tv Weekend News Al Jazeera June 14, 2015 3:00am-3:31am EDT
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the vested nature of our neighbors may are neutralizeby these groups. >> i'm looking at peace and security council must be actually committed to the principle. the african union principle of acts african problems require african problems. >> the african union peace and security council is meeting in johannesburg. is the political fallout as president me air pierre nkurunziza pursues a third term of office.
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>> humanitarian situation have fled the country and we think that it is only the dialogue and its consensus based on the respect of the execution of all the agreements that have been reached in order to find a lasting solution. >> closed door deliberations continue. >> arrested president bashir accusing him of war crimes in darfur. let's cross to johannesburg. what are the chance he of acting on this icc request?
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visuallyvirtuallyily nonexistent i suppose? >> at the same time the arrest by south africa. any possibility of it, especially in recent months the african union against the icc has been growing. especially following the icc the appearance at the crick by kenya's vice president, as well as also appearing at court referring to be look at african solutions to african
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approximate. the au members saying they would not follow up on arresting the sudanees president oarnl omar al bashir. so far officials have been saying very little around that. we have had reports of the president's plane landing in south africa, on saturday afternoon. this is the first appearance since 2009 and 2010. be has discouraged the sudanese president's, arresting by south africa authorities. >> thank you.
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doctors without borders is warning the fight against ebola isn't over. there have been a spike in guinea and sierra leone. >> it's not over until it's over. i'm very concerned about the fact that there is a general fatigue in waning of attention on ebola and they are basically declaring victory before its time. we need to double our university or else we will never get there. >> aimed at ending the war in yemen, although there's some doubt as to who will actually attend. in yemen itself, saudi air strikes and ongoing fighting are taking a heavy somewhere toll heavy
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toll. >> rush of children and their mothers, most government services have been cut here because of the fighting around the city. schools are shut. power is down and supplies are running desperately low. >> there is a war. we have to stay at home where it's safe. it's chaos. no one can live in such condition. >> this man has a generator. rare in the city. people are paying him for producing their power. they know who is possible. former president ali abdullah saleh. >> there is little fuel here now so disorchgies are being used more and -- so donkeys are used for and more.
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rubbish is strewn on every street corner. tight security is another restriction on normal life. residents clear up after what's described as an air strike by the saudi led coalition and all the time, appellants for aid groups are growing. richard martin, al jazeera. >> hundreds of syrians have gathered near the turkish border over 13,000 syrians have crossed the border. strategically important town, al aviad, the only town on the
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border near raqqa in syria. video of an alleged incident shows a soldier swinging a rifle, it happened north of rah ramallah. israel, video shows a man pulling afiring a bomb nearby. files contained intelligence techniques that would allow foreign powers to identify supplies. edward snowden is wanted in the u.s. for leaking files from the
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u.s. national security agency currently in russia where he was granted asylum in 2013. a man who opened fire on the dallas police headquarters, was shot dead by police. melissa chan has more from dallas. >> reporter: the blaze of bullets in the night caused such chaos that police thought they were attacked by multiple gunmen but it was one man who rammed his car into headquarters. before leading officers on a car chase. and then, a standoff. >> this was an on again off again negotiation. he would get angry during
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negotiation and hang up and stop talking. he would rant for a while not actually have a conversation with us during negotiations in hutchins and at some point negotiations just ceased. at 5:07 a.m. our swat snipers shot at the suspect. >> that's dallas police department headquarters. now how often does the police department of a major city become a crime scene? but we understand the gunman shot bullets through ground floor lobby second floor and also at police vehicles. no one was hurt, including a officer who was seated here. >> some officers are very lucky i believe we are blessed that our officers survived this ordeal. there are bullet holes in squad cars, where officers were
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sitting. there are bullet holes in the front lobby where our staff was sitting. and once that member had just walked away to get a coke dpm they had stayed.if they had stayed there during the ordeal, we believe they would have been killed based on the .travel of the bullets. >> bomb was detonated by the bomb squad. eric ah anda and jeremy lift e-live nearby. >> there was a lot of yelling get inside the house. you see the van shooting inside the police station. >> it was something like we've -- >> we've never witnessed. >> first time we've been through that. >> this is the most excitement on the whole street.
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>> we have front row seats of it. >> kind of like a movie zeal. >> yeah. >> reporter: in the end a police sniper killed the gunman, but his vehicle had been booby trapped with explosives. melissa chan, al jazeera dallas. tamir rice was shot because of a police call that somebody was waving a gun around in the park. it turned out to be a fest child's toy. still to come on the program, supporting an entire family on just $10 a day. but this rohingya migrant living in thailand is lickier than
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most. plus. >> government of azerbaijan. >> the was a lot of luck involved. >> engaging a younger audience. >> a lot of kids don't think reading books is cool... >> and why novels are a key to success. >> education is the future of the economy. >> every tuesday night. >> i lived that character. >> go one on one with america's
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heavy fighting between kurdish forces and i.s.i.l around 13,000 have crossed the border in the last two weeks. after russia and china cracked top secret information from whistle blower edward snowden. hillary clinton has held her first major rally speaking from new york she called for a new era of prosperity and economy for ordinary americans. kimberly halkett reports. franklin roosevelt the former u.s. president who lifted thousands of americans out of poverty. >> prosperity can't just be for ceos and hedge fund managers. democracy can't just be for billionaires and corporations. prosperity and democracy are
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part of your basic bargain too. >> clinton believes the recent economic recovery in the united states has eclipsed too many working and middle class americans. she said she will build on the problems first championed by her husband in the 1990s. she promises she will reform the u.s. criminal justice system as well as the immigration system in the united states. she also says she will fight for equal voting rights and pay for women. but first clinton needs to win the white house. there is little competition for democratic nomination but her republican challenger is expected to be remind americans of potential conflict of interest involving foreign donations to husband bill clinton's foundation. >> there is no question that there are -- that hillary is going to have a lot of tough
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stuff she's going to be dealing with, particularly this year. she's going to have to persuasively explain to the american people why these things were appropriate. >> those attending the rally seem unphased by the allegations of impropriety. >> she's addressing the issues that are important to the people of america today. >> in this nation it's important to be inclusive and to really fight for everyone. >> over the next year and a half clinton says she will prove despite her critics she's a tenacious fighter determined omake history. >> i may not be the youngest candidate in this case but i will be the youngest woman president in the united states. >> meeting face to face of the very voters she says if elected president she will fight for.
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kimberly halkett, al jazeera new york. world's biggest ever engineering projects, the inter-oceanic canal. due to open in five year's time. (n) guatemala there are calls for president to resign over a multimillion dollar corruption scandal. the new protest investigating whether president otto perez should be stripped of immunity. david mercer reports he has done nothing wrong. it is a show of force that will not go away, thousands protesting in the nation's capital as they have for months. their message clear.
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>> there's been too much corruption. the president should resign because he hasn't represented us like he should have. >> this is becoming known as the guatemalan spring. while they're playing a role in political change they're only telling part of the story. last week, guatemala's past was tasked with forming acommission to investigate whether president perez had any role in two corruption scandals. the situation has already cost several of his cabinet ministers their jobs. he says he has hot committed any crime and will not step down. >> translator: i have a constitutional responsibility. it is a responsibility i was not
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named. it was determined by the people in the ballot boxes in a vote. it is a constitutional mandate. i'm willing to face these situations these proceedings but i will continue to work until the last minute to sterve serve the guatemalan people. >> it is not exactly clear away will happen. i think the congressional commission will look at the presidents but also not try generate more social mobilization against their own congress. i think they'll trio to make an objective decision. >> say guatemalans need to be more vigilant than ever. >> translator: we can be alert, we can be ready we can be organized and stay informed what's happening politically. we need to make sure that politicians act in a way that's transparent and just. >> with elections just three
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months away, protesters are demanding urgent political reforms. thousands of voices telling the government to act now. david mercer, al jazeera guatemala city. >> jack warner has promised to says he will not tell due to loyalty to sepp blatter. have promised to discuss documents related to fifa's financial dealings. >> boycott in azerbaijan. dozens of journalists and activists are said to be jailed for criticizing the government. >> on the other side of the
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games is the detention center. many critics of azerbaijan's government are locked inside. on her way to jail six months ago, she's azerbaijan's most famous investigative reporter. still embarrassing as he hosts piern games continued her research into billions of dollars. the first family allegedly owns in assets and off-shore accounts. her mother elmira is proud of her achievements. >> she loves me very much but she will not give up her fight to protect me. when i went to see her in prison she said, i will not give up my fight even though they try cel you. i said i know that. human rights lawyers and
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religious leaders one opposition activist who was fearing arrest was given refuge at the swiss emimeas baste for ten months. now is free escorted from azerbaijan.. prisoners of conscience as defined by the group amnesty international. >> there are no political prisoners in azerbaijan. there are criminals in custody. no sifn canno civilian can interfere with the judiciary. >> these world leaders who were embarking for the games and met on the sidelines suggest there
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are other partners azerbaijan can rely on. robin frefort forester walker, al jazeera, azerbaijan. >> 14 people have died from the advisor mers in south korea. hundreds of protesters have marched in hong kong after a key parliamentary vote. the opposition's promised to vote down china's proposals which means that only candidates vetted by beijing can stand for election when they are debated in parliament on wednesday. pirs from chinese state television show entire floors missing. four people have been rescued so
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far. it's unclear what caused the building to collapse. rohingya muslims have been fleeing myanmar for decades saying they are denied basic rights in the mainly buddhist country. for members who have managed to settle there life can be a struggle. scott heidler traveled there to.report the story. now living if shanghai, he runs a small roti stand. like many of his fellow rohingyans he left to flee persecution but well before the recent spike of migrants. undercover soldier were beating his father before they took ethical prison. years later the incident is
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still raw. >> translator: i never saw my dad again after he came out of prison. i fled to bangladesh and then india. i fled to myanmar and then ended up in thailand. >> we aren't showing mohamed's face his work permit is for construction not selling roti. but he is better off. >> the ones that just arrive over the last couple years do not have any documents. >> reporter: that's because myanmar's government does not recognize the rohingya. they view them as illegal immigrants from bangladesh. known as being a multicultural community thanks oits location underto its locationon trade routes.
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this congregation has been going. >> we can't really identify that they are rohingya. they have told us that they are not rohingya but burmese muslims. as there are many buddhists living in shanghai. he can't go back but encourages the rohingya still in moirm myanmar to stay on. >> they should stay and fight not with guns but with law and prove we are entitled to be here according to history. as myanmar's government has shown no signs of changing its stance on the roing, scott rohingya. scott heidler, al jazeera
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myanmar. tearchedingattending talks it's uncertain who will attend if at all. we'll be keeping a closing eye on that at al jazeera. you can read more about that with analysis at you are website website, aljazeera.com. this is techknow. a show about innovations that can change lives. the science of fighting a wild-fire. we're going to explore the intersection of hardware and humanity and we're doing it in a unique way. this is a show about science by scientists. tonight, techknow investiages dirty gold.
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