on emergency management agency. we spoke to earlier today and he says the number just likely to increase right now. more than half the cities underwater,
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we understand the rotors are receding, however, would be received in the water. we see the arrival of more and more people displaced by this disaster. a that has been happening here since yesterday. when this disaster stopped, it was the help that these people are looking for is not forthcoming. this is exactly the situation is what in one of the areas such as that where thousands of the internally displaced persons have been a gold t. as we know, it's only individuals awful agents is coming in with 2 supplies to help these people. the vice president was here yesterday and he promised on lots of help all the help, the former state needed to help with the people displaced by this disaster. however, what we're seeing right now is the help has got into these people that most people are sleeping in the open. i remember this is the peak of the rainy season. yeah. in
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northeastern, i did it. and we also talking about thousands of people who are been propped by the waters in the old city all my degree, simply because they are unable to come out of their homes. we don't know exactly how many they are, but what we know at the moment is that the officials here are very talk to you about the issue of casualties yesterday i was the people upside, but they're not willing to talk about how many people on the sides in front of people who are looking for medical assistance when are themselves flooded as we speak. so what we're seeing here as like a menu of the comes to visit. the apartment is up to 3. okay, we do apologize. uh, we have lost our connection with my diseases reporting for us or for my degree,
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but we can continue the conversation on what's going on there with thomasville, who's the nigeria country director of the norwegian refugee council joining us from my degree as well. thanks for your time. in terms of your response as an our region refugee council, what are the priorities right now that you've outlines and are having to deal with the year? so for the e counselor side, you've been in by the board for many years working on this last few years already we're seeing exacerbated our ability to there's function boss that people work with as well as new displacement. so i have this morning for 50 dollar people where you can result in that area. so we're looking at video. yes. for the people with no money to buy the thing they lease with her shelter with the water and sanitation was our correspondence. f. mad was just telling
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us that the, the government has now revised up the number of displaced people. it was 1000000 and now he's saying it's a 1200000. do you think in your assessment, could that number still be an underestimate or yeah, i'm outside the numbers in the assessment. somebody you're in the government, there's still a grey area. it's a bit too early to sort of figure on hold owners of people this way. i think we will see, and there's a lot of people who we have to buy the it's out there now they should a lot of people living there for this loan because the people suffering currently just place. we're looking at you ever just wondering what you're talking about 230000 in immediate need of assistance and that much larger population is impacted as well. of course, which is the government is reflecting. okay,
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so what help are those are people getting right now? i mean, when you speak about immediate assistance, what is needed right away and what are they getting? yeah, there were course finalization and people who are, you know, immediately jobs they need help, emergency responders. you know, people are stuck in their houses. they need immediate assistance in terms of what we can do about the international community can do is to really look at people who are housed in the place to sleep. is to be able to help provide clean water, extra rides, invitations or diseases. the jobs for really starting to think about a few after the immediate need of food and water and sanitation and starting to be met is that we're concerned about more diseases and will come next as well as learning will use, you know, the flood is receding just good news, the supply chains will be rapidly reestablished and have
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a much more robust response can move forward. ok, thomasville, thank you for speaking to us from my degree. yeah, thank you. a zombie is experiencing one if it's worth drought. in decades, low water levels at lake hurry by means the country cannot produce enough electricity to meet its needs. the energy ministry size, the power plant it's feeds, could shut down within weeks, harm a task. joining us now from co reba it's on the border with zambia. so what are the government's plans to try to stop the power cuts here? well, zambia ends in broadway are trying to upgrade the coal fired power stations or build new ones. they also told them to independent pop producers trying to encourage them to invest more in solar energy and, and feed the electricity into the national grid. to give you an idea of just how low these water levels this is pods of lake reba it over there across the water
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that area or used to be under water. now look at it and you see those animals over the, those he posed there in the water a short while ago they came out to the basking in the sun. the problem with that is those animals are coming closer and closer to communities where people live looking for food and water because the droughts has taken away what they used to eat, what they used to drink. and what happens is they start as coming to constitute people, and overtime people, i'd be in the test, the lowest levels of also being affecting the fishing community. these people here said the on catching as much fish as they used to, but it tricity is a major concern for both countries and people. they also struggling to cope with constant paul cuts. the school computer lab doesn't get use much anymore. people in zambia are going without paul for more than 20 hours every day known as no shipping. we have to pump out what happened to attend
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a meeting to the class and, and the toilets and everything. on the school side. one day we had a terrible incident where because of load chevy, we just didn't have enough of what and there was quite a bit of trauma and stuff really bad as to say, we need to do something more investing and reliable supplies. electricity is no longer a luxury so the cost of living cost to reboot down provides hydro electric power to a station other than the inside of the lake in the north. and to this and bobby and 5 on the south. the time, most of the country's electricity, the shoreline used to be here. now it's over, they want to label the lake re,
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but have dropped dramatically because of the drought, boats, and ball, but ends up being either late generate power. low tables means a pretty the supplies having drastically cut into bobby, that means daddy blackouts sometimes up to 18 hours for yes. the oh nino with us and nominate has cause droughts and heat waves in is amazing region. now lake reba is shrinking. it's worrying a lot of people have them with us out there. tony. bye bye. when one doesn't have power for most of the day. this is how they closed. it means you wake up maybe sometimes at midnight. i know closed because that's the only time the power comes back on. then bobby says they have maybe until december, before things get really die away. they may not have enough water to run, they pop on. so it is a major crisis for both countries. and everyone wants some kind of solution to this
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image of christ is kind of defecting both zambia and zimbabwe. okay. however, thank you so much for that reporting from zimbabwe protest or as a storm mexico senate forcing the suspension of a debate on judicial reforms they chanted traders as they entered the chamber. the demonstrators say the proposals would harm the independence of the judiciary. judges, including those up a supreme court would be elected by popular vote. under the reform pope frances has arrived in singapore on the last leg of this tour of asia on the pacific. the pontiff is expected to meet fellow adjusted with clergy during his visit. this is the 1st paper trip and nearly 4 decades to a single poor home to less than half a 1000000 roman catholics visits through the region,
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including engine use up coupling to jenny on these 2 more time for an update on the sports things. here's drama. thank you 3 to have the power houses of south american football argentina, and brazil have both stuff with defeats and world cup, qualifying the current well champions, argentina and last, 2 columbia, that seem who they beats. it's a list of corporate america in july. this time, argentina, well without that and just cops in legal, messy and when behind away from home, when home is rodriguez? yes and mascara. argentina equalised early in the 2nd house, at least passed from rodriguez was punished by nicholas gonzales and level things up. but what are you guys made up for? it's a ceiling 8 to one when full columbia with a penalty. is that 1st victory i brought in to you? this is 2092, breaking towards the end of june. escape. it's always important to play against the team's the forces to raise our game. we already played them in a match that was very important for us. unfortunately, we weren't able to win the copper america, but we approached this one lucky it was another final. and there's nothing better
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than beating the big rivals as full for sale. they were missing the engine name, all but still started with 3 around woodridge strikers against 5. why? and this is julia andric and rodriguez could not school today, and they went down one male at diego, gomez, the and he goes to the highs and the 20th minutes for zillow. i only have 3 shots on pockets and slumped to the full defeats in the last 5 qualifying match. the you watch the most, it was a key. i think we have to work. we understand that we need a lot more to reach the level we will want. it's not simple, it's not easy. but we have to intensify so that we can quickly find that path for sale off fist in the standings, following that the fates argentina lead the way that just 2 points clear of columbia, who are the only on the beach and team the top 6. guess what's about 6 spots for the walk up? there was still
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a 10 games left to play. the usa team has hired ritz say, push it to, you know, as the new coach, the origin to me and it will lead the team to the 2026 woke up, which will be hosted by the usa, mexico and canada purchasing who has previously coached top club sides, the toner power, sasha, ma, am chelsea assess much and johns is expected to be a friendly against panama, mid oak table to us counseling christian imperialistic is hoping for. just say that will bring a culture that is willing to fight. so a team that's last 3 of the last 4 matches, due to sick, helped us to consider all with new zealand and a friendly on tuesday, scoring in the 2nd off for his 31st international goal. but new zealand substitutes vend wayne grabs license equalize that will be a bit of a switch. who is this one to secure a one tool for support makes way to get sent through to england. cops
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in hurricane described it as the passage nights as he mocks his one hundreds of parents for his country by scoring to goes before that nations big match with finland cane was presented with a golden cap for by franklin pod came to come in. this last england plaza is wayne rooney's 10 years ago to reach 100 caps. the bond meetings process has been going to one deal up in the 2nd talk. you then finished of a nice promising move here to make it to do those kinds of 68 international goal, extending his record as england's o time, top score. perfect night, you know, as a, as a strikes of close them, a 100 crap. i wanted to just go, go and make them not as memorable as possible and get to win the game as well. so it's a so, you know, a couple of those couple nice when this is and helped to, to into nel was was on. uh yeah, pretty much perfect. a novelist case for almost to include his sides single draw with gem, the ice on testing. that's it, was it up? she went ahead less than 2 minutes in this mazda his 1st stop. so to identify
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storing a best goal for his country, the level of the schools gemini then took the lead, a just a full house time, and i knew captain, adjust your activity, glossing home to make it to one, but the netherlands equalized 5 minutes into the 2nd hall denzil, dumb phrase with the go south 3 accounts in the song that shouldn't been said his side put in a great performance to be certain mom, 31. and that will have co qualify quantity chance itself forever has 10 minutes into the game and most got am on equalized before the sun for the koreans and back in front with 8 minutes to go is good enough at different stuff. it's time to make sure of that 1st, when at this stage of qualifying japan have been racking up the goals last week, they beat china 7 mail on tuesday. it was just the slice they put costs. all right, i a set way to, i'm here to mess up my retail school twice each as a teen named as the summer i blue creek to the 2nd straight. when in this round of qualified face it top of group see 2 points ahead of saudi arabia
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and ronald, so it made it so you from see it was a secured a hard foot when over they usually maybe gaiety school in 1st house stoppage time, really full but hadn't opportunities to equalize that when the referee gave them a penalty for handling the 86 minutes. but to them reverse this decision often via intervened iran since 2nd degree right behind is back to strong on go different and i haven't sadler continued his impressed as not to the season helping egypt to a for the wedding qualifying for next. just ask for kicked off of nations they were facing, but swan, it was not loaded treasure guys pulling twice in the 1st off that was before the saw that added to the tally. the pull forward, scoring his full goal in 5 games across space. the primary on the on qualifying result keeps egypt to talk with breach, sees in and out. jerry also made it to wait. is that a right? it was a beach fly bear? yes, 3. no. it's just 25 minutes to get the 1st 2 goals. a decent strike here from adams . so again, the, when it sees the main, toughest creepy, with
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a full point advantage over time to go elsewhere. everything champions i've replaced will say one that much with chad. but cameron an idea of what size house to go. this rose, that is the schools. now i would have melissa there. all right. who am i? thank you so much. students in finland are being asked to switch off their phones on laptops during school hours. so it's all part of for a reversal in the countries education policy, which previously pushed forward digitize ation experts. a long screen times have reduced learners attention spans, and they post more health risks. felix, me a wire reports this box box full of books as another academic. it kicks off of the poll. your line in middle school in north of health thinking for the past decade. the finish government encouraged the use of technology in children's education. they are any good restaurants near here. some institutions are now taking a shop to. they say,
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learn is had become too distracted. most students, i think, just did the exercises as quick as they could. so they could then move on to playing games, chatting on social media and so on. that's a contrast to what the government hopes to achieve with digital devices. they said the program would promote access to learning and develop new skills, but booked as one many minors are now restless and their brains are becoming fragile. you are doing math in computer on and then you go to check in, stuck from there and my method to send, then you come back and then you go to snap and then you come back. so frames of a very um phone and loaded up and assisted living.
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the young aids each day finish teenagers spend an average of 6 hours staring that screens. that's about 4 hours more then levels recommended by the public health agency. and that's being linked to growing mental health risk. and i problems. some students say the changes already yielding results. enjoy your home, keep while you're, it's a nice thing because the ability to concentrate improves. and also if you have to do homework late at night, it's easy to go to sleep. we haven't just been looking at the device. i find i can concentrate much, much better and doing homework is it's easier because i don't have to like, what do i need to devise for it across the country? lawmakers are now proposing binds on personal devices in schools. that's tough to concerns that vin is highly around. education system isn't decline. they say
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a switch back to pen and paper would be just what's needed to keep the grades high . felix new or i'll just say right. thanks for watching the news. our on elders 0. my colleagues 0 vanya is with you in just a moment, and he'll have much more of the days, and it's bye for now. the idea is, the french republic has long proclaimed, the just would needs more than from in a full talk series. the big picture takes in, in depth nest products in focus. episode one on ality sierra. ready too often of kind of style and it's put tray through the prism of war. but there
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were many of the kind of stuff thanks for the braves. individuals who risk their lives to protect it from destruction. an extraordinary film archives funding for decades reviews the forgotten food of the countries mold in history. the forbidden real part for the air of darkness on a busy at a business latest is sponsored by intellect, global, your real estate destination in due by
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the, the, the business latest to sponsored by him to like global your real estate destination in due by the heated showdown donald trump and color harris face often their 1st presidential debates with the economy, emigration, and abortion. the main issues on john hendern in detroit. the
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i'm several of any good to have you with us. this is l 0 lives from the also coming up palestinians in gaza. pray for their loved ones killed and is really strikes 13

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