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tv   News  Al Jazeera  April 19, 2014 9:00am-10:01am EDT

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>> hello, a warm welcome to the news hour. the top stories on al jazeera. a desperate search for survivors goes on as the death toll from the south koreanfer yes disaster rises to 32. divers fight strong currents and murky water. four journal journalists are
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released. >> we'll have all the days support including details of the qualification for the chinese grand prix and all the latest as chelsea moves to the top of the table. >> we begin in south korea where the captain of a stricken ferry said he ordered people to stay in their cabins because they feared they would be swept out to sea by the strong current. divers' hopes of finding people are fading by the hour. they are using dna samples to help identify bodies recovered by the water. more desperate efforts at the site of the wreck as dive teams continue to battle strong currents and poor visibility in and around the sunken ferry.
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bodies had been seen on board. >> civilian divers discovered three bodies in the cabin of the fourth floor, however, the diver came out of the water due to time limit and floating objects. >> but relatives were shown footage of overnight dives news emerged of the dramatic visit in the vessel's position. it had tilted on its side, making access more difficult. >> reporter: there is a feeling that officials are not telling people everything that they know. the air pockets are gone and with it any hope of survivors. others are still clinging on to hope. there is a growing feeling that this operation is moving into recovery mode. the veteran special forces diver told us time had run out. >> when there was talk of an air
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pocket that's when part of the ship was above the water. now i don't believe any air pockets exist. >> reporter: so parents began submitting dna samples with recovery of bodies a lengthy process, the reality is dna may be crucial in identifying children. the captain offered apologies to the parents and the nations. but also insisted he had delayed for the order of passengers to abandon ship because rescue boats had not yet reached the scene. >> the current was very strong. the temperature of the water was cold. and i thought if people left the ferry without guidance, if they were not wearing a life jacket, if even they were they would drift away and face many other problems. >> reporter: the students vice
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principal who had committed suicide was brought home for funeral. al jazeera, south korea. >> another one of our correspondents in jindo. tell us about the moods of the families there. are they still hopeful that their loved ones will be found alive? >> well, yes and no. as you said, i spent quite a bit of time with families of the missing, and it's really fair to say that emotions have gone the full spectrum from anger, denial to acceptance, sadly acceptance that they may never see their loved ones again. there is a real concentration of grief here. people break down all around you. i spoke to one mother who's 16-year-old daughter is missing. she said she got two phone calls from her daughter within the space of an hour.
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one at two minutes past nine just after the alert was raised, and then some 56 minutes later by this stage, of course, the vessel was at a critical stage, and she said to her mother, i'm with my friends, and i'm praying. please pray for me. the mother is in a way strangely philosophical. she said it's now up to god to decide whether she lives or whether she dies. this woman is a very devout christian. tomorrow is easter country and this is a country where more than 6% of the country are christian. prayers are going to be said right across the country. today people have been focusing very much on the news that the captain has, in fact, been charged along with two crew members. he was paraded before the media today, and he really did sort of cut a very contrite and remorseful figure but insisted he had done all that he could to ensure the safety of the
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passengers. despite not carrying out an evacuation as h had been recommended to him by maritime officials some 30 minutes earlier. they're also going to be focusing on comments that the third mate, now he was at the helm when the accident happened, and he said that the vessel was reacting strangely in relations to the steering. investigators want to know whether he steered the vessel to hard of fashion, whether he caused containers on the vessel to move, causing the shift to looslose its balance. they want to know if the shift took too hard of a turn. that's very much a part of the operation. now the man in charge of the rescue operation said it could go on for weeks and months. we have to remind of why that
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could be again today when divers were again hampered by bad weather, poor visibility as strong currents as they maneuvered around the ship. but they were able to see three floating bodies. in fact, the body of a woman not a student was brought assure earlier today. it has to be said it is the dead, not the living, who have been brought to shore at the moment. >> thank you very much for that. adrian brown in south korea. in other world news an education commission center apology near gentleman said 44 school girls out of 129 who were kidnapped on tuesday are safe with their parents. they were abducted from their school on tuesday. they are still not clear where the remaining girls are being held. let's get the latest from al jazeera who joins us now from the nigerian capitol. it's been four days since these girls were abducted from their school. there have been conflicting
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reports about their fate, their whereabouts. what is the latest you're hearing? >> just like you said, they have confirmed that so far 44 students are safe or are back with their families. but they fac the fate of 85 oths still missing, and the manhunt is underway to try to find the remaining 85 girls. one area of focus is the notorious forest, a known hide out of boko haram fighters. the military in the last year or so has launched several air and ground all thes, yet they have not launched the fight freers this area. >> amid, the finger being pointed at boko haram, and there
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is responsibility taken for the bus attack. >> reporter: yes, according to reports, the leader of boko haram appeared in a 28 minute video claiming a bus attack. i called the security official a while ago who said they have yet to see that video, but they have to analyze it to verify whether it's authentic or not. many are surprised by this announcement. even the president himself just minutes after the attack happened blamed boko haram for the attack. in the video, for example, quoted as saying we are in your capitol in a current address to the nigerian president which
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means they have a sleeper in the nigerian capitol. that is very worrying for many nigerians, they have in the last few months been enjoying a state of attack. >> very worrying, indeed. thank you very much, indeed, for bringing the latest from nigeria. also in africa, south sudan government has september troops to secure united nations bases across the country. this comes after an attack on thursday in which 58 people were killed. pictures are emerged of the aftermath of the attack. this is described as a war crime. the south sudanese government has blamed peace keepers for firing in the air. journalists held in syria were released. they were found by turkish soldiers. they are in good health and are now on their way back to france.
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>> we're happy to be free. thank you very much. we thank the turkish authoriti authorities, and it's very nice to see the sky, to be able to walk, to be able to speak freely. i'm really happy. >> meanwhile after two million children in syria may need psychological help because of the war. that's according to aid workers. some are getting support and treatment, but as this reports in jordan, others aren't so lucky. >> severe depression has left this 14-year-old boy scarred and desperate for help. he has tried to end his life four times. >> i was upset with my grandfather, and i used glass to cut my arms. >> reporter: he said he never felt suicidal until he moved to jordan from syria two years ago. he's receiving free
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psychological report and medication from the ngo international medical core. his parents are divorced, and he and his siblings have been separated. the death of his youngest and only sister in the shelling of homs devastated him the most. he has dropped out of school, and he has even picked up drinking. >> i hurt myself to escape. it's no big deal if i die. death is better than my life now. >> reporter: there are so many children who need specialized help. here the children who need psychological support where they share their fears, war experiences and worries about their future with psychologicals. the unicef estimates 2 million syrian children need psychological support or treatment. but more severe cases require individual sessions. she has not said a word in over
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a year. she has been silent since her street was sheffield united. she points at things to communicate. this is a common condition among syrian children. she was mute for a year. she has spoken again after treatment but now suffers from a speech pediment and requires speech therapy, which her family cannot afford. >> if she hear a thump, she thinks it's a bomb. the girl is living in fear. >> thousands of syrian children are being treated for psychological conditions across jordan. psychologists say it's much harder for children to come to terms with war. >> i could not even accept the people, the atmosphere in jordan. >> children continue to receive help but back in syria millions
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more face uncertain future of war and more devastation. >> in egypt a left wing politician has submitted his bid to run for president. he is the second candidate to put his name forward. he heads the political alliance he is being supported by the nobel peace oner. he is expected to win the election, which is scheduled for may. in egypt a policeman has been killed in an explosion in the capitol. it happened in friday night in the lebanon square. there is some confusion of where the bomb was placed. some reports that it was thrown from a traffic post and others say it was thrown from a bridge. and al jazeera continues to demand the release of its
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journalists that have been held in prison. they are falsely accused of providing a political platform to the muslim brotherhood. they have now been behind bars for 112 days. the case has been adjourned until later this month. the fourth al jazeera journalist has been held without trial since august. al jazeera rejects all accusations against its staff. coming up on this news hours from doha. bigger than the eiffel tower. the massive drill that is ripping up germany and has some people fearing for their home. hamilton stays on course for a third grand prix trial in a row. we'll have all the latest coming up in sports.
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>> first, a government in malaysia said the hunt for flight 370 has reached a critical state. an underwater search could end in a week according to the transport minister. >> the narrowing of the search for today and tomorrow is at a very critical juncture. so i appeal to everybody around the world to pray and pray hard that we find something over the next couple of days. >> in nepal the body of a 13th sherpa guide has been found on mt. everest. hopes are fading of finding the remaining three victims. they were struck by anas by an avala. the families of some of those killed have been speaking out
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about their loss. >> my very close friend died in the avalanche. we are all gathered here to see his body. we had climbed just three months back. he was a good man, a good climber. his death is a great loss in nepal and mountaineering. >> now what are we going to do? he's dead. he used to take care of all of f us. he used to take care of us all. there are five children still attending school. >> we'll see what is happening elsewhere in the region. >> pakistan all turned a little unsettled, let's take a look at the satellite pictures. you can see the bright white areas of clouds. those are our storms. some of them have been giving ferocious weather.
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we've seen pictures like this out of the northern parts of india, and it's also been rather wet. we've seen a fair amount of lightening as well. things are certainly quite disturbed. we'll see outbreaks of wet weather over the last few days. looking over at the charts behind me they are likely to develop quite quickly and gradually march their way to the east. further south is this cloud that will give us one or two showers. generally for some of us here. particularly the central belt and up to pakistan we're looking at more in the way of disturbed weather over the next few days. meanwhile here in doha its been incredibly hot. yesterday we got to 40 degrees. it was the first time that we got that high this year. and today we got to third. bu39.the temperatures won't be e
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as high for us on sunday. >> thank you very much, indeed. russia has sent more troops to its border with ukraine. it said that the deployment is a precaution to protect it's security. the kremlin is also deny interfering with eastern ukraine where dozens of pro-russian activists and gun men are oning government buildings. u.s. and france are in negotiation to settle a legal battle over french's involvement in death camp deportation in world war ii. hundreds of survivors of the holocaust are demanding that the american division be barred unless they're awarded reparations. >> at age 76, she said every day she's reminded of the deaths of her father, uncle, aunt and cousins. all murdered by nazi germany.
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four-year-old row set survived hidden by a french family. but it was the railway which more than 70 years ago transported 76,000 jews and other so-called undesirables to their deaths. >> they put them in cattle cars with straw on the floor, a bucket in a corner, and they taught their employees how to lock the doors of the cars, the train cars, and to clean the train cars after the trip to auschwitz. >> the rail company has denied being a willing nazi tool but has expressed regret for having played a part in the holocaust. >> the state enterprise was a cog in the nazi extermination regime. we will not forget it 237 but unlike many other companies which collaborated with the nazis they have refused to
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compensate it's victims and french government has limited $6 billion. spent on holocaust reparations to its own citizens and others living elsewhere in europe. so more than 200 victim who is live in the u.s. are ending at the corporate bottom line. the american company controlled by sncf holds $3 billion of contracts to operate american commuter lines including this one. now it wants to bid on another contract worth twice that amount. the campaigners are trying to bar sncf from working in the state of maryland. under the pressure the french government has begun talks on compensating the survivors in america but victory would come too late for leo a campaign leader who escaped from an sncf train before it arrived at a
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camp in 1942. >> yes, we sent people to their deathbed and they got paid for it. >> just before his 94th birthday he died. one less victim to be compensated. tom ackerman, al jazeera, washington. >> the u.s. president barack obama has signed a law aimed at rocking iran's envoy. abu test talabi said he only served as a translator. new legislation is being introduced in interest of national security. germany's ambition is to produce 80% of its energy from renewable sources by 2050. but it's also the largest producer of one of the dirtiest forms of fuel also known as brown coal. al jazeera's nick spicer reports
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from near the polish border where one village faces a bulldozer to make way for a mine. >> reporter: it's a multi mega ton monitor. monster. the world's biggest mobile machine. wider than the eiffel tower is tall, and churning out 50,000 tons of highly polluting brown coal every hour. while it's used to have a kilometer of countryside of poland every year. the monster is headed here, the village, 700 years old, one of several residents are fighting plans to expand coal production. monica and her family have spent years building a home just the way they want it. >> it is just horrible to imagine. they want to dig 100-meter deep hole right here where i am.
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the 900 years church will be dug out. the cemetery where my ancestors lay will be moved. it's impossible. >> the coal production and use in germany has hit it's highest levels since 1990's when the germans were unified. this is having an affect on the environment. carbon emissions in germany went up 5% last year. the company running the palestine, however, said coal is needed as nuclear energy is phased out and wind and solar energy production gathers steam. >> reporter: brown coal is a necessary part of the energy transition. we can drop our coal-based energy production when the solar and wind produces energy. but on days when there is no wind in sight we can make up for the shortfall of renewable sources. >> reporter: she supports the
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shift to renewables but there is no need to expand coal production if there is going to be an energy revolution in germany. her village is slated to disappear forever in ten year's time. >> millions of tons of waste are produced every year by bangladesh factories. but one company has coupl come h a solution to make waste valuable. it's called up cycling. >> reporter: oon the outskirts,a mountain of waste. teams sift through the piles of fabric. there is money to be made. >> there are many things here that can still be used. so we're paid to go through them and sort them out. then they're sold to other
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businesses. >> reporter: the garment industry produces a massive amounts of waste. from bits of clothing to entire shirts. less visible is the water. tens of millions of tons each year. but largest industrial conglomerate these workers are turning trash into trend. up cycling is more efficient than w recycling. >> it uses about 84% less water if it's a fashion garment, and it uses if you look at it it's carbon emission which is about, again, 84% less. when we look at the numbers we have hug huge energy savings. >> so far up cycling is limited
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to boutique designers churning out a few items of clothes at a time but now delivering an order from estonia of clothing. >> when we started recycling 10 pieces, 15 pieces. then 100 pieces, 200 pieces. maybe at best, 1,000 pieces. now we're doing 3,000 pieces of up cycling. that's what amazed everyone. >> they both believe its just a matter of time when other industries follow their act. right now these t-shirts tend to be more expensive than other t-shirts but as production increases costs fall. designers hope that it won't be long before every brand is selling it's own line of up cycled clothes at a store near you. >> there is lots more to come,
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including a mother recalls the emotional of her missing daughter before the ferry she was on board sank. plus when the price is not right, the high cost of food in venezuela means not everyone is celebrating president maduro's first year in office. and could atletico madrid extend their lead, or was it a night of frustration. stay with us. we're back right after the shift.
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>> welcome back. you're watching al jazeera live from doha. the captain of the stricken south korean ferry said he ordered people to stay in their cabins because he feared that they would be swept out to sea by the strong current. divers continued to search but hopes are fading by the hour. relatives of 200 missing children have supplied dna samples to help identify bodies recovered from the water. a commission center nigeria say some of the school girls who were abducted are now safe. it's not clear where the rest of the school girls are held. 29 journalists are still missing in syria and 40 are in government prisons. let's go
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live to al jazeera in turkey close to the border with syria. what are you hearing about the journalists which they were kidnapped ten months ago. >> well, the french government is not saying much. what we do know is that the four journalists were taken in two separate incidents last june. two of them were taken on the road to aleppo city. i know that because the driver who was with them drove them to the city, and they were stopped along the road near the village and those masked men stopped their vehicle. he took the two frenchman but let the syrian driver go. the other two journalists were taken in the east of the country. now at this time it was a stronghold of the islamic state, and in fact, it is still a stronghold of the isil. there has been no claim of
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responsibility of the kidnappings. two weeks ago two spanish journalists were released. we have been talking to people who have been following, and they said a ransom could have been paid simple to what happened with the spanish journalists. it was confirmed that the two were held by the isil. there is no claim of responsibility. you don't see any videos of republicans saying why they're kidnapping these people. but we understand that since the end of last summer it's been difficult for journalists to operate in rebel controlled syria. >> what do you hear about the battle in homs that has been intensifying. >> yes, it is intensifying. many activists calling it the
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last battle because the government forces are pushing into the last remaining pockets of territory being held by rebels. the rebels are trapped inside. they have no supply line. there are 1,000 fighters that remain in the old city of homs. they have been calling on the rebels and other areas of the country calling that they have been abandoned. the stronghold of homs, this is going to be moral blow to the rebels who have been losing territory close to the lebanese border and the capitol. the day after tomorrow they'll decide about presidential elections. the morale is low at the time being and in aleppo barrel bombs kill people on a daily basis.
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>> thank you. >> let's return to the search of hundreds of people til still mig on the sunken south korean ferry. hundreds wait for news of their loved ones but many families say their suffering has been made worse by the way the disaster has been handled. >> reporter: it is one of the saddest places on earth. the gymnasium that is now a temporary home to families of the missing, and where grief is all around you. among those enduring another agonizing day, her 16-year-old daughter remains unaccounted for. these are recent pictures of kim on the left. a daughter, her mother describes as intelligent, optimistic, and above all, fun. >> she was a daughter and a friend. >> the daughter she wants to believe is still alive.
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this is kim a devout christian, who got the last call from her daughter on wednesday morning. when the ferry was all right listing dangerously to one side. >> she said mom, quickly pray to god. we're also praying. i hope god is protecting her. if god decides to take her, there is nothing i can do. >> she's getting by on two hours of sleep a day and spends most of her time watching the rolling news coverage of the disaster. >> they have been through the full range of emotions. anger, denial and now acceptance that they may never see their child again. >> mrs. kim's husband has spent the past four days demanding answers from the authorities challenging officials over the true state of the stricken vessel. his daughter did manage to call him twice. he told her to stay on board.
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>> as of now i don't know whether those kids are alive or dead. i just want to believe that they are alive. but in reality i think they are dead. >> like many parents of the missing he's anger and frustrated over the official response to this tragedy, and why no one can still explain how this all happened. adrian brown, al jazeera, south korea. >> japan has set up a military radar station on the western island in a move that risks angering china. china already in a dispute over nearby islands which they both claim. the radar is part of japan's plan to improve it's defenses and surveillance systems and will allow it to have a lookout 130 kilometers away from disputed islands. at least nine suspected fighters have been killed in an airstrike in yemen district.
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a bomb hit a car thought to be carrying members of al-qaeda. three passersby were also killed. now among the oldest civilizations in south afric af. we look at how a culture is reborn with a new generation. >> they are the new hope of libyan minority that was slowly fading. they are proud libyans. for the first time in four decades they are in school learning a disappearing
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language. >> it's great. i like studying it. my mom always pushes me to do it. >> here the green, blue, and yellow banner flies again, the simple of the resurgence of an ancient people. >> in the past we never had the chance to teach the language or learn it. but now that that tyrant is gone we can. >> for 42 years muammar qaddafi suppressed the people and their history. they were forbidden to speak their language, sing their songs, celebrate their culture or even come here to the ruins to mark the new year. since the fall of his regime it has been a cultural renaissance. >> they were among the first to join a revolution that toppled libyan leader who sought to erase them. >> the revolution finished, and a lot of people died.
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>> studying a language his father never learned in school, an alphabet his principal never studied, a culture outlawed for half a century. >> i love it. >> if the culture is so survive he'll have to pass on these lessons to his own children. libya. >> this weekend marks one year since nicolás maduro became president of venezuela in a narrow election. he promised to carry on the legacy of his mentor hue do chavez, but he has struggled to solve many of the country's problems. >> fish, and lots of it, will be eaten in venezuela. buying tuna, but this year he's
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having to pull more money out of his wallet. this year it costs double. on the other side of the market luis also struggles to pay the higher prices for fish, but this isn't another story about the high inflation in venezuela. it's how two people neither with political leanings see the same simple fish price situation very differently. >> the food shortages and inflation problems don't seem to be a concern of the government. they're only worried about fighting and arguing and threatening, this is all our president does. >> for me they will they bring down high prices of food. people see this. >> this fish market, everybody
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agrees th the price of fish has gone up, but nobody can agree who is to blame and who is best suited to fix it. >> this week supporters celebrated his first year in office p but despite the outward signs of support of this politico application still behind him there has been little to celebrate. >> they have been able to keep the coalition together but not making some of the most difficult decisions, for example, the decision about economic reform. you problems with violence has not improved at all. >> they have also inadvertently allowed the president to change the fuss of the national debate to what he says is an opposition in a coup against him. for now back to the market the ones who can still afford it
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will buy their fish for eater. >> christians around the world are marking easter. but in argentina one rock-n-roll priest is getting into the religious spirit by celebrating with his band, the sinners. we caught up with him in buenos aires. >> he looks like a rock-n-roller from head to foot. only the robe and the collar give him away. the leader of the rock group, they preach peace, love and the word of god. whether he's rehearsing with his band or hosting his nightly radio program this 50-year-old catholic priest has become the modern face of an old church thanks to his former boss.
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>> he recognized that i had a talent for much. he never gave me a parish. rather he let me study, record and display it in public. on his radio show called "calm down," he intertwines rock-n-roll with deep reflections about life. his target audience non-believers as well as christians. >> during the dictatorship in argentina, rock [♪ music ] is what dared to denounce what the media did not. rock-n-roll in argentina was and is a medium that awakes people. >> reporter: they have recorded twos albums with controversial songs like "abandoned love" dedicated to prostitutes and "i want a latin america pope." it was three years before they
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got their wish. he was asked to write a song called "the motorcycle and the cathedral." it's here that the former archbishop of buenos aires was inspired by an arckis by an ana. >> we got a sneak peek of the song. it speaks of bringing a motorcycle into the cathedral. a metaphor of the belief of opening the church's door to all men of good will, and spread that message. he has recruited people like the father. clearly a new breed of disciples. al jazeera, buenos aires. >> in just over a leak the late pope john paul ii will officially become a saint.
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it was when a woman was unexpected liqueured from an nurturananeurysm.an anyou--unexs cured from a an aneurysm: boston opens their nhl series. stay with us.
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>> welcome back. the privately owned space exploration company has launched its falcon 9 rocket from florida. >> falcon nine will deliver 29 kilograms of cargo as part of a deal with nasa, and as reports, a new era of privately funded space rights. >> iin an age of government cut backs, space exploration are little more than animated videos of what missions might look like. but a nasa program that will take astronauts past mars and
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venus. >> the series of flights we have coming up is returning space and returning humans to deep sprays where we haven't been in four years which is pretty exciting to be a part of that. >> but the days of solely government funded space programs are gone, and you could be fooled into thinking the next few years the famous site of missions will be quiet. when the program ended many heralded it as the end of space exploration. but companies are vying for new contracts here and they have ambitious plans to take it to a new era. the partnership between the u.s. government and the commercial sector. executives say the cape will have plenty of competition. >> other states just like other nations are going to seek space
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activity, and that includes both vertical and horizontal launch. florida will not be alone and that is not to alienate but to bring competition to other states i think it would be amazing to be up there. >> it's like an adventure. >> because you get the float. >> taking shape across the world and competition will be fierce. those backing the space say they are ahead of the rest saying this could be the last stop before leaving the planet. >> we'll catch yo up on all the sports. >> thank you very much. we start with formula one. the time in qualifying as they
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look to win their third race in a row. daniel second fastest with sebastian vettel in third. he has just achieved one body yum finish in three races. >> it was a tough session, and i really enjoyed it. i think we definitely could be--we always have something to improve on, but the team has done a great job this weekend. it's put in good position for the race and i hope we can pull through tomorrow. >> if they can beat bottom sunderland. it's been up and down and they've lost two of their last five games. chelsea is chasing atletico madrid. but the management teams. >> we have as much desire to win
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the premiere league as the champions league. one does not come ahead over another. and we try to put out the best team possible. first thing sunday morning we are headed to atletico. >> tut hams that just won 3-1. the current league leaders, playing nourish on sunday. if they win their remaining four games the reds will be crowned champions. we have been speak together liverpool manager about the prospects of the league project returning for the first time since 1990. >> yesish, i think through the course of the season we started with high expectations for
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ourselves. we developed really well over the last few months, and as the season has gone on. >> how did you and how do you cope with the expectation level here at liverpool that is so huge because of the history of the place? >> of course there are big pressures. i see it as a wonderful opportunity to be working at the lead match of the game with one of the leading clubs in the world. it's a honor to do that. >> tear to dream. have you allowed yourself to dream and what this championship would mean to you and your club as well? >> no, my job when i came in here my job is to get into the
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champions league. once we can do that, we can concentrate on the other targets. >> does the city now feel like home for you? do you feel like you found your home in deliver pool? >> i feel very comfortable in the city. we're very much aligned to the same objective which is the the passion in live liverpool. >> atletico madrid has opened up a lead. >> athleticcal madrid ran out in front of their home fans hoping to report an eighth consecutive league win. athletiatletico strider went inh
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the flash but he wouldn't add to his tally in half of a few chances. he brought garcia down in the box. they could not take advantage. in what was turning out to be a frustrating night home side. they did have the ball in the net, but would disallow for off side. then in the 72nd win, heading in to a corner much to the relief of the crowd the points were made safe in the 90th minute. christian was sent off on a
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challenge, and they scored from the spot 2-0 to atletico, they now laid the second place real madrid by six points. al jazeera. >> expected to visit palestine to settle a dispute between the football ocean and palestine counterpart. they have restricted players were moving in, out, and between the occupying territories for matches. but israel's security forces feel football is being used to hide weapons and militants. they have signed an agreement on both sides. if a deal cannot be done, th thy
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will seek expulsion in june at the fee at fifa conference. >> i think this pressure and the understanding of this government might be an expulsion that would be good for the footballers and good for security. check fofor more go to www.aljazeera.com and you can get in touch with our team using twitter and facebook. the address once again, www.aljazeera.com/sports. peter moorhead has been named the new head coach of the cricket team.
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following england's ash defeat in australia. this will be moore's second stint in this position. the detroit's goaltender made 25 saves. they broke a scoreless tie to give the red wings the 1-0 win. game two will be in boston on sunday. rene boruqe scored twice as the canadiens take game two in second game in the series. the top seeds in the west the anaheim ducks lost against the stars. that's all your sports for now. >> thank you very much. we'll see you later. that's it for this news hour on al jazeera. stay with us.
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