Transcripts For ALJAZ NEWS LIVE - 30 20240714

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had i read proper someone after a round west was full of fancy you wouldn't expect to see very much in the sky there's no shells around a bit to the north in turkey in the caucasus a bit of water evaporate from the caspian suggest showers can go eastwards towards kyrgyzstan however it's going to be dry i think during sunday and throughout this region through turkmenistan the green here suggests in armenia and georgia pasta turkey showers and they are thunderstorms we are as likely but the south not to runs at $35.00 baghdad being near to sea level up to $46.00 in the dust is to willing iran but the wind is not staying in any one direction it's on shore for beirut that gives you a reasonable enough feel to the air but 43 in baghdad are just be hot and dry and given the change the wind direction further south the feeling in doha with this cloud of oil could well be an increasingly humid one and that's largely because of catching a lot of these cuts coming up from the arabian sea was a tropical cyclamen still wandering around but slightly driver land and i think rather less cloudy or hotter monday. as governments fail to cut emissions scientists are proposing drastic measures to save the planet. people in power ways technological endeavors to counter humanity's pollutants against the risks of further meddling with the environment feel like this is playing god it's actually quite unsettling and quite frankly makes me quite anxious. kalina attacking us on al-jazeera. welcome back a quick reminder the top stories here on al-jazeera saudi arabia's crown prince has blamed iran for the explosions on 2 tankers in the gulf mom on thursday iran has dismissed accusations that it is involved. yemen's who the rebels have launched drone strikes on 2 efforts in saudi arabia claiming to put them out of service but riyadh says it said defense systems brought down the one bone headed to the yemen's border telling it with air strikes the yemeni capital sana. and protests in hong kong return to the streets in the coming hours they want the complete withdrawal of a controversial extradition. so dan's former president omar al bashir could be brought before a court as early as next week the chief prosecutor says she'll be referred for trial unless he files an appeal in the next few days the former leader is facing corruption charges he was deposed by the military in april after weeks of protests against his government. meanwhile hundreds of sudanese nationals a protest in london calling for sudan's ruling military council to stand aside they're demanding that governments including saudi arabia and their support of the leadership after more than a 100 people were reportedly killed in the khartoum city and was dispersed i mean baba reports. this is the 1st stage of a protest has brought hundreds of sudanese nationals onto the streets of london hey we're outside the united arab emirates embassy that's one of the governments but the protesters accuser propping up the military rulers in the hard to lose a lot of anger but there's also a lot of solidarity being expressed there you know fear coming out of they have all done because they feel you know nasa anything they fear of being killed off by so many places they were made here and raised i think capital was in the last day of them that if you're a young saudi arabia are donating to see the $1000000.00 bill there are military council hands who didn't talk on tuesday. and did militia and these are the people now standing against the will of the people. who during the protests we got the news that the chief prosecutor in sudan had announced former president bush who was just on trial for big open against dozens of other former government officials so we took the chance to ask some people here what they made about. that night it was the cat that was a public doesn't see what let's put it to the side that's funny yes that's what's always this is like the never do anything the the she'd know he said see if you're any serious like c.d.'s action you're going to get us here. well after passing by the egyptian embassy the protesters have now ended up outside the embassy of saudi arabia. another country got calling on to stop supporting those in power in a courtroom while back home there's a crackdown on protests these people see it as their responsibility to carry on what they're calling their revolution u.s. president donald trump has accused the new york times of treason after reported the u.s. is increasing cyber attacks on russia the article quotes former and serving government officials who say the u.s. has hacked the russian power grid the report says as part of an aggressive aside a campaign partly nataly asian against what it called interference in the 2018 mid-term elections the us president has denied the allegations questions only as many. the new york times article does not give details about specific actions being taken by the pentagon's cyber command unit rather it describes increasing attacks on the russian power grid and other potential targets as well as a change in posture from a more defensive strategy to a more offensive one and the reporting seems to be bolstered by comments made by john bolton the national security advisor in just the last week in which he describes taking a broader view of potential cyber targets in the as a way to send a message to russia or to anyone else who might be trying to hack the united states that they will pay the price if they do the new york times speculates that officials are talking about this operation as a way to send that message to help send that message and while president says that this information is not true last year congress and the white house itself gave broader powers to the cyber command to act without prism presidential approval and the article actually quotes unnamed sources who say that they were afraid to discuss these moves with the president because of how he might react or who he might share the information with the the united states has granted iraq a 3 month extension on sanction waivers so it can buy electricity from iran but after that sanctions imposed by the u.s. against countries doing business and tear on will kick in when iraqis rely on iran for vital supplies in the summer months even that's not enough strength of the ports not from basra. the same reality starts to generate to go build using the old age. which of course electricity to families in this poor neighborhood of both or so. there are hundreds of generators like this one across the city because daily power cuts often last for hours. we provide electricity to the poor it comes on for an hour then it's off for 5 the children really suffer in the summer heat we are so tired inside i have nothing joyful in my life it's all been misery the government has forgotten us. iraq cannot meet its own electricity needs even a city like basra which because of its huge oil wealth could be one of the richest cities in the world of asked amounts of the electricity comes from close by across the border in neighboring iran the us has increased sanctions on iran in recent months and this could seriously affect neighboring iraq which depends on iran for its power supply. iraq relies hugely on iran for this vital resource and a decrease in that power supply could cripple the local economy further we so angry demonstrations over the lack of services in bus for last year the situation hasn't improved since then there america's just extended a sanction waiver for iraq so it can keep buying iranian electricity and gas for another 3 months the us is trying to help iraq be less dependent on its neighbor for fuel as a means of increasing its pressure on iran energy joint x. and mobile recently signed a $53000000000.00 deal with the iraqi government to develop 2 southern oil fields it's hoped that project will also help iraq be more self-sufficient in gas needed to few electricity power plants considering the potential boil wealth of basra the poverty and lack of general services is shocking. piles of rubbish lined the streets there are open drains buildings long ago fell into disrepair even with the help of iran there isn't enough electricity being distributed here to a city that people like hussein say has suffered years of government regulate. that al-jazeera basra. al shabaab says it was behind 2 attacks that have killed at least 11 people and injured 25 others in somalia's capital a car bomb 1st exploded close to the presidential palace in mogadishu causing most of the fatalities another car bomb near a checkpoint leading to the airport killed the driver and his accomplice. at least 6 kenyan police officers have been killed after a roadside bomb hit their vehicle and was in the kenya's border with somalia 6 other officers are missing gunfire was reported during the attack no group has claimed responsibility but al-shabaab has carried out several assaults in the area and kidnapped 3 was a policeman in northeastern kenya on friday. health officials in the democratic republic of congo have suspended vaccination campaigns for measles and other diseases in the northeast area struggling with an outbreak of the virus 5 cases in the city of bunia that's the border of the gander officials say they'll continue to prioritize vaccinating against about her until the disease is illogical. to. health officials have just informed as about the measles vaccination cancelation in this region because of cases we wondered about the situation as the number of cases of this epidemic is growing even here in this camp kids are suffering and dying from measles we need more medical support now. united nations health teams are struggling to control an outbreak of hiv in pakistan sindh province most of those infected are children are there as lord and laura but munley has more for imtiaz ali and his family live in the tiny remote town of project darrell it got wild attention 2 months ago when medical experts found multiple cases of hiv mostly in children the ali family know this pain too well of the 6 children only one hadn't contracted the virus 2 of them died. my wife and i h i v negative but sadly 5 of our children contracted hiv and 2 of them died recently now i am more worried about my other kids as there is no proper treatment available here and i can't afford to take them to any good hospitals doctors were baffled when they found many parents who tested negative to the virus but their children positive. authorities trace this back to a local doctor. they have accused him of infected patients with the virus through contaminated syringes he denies these allegations and the investigation continues. screening centers were quickly established including the district capital larkana but the findings were worrying from just over 20000 people screened more than 750 people have been diagnosed with hiv 80 percent of those a children. the unsafe or if this is. not properly. treated and. banks are feeling unsafe for people with vision. health organization says it's not enough antiretroviral treatment stopped in pakistan only hoffer the new patients are being treated the illness also carries a social stigma the clinic has set up counseling sessions for women too afraid to be screened worried if that contract the disease they'll be out costs from the community the ladies mostly they are thumbing their door nor their towel at ari has happened if someone is positive there isn't is this 3rd order of ever miss we wanted to give the assertions to them in order here to anybody not not the children being never referred to it was a deficiency there's also concern if the government doesn't act quickly in the virus could lead to aids an illness that is far more difficult to treat. back in russia darrow imtiaz ali spends what time he can with his children but it's a battle to keep their temperatures down a common side effect of hiv all the more difficult during the school teaching some a month's nor about a manly out to sara. ministers promising to strengthen ties with the e.u. and corruption. government resigned on friday and pass trouble triggered by an inconclusive election. in a speech after a meeting of the new cabinet son do promise to pursue the oligarchy leader of one of the main opposition parties has left the country she's accused him of corruption . the heads of the mafia group that you served power and terrorized to the citizens of moldova for years have left the country we want to assure you that justice will be done and we are working to achieve it all of those responsible will be brought back to moldova and held accountable for everything that they did. and a little further to the west another leader promising to tackle corruption has taken office in slovakia is on a capital was sworn in as the country's 1st female president. the political novice one of the in march a campaign for the largely ceremonial office centered around the murder of an investigative journalist last year which led to an apple tablet over us of the murder was one of the reasons she decided to run for president. has held its 1st mass since a fire destroyed the roof of the cathedral 2 months ago a small service took place may preserve part of the building donations to repair the 850 year old structure have reached nearly a $1000000000.00. and powers. the sound of prayers filled not for the 1st time since a fire ravaged the cathedral 2 months ago the archbishop of paris no small congregation will protective hats for a mass in a part of the church that hadn't been damaged to do c.m.'s this is a message of hope and sayings for all those who are moved by what happened to. the reg limps inside notre dame has revealed its fragile state the roof inspired gone charred debris littering the floor. in april flames engulfed the almost 900 year old cathedral a site there shocked and saddened people in france and around the world the service was an open to the public because of concerns over safety but it was broadcast internationally on television and online and for catholics and admire is of not redoubt it was an emotional moment theodore sagna is visiting from senegal he says he's always wanted to see. it's a small ray of hope even a big want to see a mass celebrated day at the cathedral in any case we want this cathedral to be rebuilt with all our hearts we want to see mass celebrated here as it used to be. majestic an elegant notre dame is an enduring symbol of french culture the french president wants the cathedral. built in 5 years many experts say it will take longer but what is certain is that its restoration is already seen by many as a powerful symbol of new. al-jazeera paris. are tough a quick check of the headlines here on al-jazeera saudi arabia's crown prince has blamed iran for the explosions on 2 tankers in the gulf of amman on thursday iran has dismissed accusations but it was involved. yemen's who think rebels have launched drone strikes on 2 airports in saudi arabia claiming to put them out of service but riyadh says it said defense systems brought down one drone headed for our airport near yemen's border with the yemeni capital. protesters in hong kong will return to the streets in the coming hours despite the government putting controversial legislation on hold they want the complete withdrawal of an extradition bill. critics of these semi autonomous territory to be sent to mainland china for trial has more now from hong kong. back to china. and they're. hoping that as many. hundreds of thousands of people. behind us. and they're. hearing. us president donald trump accuse the new york times of treason after a report of the u.s. increasing cyber attacks on russia the article quotes former and serving government officials who say the u.s. has hacked the russian power grid the report says that all this is part of an aggressive cyber campaign partly in retaliation against what it called interference in the 2018 mid-term elections saddam's former president omar al bashir could be brought before a court as early as next week the chief prosecutor says she'll be referred for trial unless he filed an appeal and. the former leader is facing corruption charges it was deposed by the military in april after weeks of protests against his government. health officials in the democratic republic of congo have suspended vaccination campaigns against measles and other diseases in the northeast region struggling an outbreak of ebola virus health services say that prioritizes vaccinating against a bona until the outbreak is contained. well those are the headlines the news continues here on al-jazeera after people in palestine that's watching i thought after decades of being programmed with instructions day to hungry computers can now know on their own identifying patterns and predicting human behavior. artificial intelligence can monitor our movement. and decide on a future the big picture decodes the world according to ai and exposes the bias inside the machine to on al-jazeera. the un's intergovernmental panel on climate change was born from relative just 12 years to avoid one of trust with governments having failed so far to take effective action to come but global warming many and are looking to science and technology to come up with ways of bringing temperatures under throw but what kinds of solutions being devised and how effective could they be reporter eric campbell has been finding out. we start our journey in a city moving on from kabul. few places are as eager as copenhagen to get power from wind and even in this weather from sun. know when his plane came into ditch cars the parks. klaus bonded as director of the danish cyclists federation and a former mayor of the city. he's leading its push to be the 1st carbon neutral capital by $22.00 which. i do believe that there is a strong political consensus in denmark that we need to act it's pretty cold right now but we have an extremely hot shot it didn't rain for 2 and a half months here. but nothing says why is there something going on. and i think we have to realize that something is going to. copenhagen has been breaking all records in traditional ways to clean air. that according to the speaker's 1631 box of cross this bridge this morning alone in the past year it's been 3519062 it's extraordinary but the problem is no matter how much we ride no matter how much we recycle the matter how fast communities transition to renewables it's probably not going to be faster now because governments aren't meeting the commitments they made at the paris climate change conference to cut emissions the politics are failing which is why there's now such an urgent push to try a new technology to experiment with things that sound like science fiction but cook with the only way to ensure a secure future is the fact. the warning was sounded in october body i.p.c.c. the un's intergovernmental panel on climate change which are working long leading scientists say carbon needed to be almost halved from 2010 levels to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees. otherwise runaway temperatures were destroyed but right ballio reef droughts and hurricanes would become the norm melting ice sheets would flood major cities. but our sky mythologised jason fox the former lead all that of the i.p.c.c. says even that won't be enough. it's frightening and i'm sorry to say this but that one and a half to greece global warming we still have like 2 and a half to greese of summer arctic warming and that pushes greenland beyond its threshold of viability so we still lose greenland but at a slower rate. based in copenhagen he measures our street rate for the geological survey of denmark and greenland. when we lose the reflective cover of the arctic sea ice and when we lose the greenland ice sheet and the climate system globally unravels and and it's going to create the kind of problems that will make it pretty hard to govern society. the migrations the droughts so what's at risk here is is practically civilization. whole professor bob shares the frustration of all scientists contributing to the i.p.c.c. see the. evidence gathered through years of painstaking field work is often. north by politicians. politicians and governments that dismiss i.p.c.c. reports that's not conservative it's not progressive certainly it is insanity . if is the world will need massive technological fixes called geo engineering literally read engineering be good if you just hold back what's coming. for example we can slow down melting of the antarctic ice sheet by piling up sand on the sea floor simply to block a warm currents that are already destabilizing the whole west antarctic ice sheet. other id's include covering oceans with ion filings to encourage carbon e.g. plankton. also sending ships around the world to pump seawater mist into the sky to diffuse the sun's writings we have some ideas and we need to try several technologies and evaluate them and figure out which are the least risky etc 2 to get the carbon curve which is like this now to get it negative. and that all needs to happen in the next. 1020 years to start down that path it's extremely ambitious . the idea of geo engineering has excited by scientists and industry. on the other side of copenhagen i've come to meet a prominent political scientist dr be a long ball he did it by using lots and lots of coal he's a favorite commentator in conservative media for argument against major cuts to fossil fuels and i would say look if you say to people there is another solution yes it is going to take the attention somewhat away from the original solution but we should also be honest and say we've tried the 1st solution namely ask people. could you please use the car less could you please use less energy could you please turn off your lights and it's not work for 30 years and actually there is about half a planet who's waiting to get more energy available and why do we talk to says he except that fossil fuel emissions are warming the planet he just thinks geo engineering will cool look much faster than switching to review. because it's so cheap it's very likely to happen sooner or later some indian billionaire or some saudi billionaire is going to do it all by themselves just turn it down a little bit to pre-industrial temperatures or wherever we decide to to have it and that would be essentially avoiding a large part not all but a large part of the global warming problem. so what are the most likely fixes and would they really work most of these globally ambitious projects are still on the drawing board but one surprising new technology is up and running in a place generally seen this need to retrieve. it strongly now whom the precision innovation. from swiss watches the never lose time to swiss army knives in a country permanently a piece of small company. believes it's found what could be a big part of the solution to plug. kristoff cabal to spark a ph d. students when they decided to form a world changing company. tonight they're celebrating clime works 9th anniversary so we're still not making money so of course money is not the motivation the money ration as solving a big challenge and there is probably as little as challenging as climate change. this illusion is building giant. hands that draw in air and bind carbon molecules of the filters. the carbon free air is released back into the atmosphere the c o 2 is super heated and collect this gas i like to call it low tech not high tech and it's actually very simple the challenging part is making it work and making it cheap. in just 2 years they've opened the plants in switzerland icelandic italy. they believe they could remove 10 percent of the carbon the i.p.c.c. wants cuts. their 1st target is one percent by 2025. it's like 300000000 tonnes of c o 2 and that we're require a quarter 1000000 machines. but in this developmental stage removing just one tonne of carbon costs at an economical $600.00 us dollars we are confident that and the next 2 to 3 years we will have our cost and the ranch off 2 to $300.00 per tonne and the mid to long term and that's for us 2025 to 2030 and we see cost as $100.00 as feasible. so the big question is what do you do with all this captured c o 2 well fortunately in this case there's a greenhouse just 300 meters away so half of the carbon sucked in the ferns it's piped underground of the greenhouse and turns into vegies. plants absorb carbon so the greenhouse buys the gas this fertilizer. since it started spraying crop production is increased by 10 percent. the quicker the process can turn a profit the more likely it is to spread round the world. even in frosty switzerland there's a real sense of. urgency about limiting global warming. i came here for the mountains to climb to ski and in the alps you could see very early signs of climate change and of course closures are disappearing like we won't stop that if with and without climate change but the speed of disappearance is shocking. patrick hofstetter from the world wildlife fund took us out to see the disappearing place in. the alps a bore me more than twice as fast as the rest of europe over some of it was unprecedented drought. yeah that's really special for us to farmers don't notice it to yet. the grass growing stay there is a shortage in feed so they actually started to slaughter their cows much earlier. after this really dry summer i can.

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