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tv   News  Al Jazeera  November 21, 2014 5:00am-6:01am EST

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♪ >> announcer: this is al jazeera. ♪ hello and welcome to the news hour i'm i'm live from headquarters in doha and coming up, in the next 60 minutes, turkish prime minister agrees to close a security corporation with iraq in the fight against isil. marking an anniversary ukraine remembers an event that changes political and territorial landscape. >> you can come out of the shadows and get right with the law. >> president obama gives hopes to millions of undocumented
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people in the u.s. and during to go into uncharted waters, we will meet some men who are choosing to experience what child birth almost feels like. ♪ the turkish prime minister is in irbil to meet people in northern iraq and they held talks with the prime minister al-abbadi and the turkish prime minister met with the kurdish president, what did they talk about? >> well the press conference afterwards was very positive, again a similar type of language to the language yesterday with al-abbadi and saying the
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relationship was renewed and moving forward but again it was only two things people were interested and really the only two things being discussed was security and energy. on the energy front turkey is a big customer of kurdish oil, that was discussed, saying the turks were going to receive the oil they were promised and this is important because turkey doesn't produce any of its own energy requirements and they have to import it and the prime minister said he was willing to act, turkey was acting as a broker between the kurds and baghdad that may arise in the future and actually have done it in the past and we are now hearing oil is now being pumped through the oil ministry into turkey so that is a positive move and also on the security front he promised he would give help to the fight against isil to the kurds and a fight both countries were involved in and energy and security the big issues. >> a very general press
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conference, what concrete steps are they going to be taking? >> well, it was interesting. one of the things that the kurdish president is if the turks needed help in the battle for kobani they can ask and they can send troops and pershmerga in and they didn't have iraqi kurd help and he can say this publically and openingly is a definite turn in the relationship and also the oil that is going into the kurdish territory from the kurdish territory into turkish territory and being pumped today is also a very big step and the money that comes from that also a very big step. this is from the revenue and being placed in a bank account effectively in escrow and nobody could touch it, neither the kurds or baghdad and that is released and the money going to
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baghdad and there are concrete steps and this is a very positive step from the turkish prime minister and seen as being very positive and that is crucial and the relationship does seem at least publically is much more positive than it was. >> in baghdad thank you. israeli police do not plan to prevent young muslims from attending prayers at the mosque, the second week in a row the israeli government lifted restrictions on access to the mosque and live from occupied east jerusalem and i believe the friday prayers have now begun, what is the scene like? >> that's right, friday prayers have begun and as you can see it's a pretty calm scene over here and may see more media and anything and a calm situation outside the historic old city with the mosque compound. in saying that there is still a
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fairly sizable israeli security presence and we see officers periodically patrolling the area but nothing like the numbers we have seen in the past. of course we have been speaking for several weeks now about the confrontations between israeli forces and palestinian protesters in the compound again which is just behind me particularly when far right israeli groups have tried to access that compound, sometimes with them far right ministers as well, this is seen as very provocative and resulted in a lot of protests, but as we have been reporting just last week an agreement between the israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu and king abdullah of east jerusalem and secretary of state john kerry came up with agreement to end restrictions and would appear for now israeli is sticking to that deal. >> thank you so much and live
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for us in east jerusalem and let's bring in an activist and contributor to the 7-2 magazine and live from tel aviv and can israeli government be seen as making some concessions by allowing access to the mosque to all palestinians for the second friday in a row? how do you view this move by israel? >> thank you for having me on. i think that this may well be the only wise and decents move i've seen coming from my government in recent times and i think my general approach to how this government has been acting is one of radical disappointment, first let's imagine for a moment if i were prime minister of israel i think my primary goals working to peace and justice would be to end the occupation and allow and kreept a sense of equality and democracy for palestinian citizens of israel and instead of that prime minister netanyahu
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made a joke with palestinian authority back in april and puting forward a bill talking about the jewish nature of the bill rather than democracy or equality and if i were mayor of jerusalem i would work to create a sense of shared living of decency, of basic services. instead we have settlers moving into neighborhoods like sylvan, houses being demolished and punishments on neighborhoods and finally the public security minister, instead of trying to create a sense of security for the entire public jewish and palestinian the only move he could think of was to ease restrictions on gun permits for jewish israeli. >> i hear your point but unfortunately many israelis, israeli public opinion doesn't
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agree with you, many in israel approve the actions and approve demolition of palestinian homes and approve the building of settlements and so on so how do you convince the rest of israelis what you are saying is what should be done by the israeli government when they clearly seem supportive of actions by netanyahu and, in fact, some would want him to move further to the right? >> that is an excellent question and i think you are absolutely right in pointing out it's an up hill battle but there is something to do in every moment and whether that's media or simply bringing information or challenging the state narratives because i don't think the swing to the right or push to the right is organic grass roots phenomenon and i think it comes from the top and when you have government officials and leaders speaking in terms of revenge,
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speaking in terms of getting even, suggesting only military solutions and only violent suggestions in terms of how to move forward, i think it's not so surprising you see many parts of the public falling in line and taking cues from their government. >> it was interesting to hear your thoughts anyway and from 7-2 magazine live from tel aviv and thank you very much for your time. u.s. secretary of state john kerry arrived in vienna to save talks on nuclear program and they are trying to reach a deal before monday deadline and our editor reports from u.n. headquarters in new york. >> reporter: john kerry the u.s. secretary of state arriving in vienna as the talks to a nuclear talks come on monday. the permanent members of the
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security council as well as germany are trying to build an interim deal a year ago, secretary kerry says a ground breaking agreement is still possible. >> we are not discussing extension. we are negotiating to try to get an agreement, it's that simple. and, look, you know, if you get to the final hour and you are in need of looking at alternatives or something then we will look at them. i'm not telling you we are not going to look at something but we are not looking at them, not now. >> reporter: the negotiators are closer to a deal than officer before but the most difficult issues have been left to the end, complicating things reports from tehran suggesting the iranian side will not make further concessions on the iraq heavy water plant used to produ produce platonium and they have not met the deadline to produce information requested regarding what goes on at the military
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complex where some claim there is a secret nuclear facility. >> i call on iran to increase cooperation with agency and provide access to all relevant information, documentation, sites, material and personnel. >> reporter: ban-ki-moon will show flexibility, wisdom and determination and there are only three possible outcomes, a bank down, historic agreement and yet another extension of the process, the next few day also be crucial, james with al jazeera of the united nations. and we have an iranian journalist and said there will not be a deal before next week's deadline. >> they are not reaching a deal and they had a deal last year and they can have another one and the question is the nature of the deal and we know they have a lot of outstanding issues and need to sort it out and
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america is not ready to lift the sanctions and they are not ready to cross the red lines that have been set by the parliament and leadership so i mean neither party and i have to indicate i don't think it will be a breakthrough over the next few days or so and think about it if there is a deal there should be some commitment on both sides, this means that i ran has to give access to nuclear facilities and stop enrich m program and has to lift everything and go talk to the congress and it's not ready, i ran is not ready and not surprised with extension and that is what i see and neither side israeli and that is the problem and want to be part of the international community but there are checks and balances and conditions the west has to meet and the west says we have conditions you have to meet. so i mean they have not been able to reach a middle ground and the potential is not there. that is a problem. it's not important what the
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iranian people want it's what important is what america wants from iran and they want a hold in the sensitive nuclear work and at the same time america wants better behavior on the part of iranian government in places like iraq and syria, iran doesn't want to cooperate with the coalition of the willing and that is a cue question and obama wants that to be resolved so nobody is going to listen to what the iranian people want and it all depends on the facts and figures on the ground and everything for the time being goes against final deal, i don't think that is going to happen any time soon. >> ahead on the al jazeera news ho hour, japan's house of parliament dissolved to make way for mock election and we look at the prime minister decision. u.s. president takes action on immigration that could effect millions of undocumented people and in sports find out who was
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able to keep their cool with south america futbol rivals. ♪ one of china's best known journalist has gone on trial for laking state secrets and was arrested earlier this year and previously served time for the tiananmen protest and we have details of the highly sensitive proceedings. >> the veteran journalist fate is being decided behind closed doors in this unanimous building in beijing and knows what is now at stake and she has been jailed twice before serving a total of 7 years, after her arrest six months ago state television broadcast her taped confession blurring out her face. she is accused of leaking state secrets to a german news
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organization but her lawyer says the confession was obtained under duress after police threatened her son and he was detained on the same charge and later released and denied permission to attend the trial and also turned away today foreign journalists and not allowed in the court, he is in the street outside. human rights group say the case has eyed -- ideological control since ping and they support as long as it's in accordance with the law and they are prevented from standing outside the court to report on the case and we have been told to leave the area. >> i think chinese authorities want to send a message they are in control of ideology and control who says what and what type of information is allowed to circulate. >> reporter: on the other side of the country the fate of another voice was sealed on
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friday. and he lost his appeal against a life sentence, the economics professor is from the rest of province of shingang and both cases are proof rule of law is applied selectively in china, adrian brown in beijing. >> al jazeera demands release of three journalists who have now been in jail in egypt for 328 days, greste and fahmy and mohamed are accused of helping the out lawed brotherhood and appealing against their convictions. now ukraine is marking the one-year anniversary of protests about being the president and lit candles and left flowers
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with people who died with the police. under the president jack -- and angry protests came to kiev and there were violent scenes of confrontation as police try to clear demonstrations, after months in independent scombar they were cleared out by riot police and special forces and chaos broke out and almost 90 people were killed in 48 hours and a few days later the president left kiev and at the end of february pro-russian started taking over key buildings and bases in crimea peninsula and independence was held and mosco annexed it. and later in the month the acting president launched military operation to fight them and battles broke out across
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ukraine and accused them of supporting rebels and a ceasefire was announced in september but fighting continued more than 4,000 people have been killed so far. let's speak to al jazeera's harry faucet live from kiev in the capitol of ukraine. harry, how is this day being marked? >> well, i should just say i'm not in kiev, i'm in donetsk in eastern ukraine part of the donetsk self declared separatist areas. as far as the marking of this day in western ukraine there will be demonstrations especially later in the evening at the same time as they took place on november the 21st last year when people started to assemble in protest at the announcement earlier that day of the moving away from in association deal with the european union. this day is also the day that the new coalition government in
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kiev after elections recently is announcing itself officially and announcing its policy, in the meantime the vice president of the united states joe biden is in town and symbolic gesture of support in the u.s. to mark the anniversary and important talks they will be having with the prime minister and the president of ukraine poroshenko. >> how are the russians reacting to joe biden's visit? >> they changed the kind of aid they might be willing to offer kiev in the future and talking about nothing being off the table, potential as well as the aid that already has been coming in and also mosco rejected that and said it's fueling the conflict and accuses the west and the united states of having started in the first place.
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the people here in eastern ukraine, the new leadership here extremely concerned about that and at the same time of all of that the new government and coalition government that is setting up on this day in kiev, members of that saying they will push for nato membership. i have to say that for poroshenko and a referendum before that took place but certain to anger the leadership and mosco and at a time when the ceasefire looks like it is shaping on thursday that a thousand people nearly had been killed during the course of this 2 1/2 months ceasefire and the fighting that has been persisting ever since. >> harry faucet is live in donetsk ukraine and not kiev as we mentioned earlier. he won a seat defeating cameron and for uk independence had 42%
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of the vote in a bi election in the southeast and former conservative member of parliament who defected in september and his decision triggered the election. uk independence party wants britain to leave eu and limit immigration but can he sustain his popularity to the next general election and tim friend went there to find out. >> if you want to meet the man on a winning streak in british politics do not look further than the village pub where he is playing his usual man of the people act for the benefit of the press, over a pint he predicts deflexions from conservatives and denies he is leading a racist party. >> i think the word is we are connecting can people, we are connecting with people first on a policy level by talking about things that everybody else wanted to brush under the carpet and secondly i think perhaps
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they are real people, we are a cross section. >> reporter: the tough stance on immigration earned the party criticism but also growing support and rochester and southeast england is the scene of the next by election caused by conservative defect shun to uk. how long can you rise and continue? a protest vote to the by election is one thing but can they sustain their success through to next year's general election turning it into one huge protest vote? he believes he can, cashing in on voters' frustration with much of the british political class. and the conservatives are worried, perhaps another five of their mps are ready to defect to uk. in rochester they are weary of the press, no one to interview here. you can take shots outside but it's a busy campaign center and without taking shots inside.
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>> reporter: more forthcoming is ariel and risks being cents home if ukid has its way. >> i feel very angry, you know, because we come here and working hard and we make the government happy. >> reporter: labor is for the risk as white working class voters switch alliance. >> we have to really challenge uk when they say these things to us we have to be willing to say what does that exactly mean and how are you going to deliver that and you are going against the eu but how will we deliver the policies. >> reporter: all mainstream parties adjust tactics on the onslaught and only the novelty monday the party seems uneffected, tim friend, al jazeera rochester. . >> reporter: president obama is using executive powers to have laws that could spare some 5
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million undocumented immigrants from deportation and says the immigration system is broken and pledged to crack down on people trying to cross the border illegally and correspondence den patty reports from washington. >> reporter: there are more than 11 million undocumented immigrants in the united states, with this announcement u.s. president barack obama says he will give a temporary reprieve to less than half lifting the threat of deportation for people in the country more than five years and who have children who are american citizens, potentially impacting fewer than five million people. >> what i'm describing is accountability, a common sense middle ground approach, if you meet the criteria you can come out of the shadows and get right with the law. >> reporter: it's temporary and the next president could overturn it in 2017 with a list of people to potentially be deported. moving on his own is controversial in large part
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because the president himself has been saying for years he doesn't have the authority to act on his own. >> my job in the executive branch is supposed to be to carry out the laws that are passed. >> reporter: now the white house said they did another review of the law and the president can act without congress to a limit, republicans are threatening revenge. >> we are considering a variety of options but make no mistake, make no mistake when the newly elected representative of the people take their seats they will act. >> reporter: in all likelihood there is probably very little the republicans can do to stop the president on immigration but they can try to make him pay in other areas like budget cuts or blocking legislative agenda and white house officials say they can but are betting they won't. patty in washington. staying in the u.s. and people in parts of new york struggling to dig out from under a major snowstorm are going to have heavy rain and floods and temperatures will rise and fear
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buildings could collapse under the weight of the snow and they are clearing away two meters of snow and at least eight deaths were blamed on the storm, let's get an update on the weather with everton and the snow turning into rain and that's not good news either. >> no it's not it's a nightmare scenario and looking at horrible conditions and going from digging out to mopping up and look at the satellite picture and you will see why and it's not bad at the moment and fair weather clouds in the lakes and pushing up to maritime and making its way further eastward and high pressure and things are fine and quiet now and crisp sunshine at the moment, with high pressure in the northern hemisphere they travel in that direction and a warm front and look at the temperatures for friday and around the lake and chicago and zero and southern new york and d.c. 3 and toronto
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minus 3 and here comes the big change and we start to pick up the southwest or southeasterly wind and a jump in temperatures chicago 79 and new york 6 and 5 degrees for toronto so the fall setting in as we go in the first half of the weekend. look at the second half of the weekend, 11 degrees celcius in new york and warm to cause a rapid thaw and flooding. and through friday fine and dry. rain coming in initially and it will turn to snow and the wet weather driving further east and causing those floods. >> thank you and still ahead on the al jazeera news hour, the country best known for censorship of social media and internet website so find out why it's hosting the world internet conference. and scuffles and tear gas have some nigeria people on the run and we will explain when we come back and sports what is next for
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buffalo snow bound nfl team, stay with us. ♪
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♪ welcome back, you are watching the al jazeera news hour live from doha with me and reminder of the top stories, turkish prime minister in irbil to immediate kurdish leader and will close a security corporation with iraq in the fight against isil and talks will be held in baghdad. israeli police allowed young muslims to attend fry prays at
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the mosque and the second week in a row the israeli government lifted restrictions on access to the mosque. days away from monday's deadline six world powers and iran are trying to reach an agreement on the program and the sticking point are the scale of uranium enrichment and lifting sanctions. a snap election in japan is expected next month after they dissolve the lower half of parliament and not due until 2016 but the vote is seen as a referendum on the economic policies and cheryl tan has more. >> reporter: and with that japan's lower parliament is dissolved, all part of prime minister's plan to make way for an early election, his decision was after weak economic data this week show that japan had slipped into recession once again and saying he will sale
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through the vote after delaying a sales tax hike. >> right now he has virtually no opposition and he knows that, the tact of the matter is he is taking a format of asking the public about delaying the tax increase which he knows will be quite welcome by many parts of the economy and in essence it almost shows his confidence he is going for a snap election i think. >> reporter: the sales tax was already raised once this year, part of a stimulus policy known as abonomics and the government spending billions of dollars and helped the stock market surge and gave the impression that the economy was rebounding but the plan back fired and people simply were not spending especially the large population of older people and japan's economy shrank. >> translator: i want to make clear for debates in the general election and whether our economic policies are right or wrong or if there is no other choices available to us, i will step down if we fail to keep our
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majority because that would mean our abonomics is rejected. >> reporter: in many ways japan has never truly rekocovered aft the bubble burst and despite the strong sector the last 25 years have come to be known as the last decades marked by deflation and stagnation and he promised to put the spark back in the economy and he is now banking on the public to give him another chance, gerald tan, al jazeera. in nigeria parliament shut down until tuesday after scuffles broke out between police and politicians outside the national assembly and we have the story. >> reporter: these are elected nigerian politicians trying to enter the national assembly, inside a controversial vote was taking place to extend the state of emergency in northeastern nigeria hard ets est hit by boko
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haram and he has been stripped of official security detail after he switched sides to opposition last month and this was his first appearance since then and he was stopped at the gates. >> we are locked and we are trapped and then we have tear gas. >> reporter: security forces defended their actions, they say following an intelligence report of likely invasion of house of representatives by what they call hoodlum and thug they deployed personnel to the premises to prevent a down grade of law an order and it has since been closed down. >> i have decided i will shut down the national assembly until tuesday of next week. but the cities and the senate.
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>> reporter: the opposition mps did manage to enter the building and the chamber held a brief session before the parliament was shut and rejected the government request to extend emergency rule in the northeast and officially those special powers are now expired and the ruling democratic party is reigns with boko haram in three more states. >> the truth is we are in a mess as some of you say today, power among god. ddp power among god. how many people will they kill? how many people will they kill? can you imagine tear gas in the chamber of the people? this measure is from the people and where tear gas and you have tear gas in nigeria. [chanting] has political leaders appear to
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be in chaos they go to the polls, al jazeera. mexico some demonstrators fought with police after largely peaceful protests against the disappearance of 43 students on thursday, protesters threw stones in the capitol city and demanding justice for students who went missing in september. their case has become a focal point of anger against corruption and violence in the country. a large fire has broken out in a plastics fire in southwest sidney, australia and forced to evacuate and goes to a timber area and firefighters have restrained to contain the flames. tunesia will hold presidential elections on sunday and among the runners is a veteran who won last month's general vote and we report from there there are
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fears that the country could return to one-man rule. >> reporter: people here are setting another example for the arab world, the birth place of arab spring is in the post resolution and with a bumpy start from the president in 2011 tunesia held second parliamentary elections last month and now people are gearing up for the first ever free presidential poll but there are some fears. the tunis party won seats in parliament and forming the new government. its leader 87-year-old abdel-fattah el-sissi is a runner in the presidential race. >> translator: no, the one party will never return to tunis. >> translator: we are scared if he wins and god for bid he will
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bring back forces of the former regime. >> reporter: but it's different than four years ago and the people gave a clear message in the parliamentary elections last month and not a single party won the needed majority to form a government on its own and now some people believe voters could send another message to prevent the return of one man, one party rule. conservative another party came second in the general polls but is not a candidate for president and instead it's calling for rule by consensus. >> those fears will become legitimate if one chooses to govern by its own, those fears will be reality. in case they choose a different path then those fears basically will vanish or they will become weaker and that is why he has said we are calling for a consensual government. >> reporter: campaign rally for
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tunis leader, it's a party atmosphere and he insists that all fears are unfounded and exaggerated. >> translator: we have all agreed before the elections that we will not rule by ourselves. even if the people gave us the absolute majority. >> tunesians have come a long way since arab spring and on tuesday they will choose a president and shape their own future. al jazeera tunis. >> it's the final day of china's first world internet conference and event designed to showcase destroying influence in the technology sector and china wants to play a larger role in glo global internet and china has an expansion censorship program in the world and conference being attended by chinese policy makers and representatives from
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microsoft and ali-baba and others and joining us now to discuss this is thomas global managing director of mather a global advertising and marketing agency from hong kong and good to have you with us thomas and the slogan was an interconnected world shared and governed by all, governed by all, very ironic for a country so heavily criticize to be having such a conference? >> well it's not the first time we had an internet conference with ironys and tunesia hosted ikan before the arab spring. it's something that certainly one cannot ignore china's importance and i think that the is the point china is getting across in this. >> why does china feel it's able to claim a stake in governing international cyberspace?
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>> i think whether china stake as claim or united states stakes a claim certainly it is a governance issue that has to be debated by all parties and not one single party determined it all, china has played an increasingly important role in terms of medicines online, the growth of chinese internet certainly cannot big , ignored and now we have some of the largest in the world that are all coming out of china, in fact. >> but beijing's internet model is of sense ship and oppression and not just human rights saying this china is not the only country in the world that is so wide and tightly controlled. it if is such a good thing, if china is doing so well why do that bother to send to the internet? >> china, yes, the great firewall cuts off a lot of
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international sites and a lot of global social media sites but internally has grown a tremendous echo system that is china focused and china centric. >> what came out of the conference? i mean was anything achieved? >> as with any conference what is ever achieved? i think what they would want out of it is a discussion about how to govern the internet, how they can work with all parties concerned and there certainly has been a good deal of discussion around it and highlighted the issues you are talking about censorship of the internet in and of itself. >> thank you for joining us live from hong kong. people in the town of ferguson, missouri are waiting to see whether a white police officer will be charged in the death of a black teen ager and the death and protests have highlighted racial tensions in the town but people say it's not the ferguson
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they know and john ferguson has the story. >> reporter: if you live here you no longer have to tell people where your hometown is, nearly everybody knows about ferguson, missouri and the new found notoriety sings. >> people see ferguson and looks like the footage of downtown fluji and because in august we saw the images of quick trip burning and tear gas and buildings boarded up. >> the shooting of an unarmed black teenager by a white officer put it on the map and joins the places like littleton, california and new town, connecticut and names tainted by tragedy. they repair to line the streets and many store owners on west floricin avenue boarded up shops and believe the police mistreat
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african/americans the people who live here don't. >> i have not known a racial problems with the residents, no. >> reporter: for many here and white and what exploded when a white officer killed an unarmed black teen in august is a shock and this is not the ferguson they knew >> the hard part is seeing the community i grew up in, embroiled in racial tension to see this kind of uproar, by the time i graduated, never seen any kind of racial frustrations or strife. so for me to see this happen to our community took a lot of us by surprise, really. >> more than ittings neighbors ferguson went to white fight and when they fled in the 1990s many towns in ferguson became 90% black or more but ferguson remained two thirds african/americans and many whites who stayed embrace the city's diversity even after the death of michael brown. >> everybody come home from work
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and everybody walk out to the street and everybody would just hug each other. it's like everybody is taking all the love they have and surrounding us with it and there is just a select group of people that want to be divided. so we don't want, most of us residents do not want to be divided. >> reporter: when the michael brown controversy fades she said that is the ferguson whose name she will work to restore. john in ferguson, missouri. gitmo prisons with links to al-qaeda sent to europe and closing the detention center in cuba and they have been at guantanamo for more than a decade and still ahead on the al jazeera news hour south africa has the world's largest rhino
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population and finding new ways to protect the animals and in sport two drivers ready for a show down this weekend and we will tell you if it's hamilton who has the psychological advantage after practice, stay with us. ♪
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♪ now, rhinos facing threat in south africa, more than 1,000 have already been killed by porchers this year, from the national park tonya page reports on the operation to save the animals. >> reporter: a pilot herds the
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rhinos in the open and timing is everything and steady hands, the shot is good and the stop watch starts, the less time sedated the better and after a few minutes he falls. he has been shot with a tranquilizer in a part of south africa crewinger national part close to the border with mozambeake and slip through at night and in a lot of danger here and they are after the horns which are prized in parts of asia as status symbol and from the medicine benefits although there are none. marcus is also taking dna samples to help catch porch eer. >> you can take a piece of the horn and link it to a specific carcus which before was difficult in a court case so that is ground breaking that is being done. >> reporter: only a fraction of porchers are caught and convicted, so that is why up to
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500 rhinos from poaching hot spots are being moved to safe zones and some will go to a high security area inside crewinger and others sold to private owners with proceeds going to conservation. south africa is home to 80% of the world's rhino and 20,000 animals and half of them in kruger park but the park is massive 20,000 square kilometers and the same size of israel or whales and only 400 rangers to protect all those rhino. the rangers at war with porchers and hard to patrol and more needs to be done to cut it from asia and to break up the crime sindicates. >> how difficult is it be to trace them shipped in and out of your country, it must be something to do something about it. >> reporter: looking for evidence and found a single bullet that killed this rhino
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and the bones of its fetus, not one but two lives lost in a war that so far the porchers appear to be willing, tanya page, al jazeera in kruger park, south africa. >> time for sports. first practice at the season end grand prix has just finished and rossberg trying to pit hamilton at the title and double points in sunday's race, the bankrupt team has made it to the middle east thanks to sponsor donations. and sadly one of the cars made it into first practice and that finished in 18th position and top of the scandal and hamilton topped the timesheets with rossberg behind and if he finishes second place and he will take the title even if rossberg wins and no goals as they played out a 0-0 in america
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semi finals and in the 5 minute setting the tone as buenos aires had the competition and almost come to blows here late in the first half. plenty of yellow cards and goals and a bit of a premium and giving them the slight advantage with home to come next week. the man who will take on the fifa presidency next year says it's more crucial than ever for reports of corruptions to be made public, so far only a summary of michael garcia's investigation in the bidding process for the 2018 and 2022 world cup has been released and they claims fifa misrepresented his work and first they saw him having further talks with fifa and now decided his report will be looked at again, presidential candidate champaign says the future of fifa is on the line.
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>> what is at stake is not only the image of fifa but if we continue on the trend it's capacity of fifa it will be a mistake and globalized futbol we need a strong governmeance and l the once we don't want regulations, all the once we don't want governors, all the once and using futb oh, l and serving them for political and financial reasons. >> pakistan set a target of 261 to win the second set against new zealand in dubai and had 250 and ross taylor with a century and the first ever century against pakistan and now have to ball out pakistan on the final day to level the series and doing pretty well, right now pakistan 75 for 4 and has been
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scoring a lot of runs this year and is still unbeaten. england stepping up preparations for next year's one-day world cup and they will play seven matches and shri lanka one a series this year and looking to recover a 5-0 defeat in india. >> flush it out of the system as soon as possible and get problems fixed and move on, i think you experience quite a bit in india and we know who our players are, we will find some players, you know, who are players in those precious situations. >> and picking the team for this game has been really hard so they are desperate to get in the team and pulling performances as a world cup at the end of it but not focusing on that really in terms of what we want to do now, we have come here to try to win the series. >> adam scott is back in
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contention at the australian masters as he tries to win for the third strait time and 2013 u.s. master champion could have one over par round of 73 on thursday but friday sort of hitting a 69 and he is up to three on the over all and out in front in melbourne is michael wright with nine under par. roger federer to win a title that so far alluded him during his career begins later on this friday, switzerland and federer to win the title against nine time champion, federer managed to recover from the back injury that had him pulling out of the world final and playing in the second singles match. >> it's better for sure. i mean, it's much better than how i felt waking up on sunday for the finals in london, at least i can run again and do things which wasn't possible at
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all. so i'm relieved to a certaserce extent and happy to be on the court and why i'm here. >> we are glad he is feeling better but he had too little practices and it's going to be tough for him but now let's see what is going to happen, it's a long weekend and you have to take three points and doesn't matter about friday and it's already friday and we will fight to the last one. >> reporter: nfl decided to move the new york yets buffalo bills game away from the bills covered stadium and hoped to clear the field in time for sunday kickoff and offering $10 per hour and game tickets for fans who could help shovel the snow but that game will now take place in detroit on monday. plenty more on the website and you can check that out al jazeera.com/sport and more on the fifa story and the report
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into alleged corruption will be further scrutinized and that is your sport for now. >> thank you so much. and would-be fathers in china are lining up for the experience to experience child birth or get as close as technology allows and gender expects say the birth simulator is a welcome development in countries like china where men are not as involved in the families as they could be and kim explains. >> reporter: father to be thought child birth would be if not easy then at least bearable. but as his contractions were made stronger it wasn't long for him to beg the nurse for it to stop. >> translator: i thought of child birth of being natural and women can get through and do ing this it's not easy for a women to give birth to a child, it's painful like somebody coming out of your stomach, very painful.
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>> reporter: some mothers may find this rudimentry and at full power it creates only a fraction of the real thing. >> translator: even though the pain is far less than the pain of women in birth, if men can experience this pain they will be more loving and caring to their wives. >> reporter: research shows when men involved in child birth and looking after newborn mothers and children are likely to be healthier long-term and in a country where men rarely take part in the process of birth anything to connect genders is welcome but some experts believe the country is headed the other way. >> and it was much more common for either men and women both to be involved more or less equally or more equally than now for the state to take a very large role in child care.
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so in that sense when i go to china now i'm often surprised of things becoming more traditional compared to the way they are here in the uk. >> it relaxed the one child policy last year so if a parent is an only child he or she may go on to have two children and thought reversing a four-decade old luna lead to other changes in behavior in china and more men may be in the chair and in the delivery room, i'm with al jazeera. and finally mike nickel the director behind the classic film the graduate has died, he was 83, it was a movie that launched the career of a then unknown actor dustin hoffman and one of the rare figures in u.s. entertainment to have won at least one emmy, a grammy, oscar and tony awards, that is it for the news hour on al jazeera, and for me and the whole team thanks for watching and abraham is with
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you next and stay with us. ♪
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>> at the height of the cold war >> we're spies... intercepting messages from embassies, military bases... >> one of the america's closest allies... >> we were not targeting israelis... >> suddenly attacked >> bullet holes... ...just red with blood... >> 34 killed... we had no way to defend ourselves >> high level coverups... never before heard audio... a shocking investigation >> a conscience decision
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was made to sweep it under the rug... >> the day israel attacked america only on al jazeera america the turkish prime minister agrees to close security cooperation with iraq in the fight against isil. ♪ from al jazeera headquarters in doha, also ahead. >> you can come out of the shadows and get right with the law. >> president barack obama hopes and gives hopes to millions of undocumented people in the u.s. a former journalist goes on trial in china accused of leaking secrets and critics call it attack on freedom of speech. and looking for