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tv   [untitled]    February 24, 2025 1:30am-2:01am AST

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motion to the base on migration, all the major properties, i'll call you for more restrictive migration and the internet since they were ready for filling their agenda by doing that for one thing that's important. they took 20 percent of the national vote. but if you look at a map of germany, the former east germany is where they have their strongest presence. and what was formerly western germany is predominantly the sent the right party. so we have to look at it. it's heavily, strongly regional marketing. thank you so much for breaking that down. first block of insincere. thank you very much. indeed. i am. 23 rebels are advancing a northeast and democratic republic of congo. but a wanted to invite the group of reasons they took the city of chicago and advancing towards the commercial have of nevada island. what kind of reports from goldman? this police officers and because we used to work for the company is government of, to seem underwriting to enter into the bose. the notary training to work for them. no, no. most over noon we came to get an idea of the current police number. so new leaders
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and this hell will look under the leadership we have been told that will be going to governments of training, but we don't know how long this will take me back to by the one, the military, m to the president of the fussing, stop introducing majestic using the north east on the cool, what is government says one of the wants to go to one of the associating do we don't buy them to say that protecting different activities. some of the locals in the to obtain, to joining in $23.00. the sites are better than what can before go up on you call them on uh m, here is a d, c, t. then slipping sacrament for low. now under the pos leadership in our country. this is why we know joining for the sake of our country, and he's people in about 450 kilometers away. keep going to see just a little bit on h. m. 25. does that pitch and go to an overloads in did surrounding area to direct a tech hasn't happened yet, but it's going to happen at any moment. it says, if there has gripped in happens here,
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fear has taken over the streets. everyone is reading that the worse could happen to any that the markets bundles for it to get it on business. as usual, they said they look for you to attempt to stability. what matters to us now is peace. they need to stop scaring us and driving us away. we stay ross's, we simply want to get back to our own lives as they were before, to leave in peace at home. but as long as they continued to mix lots of weapons, nothing will prosper here. despite the product column official, these and the populace on the way to see what the direct from the tech and the weather is going to come to them. the allan way funny. does it all home on the democratic republic of all hell upon its next? i'm old madison, stay with us the as china ramps up to pull patients of north korean, defective human rights group say they faced imprisonment, torture,
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and even death in the country. in desperation, some involve dangerous journey. $11.00 east reveals north korea's claim to factors on al jazeera, the russians, if you have the muscle executive about starting to what's the rate of usability. and is that as an russians on to go and under that, does anyone, can you go ahead and send us the natural disasters nature showing you know, uh, of quakes plate shift, humans call control to create just so you know me, you called stuff a soon on this is nature in the name of somebody can associated with god. angry net . yeah, i mean let's plan on. i've done something that you saw it. oh, i don't remember us on what s no, no, you have natural disasters. i'm not so sure. it's natural. i'm most of its man may
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have to come on in the on obviously it's about the, the what can i have the best that come out and i didn't lose it as it on the cost or anything. you can assume them on the, for those considering what comes in sooner. tlc good president, go cited, go, right. is the, what i mean, the most comfortable. that's what i mean. got the appeal. i just seemed pretty sucky. no kidding. i say it sucks. i mean, i think, i mean, we want to blame the rich, but we're in it to the there are many ways to describe the last destruction we've seen in recent years. a soc lines, bush wise and droughts have swept through different countries around the world. you
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would be justified cooling their impact. frightening hurricane patricia in 2015 was the most powerful tropical cycling on record in terms of wind speed at 345 kilometers. now you could call the optim off. i'm president of the 2020 bush wise in australia resulted in more than 24000000. heck desmond and billions of animals killed or displaced michael. the last is devastating. especially when you consider that more than 50000 people were killed and more than 14000000 affected by the us quake across the check in syria, in 2023. whatever you call these disasters, they shouldn't be cold, exclusively natural. it's a natural disaster, natural disaster when degraded 3 lucky naturally that says go to a natural disaster. how will i know that all these natural disaster? yes, tysons floods, earthquakes. they all hazardous incidents occurring in nature. what
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a variety of human factors means their intensity and impact is a purely natural extreme weather events like floods, sight, lone, sorry, can skype forms the heat weight calling them natural, calling them god, given these until now, quite legitimate. but we have now entered into a new era. doctor celine will talk was director of the international center for climate change and development in bangladesh. feels i served as senior advise us with the least developed countries good at the united nations. our interview was filmed a few months before he passed away in october 2023. what has happened since the industrial revolution is that we have been spewing greenhouse gases into the atmosphere and that has resulted in the temperature of the atmosphere going up by well over one degrees centigrade already. and we have seen the consequences of that
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the flux we used to have uh, getting more severe. it's the was flooding. the city is seen for at least a decade. the cycle and we used to have are getting more severe cycle. and gabrielle is the most significant, we've been to new zealand has seen this century at the heat, which we used to have a getting most severe july. he's slated to become the was what is to month. so while the events themselves not cause like human induced lemma change, they are exacerbate, they have made more than that, they made worse. also, if you look carefully at those narratives, you can see that they've deployed salt times by politicians. a lot of people. but one of them guess tasha don't look any subsidies. let's get this to send it to you . hun bye on natural disasters. and i rick, this sort of have it and it's beside to yeah, there are things going to be on val control and we know increasingly because at the climate science the varies and for dr. shavone mcdonnell is a lawyer and legal entre apologise with those a 20 years experience working with indigenous people in australia and oceana,
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on climate change issues. there are various climate reasons why we're facing these dramatic changes to weather event across the globe. and it uses this kind of a several mother nature. when mother nature strikes, mother nature, weeks of woke. mother, a teacher will do what she does, we all have responsibility. and by labeling it, by the nature or natural, we are obscuring the political choices, allergy or politics. that sits underneath the basics of events, whether to cool a disaster, natural or not, may seem like a semantic argument. after all, who cares what you call it? if it makes any difference to the impact on people, animals, and property. the thing is, yes, this is a semantic argument, but it's not just about labels or woods. it's about accountability. human choices
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and actions have meant that many natural hazards now lead to recommend breaking levels of destruction. they have a huge impact on who lives and who dies well, who is injured or left homeless after an event is quakes, kill people, but it's badly located and poorly made guilty, which is really like the numbers of deaths, a crude measure of the difference. human choices make would be to compare the difference in the death rates, the similar natural phenomena in different countries. in january, 2010, and magnitude 7 earthquake heat, haiti killing more than 300000 people. one month later, a stronger magnitude, $8.00 us quake and synonymy struck chile, the killed fossil fuel, people with $525.00 debts officially reported. there were multiple reasons for the enormous differences between the quakes. but in haiti, sub standard engineering,
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poor quality materials and almost no disaster relief services, all played a significant role in the extent of the devastation. i ask celine how clients under abilities. they're not just different between beach and pool countries. but between the rich and poor living within multi countries, no matter whether it's a full country or rich country, you will find that the order of citizens stated to be located in the mall has the grown area to the places that do not get services as much as they reach a place to, to 10 so deep reinforces their father ability, it reinforces that poverty. and sometimes these are institutionalized, in the united states, for example, flex will put in areas where whites would not live. and this was in force both legally and, and by just common practice of the housing industry. and so when you see the depth all american katrina in new orleans, many of the approximately 1200 people that lost their lives. well, for black living in the 9th toward the impacts of good to happened, whether we like them or not, how big they are going to be,
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or how bad they're going to be as a function of how well prepared we work. or we're not helping people in has it prone areas get prepared is high on the list for many climate justice groups. mitchell, 10 lives in the philippines. she's an international spokes person. so the youth climate advocacy group fridays for feature. she's also the organizer for its most effective peoples and areas subcommittee apps and the lava or most effective. both of areas is kind of like the global south arbor fridays for future. the practice community bar includes the by far the black indigenous people of color to use in the global north such as the communities in australia, the vision faxes the most. by the time we realize excitement prizes intersects with all the other social economic crisis, sections of classes, quality, especially, racism, egoism, all these things. they get out of $55.00 to $5.00. so mitzy, how does ex stream will contribute to ginger inequality?
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because majority of the world for our women, women are most vulnerable to the time of christ and the philippines. a very positive example, how in 2013 high and devastated our country and for years after that, young women and young girls were forced prostitution because of the economic devastation of our community. and that's not just happening in the philippines. it's happening off the world and aren't able to bounce back after the extreme weather, but we know that reached a country. i'm not able to car free climate impacts for a country, but even even to, to those countries, different households i've been out in terms of cooking with water increasingly cascading dissolved. it's black sama in australia, massy fines. ben, it's cleavage bane. it's something else. are you the kind of household that can court or i do you a pool household that he's already struggling,
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and he's pushed down by the 1st disaster and can no longer re gain your 40. this has been new carpeting. and there's a fairly well established templates for how we talk about the damage that's left behind. in the wake of extreme weather events is a spectrum which move costs are the thoughts. this can come voltage pretty focused on see on your list. that is because the visual enough oversight data, where does it happen to be prepared for the worst? because the worst continues to happen on surprisingly, due is a big part of the response. the ship power of the elements, the scale of the destruction, all of that features in political narratives, is at the top of the news headlines and it shapes how we think about western and climate related events. across the street here records as normal, life has been completely disruptive. soc loan,
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harold is batch rings and want to suffrage. temperatures have reached 60 celsius in places there are cars upside down. it is really quite apocalyptic. what's tougher to capture in these discussions of the complex factors that to natural hasn't inter disasters placing some more risk than of it's difficult really to know what the impact of all of these apocalyptic images around fire and flooding. i don't want to detract from the impact on the experience that people buy from disaster. these proceeding real. i think what we need to focus on is when the media to peek stacy reaches in this way. what happens to people who experience of their own agency and how did people understand the broad a political choices that states come making to act for not fact on climate change,
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particularly those of us who are in common and meeting countries. i've seen in the philippines some people get the sense that size to the patients that we 6 there. yes. because sometimes it's easier than habits as well of how every year our communities just as soon. so please be advised floods the way that we try to change this again by telling them just let the time of christ isn't just something that happened is something that has happened to us and is being done to us. there were some hard choices and dramatic changes needed if we want to get serious about slowing the rates at which our planet systems a buckling it seems though, that the big institutions, the nations responsible for making these crucial calls are aligned to heavily on strategies of climate adoption mitigation and resilience, the people of puerto rico, keep getting back up with resilience and ambitious plan to take strong action to
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fight and build resilience, helping them to adapt and to build resilience. but what really worries me is that if it's very much directed, particularly where i work in the pacific local pacific villages that they somehow supplies to cultivate more resilience. and even getting the strength that way supposed to bounce back. but we're supposed to be resilience to climate change impacts. and that is the resilience. and the i that tyson, that we need, you know, our community right across the country to deal with longer hall to drive seasons that increase the risk of bush 5. and what all of these files to say is that there are choices being made by company to put fossil fuels into the environment that their political choices being made not to address. what is a competent mission problem? australia as prime minister, has visited towns damaged by the fuzz. besides,
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he's committed to protecting mining jobs, you will also not reduce the number of call, sod pass stations in the wall to die by forcing the shutdown of a striving coal mines. it is dry and jobs with them and in the pacific, no amount of resilience is going to help people with the incredible impact of 3 sidelines at a category 5 level in 5. so this narrative of resilience is placing their responsibility on local people. whereas really, these are b, e, g, or political choices that are influenced in van lines. the in 2016, a campaign began in australia, a climate emergency campaign. with all indicators for the health of the planet trending downwards, there was a need to jump humanity into action. the 1st announcement of
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a climate emergency was in december 2016 here in the city of darwin in the northern suburbs of nope. since then move in 3100 local governments. in 39 countries have declared a state of climate emergency. the question is, how effective are these declarations a galvanizing action? what i saw with the emergency term, it helped with my not the government's mind. people realize that this is something that's happening, it is alarming, and you have to do something. the next step is to make sure people understand why it's happening. it's connecting the fossil fuel in the scheme of the time in the region. when the pen demik happened, there was meaningful, urgent action. i mean, it was a real emergency response. do you think having seen that will lead is even think of climate as an emergency. i don't think that world leaders really saw the kind of
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texas as an emergent because we saw how fast the response was, that it was the cold. and the questions here is, why is the corporate send them existence and excitement prices? it's because because we put them in, can reach the us as the, the government, them, it can reduce the cost. it's something upset and then, and that's why responses so widespread in the past. but if it wasn't somebody that stuff like that, there are diseases that are still killing people today. but the ignored because it's not a threat to the rich old white man in power. for decades, pull and venerable people have borne the brunt of the climate crisis. however, as unpredictability and danger has each closer closer to wealthy communities and countries, it's become clear that nowhere is safe in a world run on fossil fuels. it is taking good media a while to catch up with this reality. in the last 3 years, we've seen events taking place in developed countries like floods in germany and hurricanes in the us,
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etc. they get farm or global media coverage. then developing countries to be countries of my desk, or in most i'm be in a matter of 3 weeks, got hit by 3 subsets, website gloves, dealed, hundreds of people made tens of thousands of homeless. so who is affected matters to the so called blo, be media, x very nauseated, media reporting their floor reflects their inherent bias. the don't expect people to die in the floods in germany. you expect it may be in poor countries, but you don't expect to see if you can imagine this sort of thing happening. you know, you just know here, there was a time when i was talking to a journalist and i said that the philippines has the highest number of extreme weather events and the best of years. and they said, also it's normal for you now. and if i was supposed to be seen as normal, but instead, something that shouldn't be happening to anyone. i've been on panels with by, with activists from the global north. and then me from the south. and all the
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questions about the solution are we asked to them, and i only get to talk about the impact the experience of the trauma, the sad part. and so while i know it's so important to communicate the impacts of the same prices and the impacts of explain weather events, every opportunity i have, i always love to talk about the solution. but this is one of the best select for best think certainly the best type loan for investing and evacuation in the whole work. we can learn any back to it more than 3000000 people. we have school kids who are trained and mobilized to make sure that nobody's left behind. they will house the house to bring the windows and the old people to the shelter. and now that doesn't mean that the cycling doesn't cause a lot of damage. it does. but people don't die anymore. over the past 3 decades, the global climate crisis response has moved through different phases. the 1st there was the mitigation approach. commitments were made to drastically reduce emissions of greenhouse gases and to protect the design from now on industrialized countries. that to apply to the protocol and have
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a clear obligation to reduce emissions. some serious steps were taken, but the action wasn't concerted enough or consistent enough. the 2nd phase was about add a patient. there was an acceptance a resignation to the reality of climate breakdown. governments realize they need to pass hon areas and populations for the impacts. the adaptation funds would benefit from additional financing this year. this is critical for developing countries which urgently need assistance to cope with increasing climate change impacts. now we're in the face with a main focus is on loss and damage. trying to put a figure on the destruction faced by countries suffering erosion, fires, floods, and degradation as a result of the climate crisis. so things like in the pacific islands, at a point in time, sea level rise will have impacts that cannot be adapted. and that because, well, some damage impacts that will result potentially in climate migration. and
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displacements forced displacement because of climate change is not we will recognize the phenomena in bangladesh. but i say it's happening in the blue line goes to so one of the country, it left simply not able to continue to live there because of selling it to intrusion. loss of the land. i mean, no one has to be guns, document, loss of cultural production to, to climate change. let's talk about lots of languages, most of identity. all of these things happen when you lose the attachment to twice . there are huge and dramatic potential transformations taking place through. absolutely north, both of them are right. pacific island is produce very little comp and emissions whatsoever. lawson damage and the question of climate financing has become a bigger and more urgent subject up to date. you can see it with each passing cop gathering, especially cop $26.00 at glasgow and cop $27.00 in egypt. in fact,
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in egypt, these stablish mint of a loss of damage fund is seen as a siege waiting at the bottle is far from o is shavone has been added enough negotiating tables to no pacific island countries. caribbean countries have for 20 years plus asked for climate finance to address lawson damage impacts. these became huge issues even call 26. i trusted specific position that got supported by the whole, the guard and south g 77 and was hugely resisted by the united states. and this being that climate science is just science. every thing, these political, that's $100000000000.00 us dollars, world private financing, the form of loans, and not in the form of brand. why should we have to go into investors to your country is when you pause. the reason why we have to borrow money when the floods happened in germany, the, the chances of germany and the visited the flood victims. and she immediately gave
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them in the order of $500000000.00 euros for less than damage that they had suffered. similarly, in the united states of america, when party can either get more than 50 american citizens, president vitamin visited them in risk knowledge. this was probably the climate change provided about $50000000.00 us dollars as nothing damage compensation for that. now, based off, perfectly good, respectable things that lead to should boot. but when glen marco came to glasgow and joe biden came to glasgow and we the developing countries, us for money, they didn't give us a single sense. the notion of natural dissolves comes with a set of visual not only all these disasters, not solely naturally, the visual and shipping highly different. they should be seen from cold off the cold when orland gas low be escaped to ulta k commitments on emissions reduction. the footage that should play after ins, devastating earthquake should be
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a big real estate developers signing off on shawnee materials and building standards and is all a nation's grapple with coastal erosion. you should also see images of ramp at mining percent and minerals alone course. none of these would work for the kind of restless coverage we say of climate events, but they certainly wouldn't be much more relevant after all, this is austin a coals by human choices that enables an even reward. human induced climate change . this has happened for decades now, generation after generation, and the bed and flows, the natural devastations, and the needful corrective action has full and on every younger people. when i talk to young people nowadays in any country including my own, i tell them that as of now, your responsibility is to be a global citizen 1st and
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a citizen of your own country. second, this is a global solidarity movement of young people. we haven't seen that from the politicians. if they came to block school, they decided, well, you know, not much of an emergency here as far as we can see. and then, you know, great offend bird with out from the st, shouting and the kid for on the food shopping. this is what they came in on the jets. they made a speech and they flew out of their jets. and for them it was business as usual, so dangerous. it's difficult to change takes time, hopefully with new generations of people being better educated. we would see sprague of this. and that's the way forward. in my view, definitely many of the justices is young people from across the world can collaborate together. why can't are real need a slab, right? we have some just against the risk at the same time facing out the roots of excitement prices, which are colonialism. interior is an end of profit oriented system that we have. and so the only way to really solve the type of crisis is to change the system. but
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why we're doing that. we have to make sure that we mitigate the risk and the possibility of things as much as you can right now. the, as the cost of all celebrates the 25th anniversary of nato's intervention that ended the fighting between serbian and because of albany and forces. we were meant to be completely ethnically, cleanse people have power, examines the posts for landscape, and present the challenges for the regions youngest country. this is a vibrant nation state that is alive today because we took no attraction as possible the making of a states on that. just so you know, they've been waiting on roy to the beach to come. it's an a migrant. so given to not one, but a network of cargo trains that hit through mexico up to the us border, there were free really no way to try and avoid mexican migration. despite the
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changes these people want to take it know as soon as possible. trying to stop covering the 5th floor. it is, well, it came up for but they were expect bad. so you know that the traits try to get up isn't on the carriages and people people have up ahead more challenges to noise. she knows mexico a us president who doesn't want to for now. the beast goes on. i have the right to boycott. anyone i want to and the state has no business getting involved in that was just opening my annual contract from the state of arizona. and i was rather shocked to see this 3 part series explodes, the implications of us and people closed the freedom of speech and 1st amendment rights got chosen to bless us because we protect israel. i'm going to continue to do on a state level. all that i can't support that one. the bill on which is era. the
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colleges here with the to ukraine's president calls for talks with donald trump has the us pushes for a deal to access the countries. significant ret, us and minerals and exchange for continue ministry. 8 the territory, and this is all just there. a life from the whole set coming up. conservative friedrich mets claims victory in germany's general election. while the far box is projected to make historic gains the 2nd largest contest.

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