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tv   News  Al Jazeera  July 7, 2015 2:00pm-3:01pm EDT

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>> a the foot, christophe exams his vineyard and worried about the coming weeks. his drapes are ripening fast under the sun, and they won't wait for greece to solve it's financial problems. if they are not picked in september, they will be ruined and so will he. right now he can't get money from the banks to pay his suppliers. time is precious, we need to make paints quickly, very soon the harvest starts and then everything needs to happen. all i hope is that a solution will be found very soon. wine is one of the oldest industry. he needs more than generations of expertise to save it now. >> almost everything in this vineyard apart from the drapes themselves is important. the glass, these barrels come
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from france, even these corks come from portugal. and this shows why greece would face a difficult time if it was kicked out. because even a successful business like this one is heavily reliant on imports that would suddenly become much more expensive if degree left the single currency. >> a factory on the edge, the machinery dates from the 1950's it's been lovingly maintained and still works just fine, this is also a family inheritance. he too is date rangoli reliant on banks that have been closed for a week and a half now. >> last week i tried to send money abroad to buy raw materials but it was not possible, so the raw materials never arrived the market has been frozen for a week, we have not received a single order and we can't pay back our debts or loans.
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the last five years have been difficult enough, he had already layed off 25 workers but now he and all of agrees' struggling industries are in a new and dangerous situation. barnabie phillips al jazeera. >> according to e.u. sources at the euro zone meeting without solidarity the path we need to follow is not possible. however, we cannot get a time picture yet. but what i say is that it is not about weeks any more, but about a few days. >> what do we want, is for greece to stay in the euro zone that's our goal. to reach that goal, they must make serious proposals.
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they have already announced them, they must be fleshed out. >> let's go live to jona. in the last few minutes they have been talking about anvil proposal for the rest of july until they can come one a bigger deal, how h that go down with the european partners. >> hard to know, i think will it be a very interesting week, of course, they were expected to see new proposals during this meeting in the evening in brussells that hasn't been the case. i am told that journalists prez passes have been issued without a specific date on them that's pretty unusual for a european council meeting they have been simply stamped july 2015 it can be a long week, and stretch well into the weekend reports there may be another meeting planned there may be that new proposals are produced that's the suggestion, they will
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need to be -- there is the suggestion of the possibility that something that greece certainly needs to see itself through the rest of this month. no idea where any of this would go, let's get -- the economists here in athens joins me. this course on sunday. the mandate that alexis now has to go to brussells. the most crucial developments since yesterday was the meeting of the party heeders together with the president of the republic. and they all came one a joint statement that will -- they want to keep greece in the euro zone. >> that was here, of course. >> yes that was here in@thens and the presidential palace and there is the first time that the greek party leaders have come together, to join state their commitment to give greece and the euro
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zone, i think this is a strong commitment, and especially mentioned that in his statement yesterday he met with mrs. merkel so i think today they have some good elements in his proposals. >> and of course, not forgetting that 18 plus% of greek opinion polls want to stay in the zone as well. >> absolutely. >> easier said than done, let's talk about the governors finances here, let's talk about the banks time is running out, even if they get a deal, will it come soon enough. >> well, i don't believe so, because the cash in the banks is running out it mite be three days five days or seven days we don't really know, but soon, the cash will run out, put we have to say that greeks have been very very patient, at the cues extreme patience there so it is remarkable how the degree
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society has been maintaining this ordeal. >> a little picture of what happens the f the money runs out, if one of those banks as is being reported now collapsed in the coming days. what happens then. >> will it be a really really dramatic. but i don't think that the rules have any kind of big clashes or people gathering in the streets no people are suffering with very reserved way. so it will be hard, the society will be hit hard, but i don't see any turmoil or any other such incidents happening soon. >> okay, good to meow, thank you for your views there. dramatic days and views in brussells as well. >> let's go indeed now to brussells where jackie has the latest. i suppose the one thing they can agree on is a sense of urgency. >> there's also a sense of frustration and
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disappointment by many here, and some of the finance ministers have actually been expressing that quite vocally, the inthished finance minister tweeted that the meeting had been disappointing the dutch finance minister who is also the president of the euro zone group, he came out and said there has been no new proposals put forward and yet as you say there is this sense of urgency certainly it is felt by the creditors. the german chancellor and also francoise along. and at the moment, the agreements don't appear to have come forward with what has been described as to what they want on the other side they are talking about wanting credible and serious proposals at the moment, those have not been put forward. >> a short term bit of money to tie them over until july, how likely is that?
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>> well the ministers here other ministers are saying there may be a request from the agrees for assistance under the european stability mechanism which would provide them with the urgent cash, which is needed to literally just keep paying pensions and keep hots also vital services like power, and water and public transportation going in the coming days. now, the dutch finance minister the president of the euro group, has said that there may be a proposal from the greeks as early as wednesday. there have also been talked possibly, of another euro group meeting for another meeting similar to the one we have had today of those finance ministers so angel
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merkel's message we are talking about, days and not weeks here, certainly the greek side appears to be stretching out the number of days before it puts forward those proposals or at least until the counter parts feel that the kind of proposals they have, are ones that actually merit serious consideration. >> okay, reporting live from those talks thank you. >> the debt crisis rambles on, it is also effecting the healthcare system, a third of degrees now don't have access to healthcare. many community run clicks are providing a lifeline for patients. >> it is a busy day. patients keep on arriving hoping to have their pain relieved in many ways than one. everyone working here is a volunteer. professional whose fill in where the government can't. we want to stay a european
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country to remain european country. but many of these people, they cannot smell what europe is in any more. >> it is political in it's origins it is purely siding with the government and the no vote. >> when it first opened it was mainly immigrant whose were coming here to seek treatment, but over the past four years the number of patients has increased steadily. >> on this day, they are the majority in the waiting room, greeks who lost their jobs and with it all access to social security and healthcare. he sold it four years ago, he suffered from a tumor on his lungs. >> i can't go to the hospital, i don't have insurance, i couldn't pay for it. the only solution for me to be alive is to come here, if i didn't come here, i would
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be dead the wait can can be long and frustrating but with the never ending crisis, community clinics have become a lifeline for many. marquise is an unemployed electric engineer, he said he is an optimist by nature, except when it comes to his country. >> so europe is going down. >> more and more. >> the volunteers listen, but are not immune to the crisis. all he had this unpaid job since he graduate add year ago. now he is looking to travel abroad. i will go so find a job.
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very difficult. dreams and hopes to be a good dentist. >> his patients however will be left behind. wondering when their country will come out of the european emergency room. al jazeera. >> still ahead, president obama pledge to step up the campaign against isil comes under scrutiny in the senate. an exclusive report on the rebel forces fighting to bring down the government in south sudan. and in h sport maria comes through the first real test of wimbeldon joe has all the news later. talks between six world powers and iran on a historic nuclear deal have missed another deadline. negotiators will now carry on discussions beyond the
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tuesday cut off our editor has more from the talks in vienna. >> face to face, and trying to bridge the divide on the remaining most difficult issues. there was smiled at the start of their first meeting, but by the end of the second, well after midnight, the atmosphere was described as tense. >> this was supposed to be the final deadline, but because of the deadlock, the e.u. foreign affairs chief says there will be an extension, which she is not setting a new date. >> we are continuing to negotiate for the next couple of days. this does not mean we are extending our deadline. we are taking the time the days we still need, to finalize the agreement which is something that is still possible getting into the difficult time. >> russia's foreign minister says there are about eight
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items that need to be sorted. some are leaving for now there are a range of issues whether there are political discussions that need to be have and there will need to be trade offs and difficult decisions made, on both sides if we are going to get this done. >> u.s. secretary of state john kerry has in the past said he is proposal prepared to walk away. however, it is clear that he is not ready to walk away yet, even though they are not setting a new debt line, the interim deal with iran would have expired and it's now been extended until friday july the 10th. al jazeera vienna. >> four years since south sudan was created the newest country remains in the grip of a bitter civil war. following a peace deal to end africa's longest running civil war, it was short lived and a new war broke out in december 2013. after power struggle between the president and his deputy.
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since then, 10,000 people have been killed and more than 1.6 million have been internally displaced. last month while peace talks were going on, rebels captured the capitol of upper nile state, the town has now been retaken by the army, but much of it remains in rebel hands. kathryn sawyer gained rail access to rebel forces. nose are the rebel fighters. the sudan people liberation army, they just come from the trenches in the eastern state, it has taken them four days through the swampy junk toll get here, we saw young boys among them. the children organizations say there's around 12,000 child soldiers but army commanders say some of the children we saw have been separated from their families. that doesn't mean that tear soldiers.
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all and all we don't accept that and we are applying with all the geneva conventions with child soldiers. >> they songs of pat and victory, they have been fighting force for about 18 month now and say the mission is to change the leadership. >> this commander tells his troops that special forces fighting for the north are making gains near south sudan's only functioning old field, the rebels have joined forces which is allies to the government until recently. we are not fighting for control of oil or south sudan. we are fighting the rule.
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he wants to rule the country with abiron fist. >> yet eager to displace some of their webs, they showed us some of their heavy weapons like this, and the light weapons as well, and a lot of ammunition, now sudan has been accused of providing weapons to the rebels, but they have denied this and so have the rebels that soy most of the supplies cot from the south sudanese government. >> we are not getting help from sudan or anywhere, if we were, we would have won this war a long time ago. we are getting support in sudan. >> this fighters are heading to yet another front line position. lit be a long tough journey on foot, but they say they are fighting for a cause they believe in. our next guess has just returned from the upper nile
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district where fighting broke out. response manager joins us live, thank you for taking the time to talk to us, can you you tell us about how people are coping with the fighting going on. >> i hope you can hear me, it is lauren taylor in the studio, just asking you you have just come one upper nile, give us an indication of what it is like for people living among this fighting. >> question seem to have difficulties connecting with lilian apologies for that we will try to get her back later in the program. >> meanwhile the u.s. defense secretary defended president obama strategy to defeat the islamic state of the iraq and levant, ash carter addressed the committee humanitarian
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situation is another tragic consequence of what is going on in isil. it remains one of the coalitions efforts as i indicated in my opening statement to relieve the humanitarian sippuation, that is difficult to do when there is not order and control on the ground. and so this is why we need to get a security situation that is stable. ground forces that are capable of seizing territory holding territory, and governing that's the only way to get the humanitarian situation turned around, either in iraq, or in syria. >> rosalyn jordan who is in washington, d.c., what is he mainly challenged on. >> lauren, the secretary of defense as well as the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff general martin testimonysy, were challenged on whether the u.s. led coalition strategy to fight
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isil in both syria and iraq is, in fact, working. there was considerable skepticism particularly from the republican leadership of the committee senator john mccain. questioned whether the u.s. should consider deploying ground forces even though that is something that the u.s. president barack obama has said he will not do. the response from the two defense officials was this, that basically they are trying to train and assist iraqi forces as well as members of the moderate syrian opposition. to fight isil, and they say that the military effort even though it is quite costly, nearly $3 billion since this time a year ago, they say that it is really the only way to make certain that the people who are most effected by the threat from isil are actually capable of trying to fight it and to try to destroy it. >> what about air strikes in syria by the u.s.? there was some suggestion it might be a change in
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strategy, but that was denied was that raised at all lauren it was raised and there was considerable skepticism again from senate republicans about whether the effectiveness of the air are translating into the destruction of isil targets. out is there as some battering suggesting that a large number of coalition sources aren't dropping any bombs at all and the defense department was quick to push back saying that they were flying when they felt they had good intelligence, and that they did not see any need to bring in u.s. troops to haul in ground strikes because they say that would mean having to get permission from the government of the syrian president and that is also something that the obama administration says it is not going to do. >> okay, rosalyn jordan, thank you very much. >> fighters in iraq have
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repelled an attack from fighters from isil. >> the five hour fire fight, backed by air strikes took place in the village picture tuesday graphic to show, the forces drove around with the bodies of the fighters on the bonnets of their armored vehicles. let's return now to emergency response manage tore talk to us about issues in south sudan. lilian is live for us in the capitol. thank you for being with us, i hope you can hear me now you have just come back, tell us about the situation for ordinary people that are caught up in this. >> we are not having any luck with the line from jube ba, perhaps we will try later. in the meantime, still ahead what lessons can greece learn
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from argentina. and in sport, one of the oldest rivalries in the world gets underway, as australia prepare pod defend their trophy in england.
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manage your account anytime, anywhere on any device. just sign into my account to pay bills manage service appointments and find answers to your questions. you can even check your connection status on your phone. now it's easier than ever to manage your account. get started at xfinity.com/myaccount >> wildfires lit by arsonists. >> this sounds like it happened in a flash. >> millions in damages. and the tragic human cost. >> he's not here anymore. >> find out how experts are fighting back.
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>> the big most history as greece today, the banks restricted what customers can withdraw and unemployment rocketed. now as the economy there has turned around, daniel take as look at what lessons greece can learn from argentina.
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>> she works in a foreign bank back in 2001, and still has painful memories. >> we stopped everything. had to do everything to ensure that our customers could not have their own money. take it out on their own accounts. monica like most had to adapt to change, leaving banking to open her own shop. it was hard for everyone to live with that fear. police were patrolling the streets no one knew what to do. >> things only cleared up after a long time. more than half the population plunged below the poverty line. the pesto was devalued. there were daily protests. some say argentina was lucky
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it had soy yeah exporting to china. argentina as you can see is still alive. and some would say thriving. but there's no doubt that that massive default 14 years ago left deep star which is the country can is still learning to live with. one of the highest inflation rates with this dispute with other hungry creditors mostly in the united states. >> billions of argentine dollars and foreigners are weary about investing here. >> the bottom line is the cost in terms of poverty and reputation, it's amazing so anything that -- and both sides should compromise. >> arm tina in 2001, still had it's own currency. and was found bound in the
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union, but these scenes of strife, find the two countries together. the arm tyne president praised him as a outvictory for dignity. in the wake of the crisis said that the dead don't pay their debts. for millions of argentines the country is not dead. and greece can perhaps take some comfort from that. al jazeera, buenos aires. >> the u.n. envoy is continuing talks to try to bring about a humanitarian cease fire. more than 80% of the 25 million people in some form of humanitarian aid. >> 24 week was supposed to bring peace theys in this discussion would replace destruction, but the fighting hasn't stopped and aid
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workers are more worried than ever before. >> this emergency is beyond the scope if we don't stop it now, so we have to have a humanitarian force. >> it is hard to imagine a more dire situation, water food and fuel shortages are spreading more misery, as malnutrition rates already high, continue to rise. last we can the u.n. declared yemen a level three humanitarian crisis highest designation possible, now the agency has announced another milestone, at least 1500 civilians killed in the past three months of violence. >> we need massive massive humanitarian intervention, if we want to avoided a real catastrophe out of hand now. >> well the envoyed arrived with high hopes his presence
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so far has stopped neither saudi led air strikes nor the houthis. >> the fighting isn't limited to the capitol and civilians keep getting caught in the cross fire. people don't have access to food now do drugs. the national registration and invocation plus the fighting is real. >> many thought the muslim holy month would be an incentive to stop the violence. but with a little over a week until the start of celebrations to mark the end of the fasting there seems no end in sight to the suffering al jazeera. >> doctors in the et balled city say at least 260 people have died of position toe born diseases. civil sr. services have come to a halt pause of fighting.
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the president of the international committee of the red cross, i began by asking him about the humanitarian situation in yemen. yemen has been a difficult place to operation because of the general insecurity. and try to adapt to the respective circumstances, of course, with the intensification of the military operations, it's getting increasingly difficult to find a space for humanitarian operations. there is not only the air war going on, but there is also ground fighting going on, and therefore, negotiating access and transport and support lines for our delegates on the drowned is very difficult. also because of the fragmentation of the environment, of armed groups and fighters on the ground so
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it is both the insecurity from the air as well as the fighting on the frowned, which makes the humanitarian operations difficult. >> for the airport to be reopened and deploring the bombing of the runways any progress on that. >> well, we do -- we are able to use regularly shaped as well as air supply lines. in yemen. so -- but the problem at the present moment is rather the distribution to bring goods from the different ports into those places in yemen, where needs are greatest, and it is everywhere, so we can bring in humanitarian goods be uh distribution is difficult at the moment. >> you have talked about negotiating safe access, obviously have to deal with difference state actors are there any people you haven't been able to deal with?
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whether it's in yemen or iraq, do you talk to isil. >> well, we do talk to those arm grouped that control parts of territories and populations when we think that it is important to have access and to do humanitarian operations. so we do talk to a lot of groups to negotiate a certain access to territory yemen has been relatively good environment in a sense that they know for a long time and has been known by the actors for a long time, so we had addressing and telephone numbers and persons. in other parts of -- >> islamic state group is difficult, boko haram in neyer have is very difficult so there are places in which
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we aren't able to negotiate access. >> you mentioned syria, what is able to achieve there? you have had some kind of operations there give office update on what it is like now. >> well, there are two sides of the medal. the operations here is by far the largest operation worldwide, we have 170 million plus a year budget, and we extend it reasonably in the whole territory, and if you look back at the last 12 months we have been able to increasingly operate in all parts of is syria but the needs are so staggering at the present moment that what we can do pails confronted with the needs. so it is not a virtual impossibility to co, but we don't have stable access into most places.
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you have recently come back from nigeria. >> a lot of killings there recently, what sort of things have you been able to do that. >> we have been for quite some time almost the only organization bees active the north, and having a sub delegation. which is a city which has grown out of proportion. we are feeding more than 250,000 displaced people in the environment, and in the neighborhoods. and we are planning to consider the increase that's coped so it is the usual water sanitation food, medicine what we have difficulty is education.
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kids have been displaced for two years now some of them, and they haven't gone to school. and it is just a highly sensitive area, so there are limits to what we are able to do, because at the end of the day, we are depend on the perception with the ability to operate in an environment which is safe enough for our people to operate in. >> saudi arabia has arrested three brothers in connection with a suicide bombing on a shia mosque at the end of june dozens were killed at the mosque in kuwait city, shortly after friday prayers. a fourth brother is believed to be fighting with isil in syria. the brothers haven't been named. there have been two attacks in the afghan capitol armed men attacked intelligence compound in the east of the city, and in the second attack a car box target add nato convoy, nato said none of the soldiers were killed
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but three civilians were injured, the afghan taliban has claimed responsibility. jennifer glass sends us this update. >> two attacks in kabul the first one the taliban targeting a nato convoy in the east of the city, a suicide car bomber heavily damaging one of those armored vehicles driving through town, a lot of windows were blown out, nato said none of the soldiers were killed and an eyewitness news told al jazeera that he saw at least three after dan civilians injured in that attack and just a couple of hours late ear couple of kilometers away, three attackers targeted an intelligence district station in the east of the city, one of them detonating a small vehicle am at the check point, 2 others wearing suicide vests to trying to get into that intelligence headquarters. one intelligence member was killed the two attackers killed as well in a gun fight there so really
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continuing pressure here, this is the second set of attacks in just a week, a week ago another convey was targeted on the airport road, that raise add lot of anger among after dan whose were angry with the soldiers to driving along the road because the targets tent to be nato convoys of course, the second target today intelligence services as the taliban keep up pressure on the government. >> more than 1 million people in ecuador have been attending a mass. in the north of the city. some even camped overnight braving the wet weather to get a good spot and the best view of the pope. he is a week long tour, and he also visited bolivia and paraguay in the next few days. >> the suicide bomb evers were carried out who
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identified themselveses with al quaida, on the anniversary of the attacks how the threat to britain has chained in the last ten years. >> lee business tape. richard elerie. >> as britain remembers the name of the 52 victims their families gather the permanent memorial dedicated to them. >> their deaths represented the first major attack on british soil by british born militants. it was during rush hour when they unleasheds is poms on three underground trains and a bus. the violence shocks the city, and forced authorities to reassess the threat facing the country. in 2013 that understanding changed again when two converts murdered lee rigby in london in brad daylight. they said they wanted to avenge the killing of muslims by the british armed forces
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security services altered their tactics but attacked are increasingly hearter to track and to stop. >> the threat we face today is very different, it is not simply a tight organize, plotting terrorist attacks you now have organizations using propaganda, to create a violent cult arecord the world. >> regular drills like this, authorities say help hone their response. some 40 plots have been uncovered, today the threat level in britain stands at severe, and the attack is highly likely. and the emergence of the his lattic state, had added a new dimensions to the challenge. etch hing the police is nick, whose organization tries to discourage extremism.
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>> becoming more religious and what is so called nonviolence, then becoming violent extremist. >> we think there are multiple different mechanisms of radicalization. >> here at the memorial service, british royalty has joined the family and some of the emergency workers who were first on the scene that day. there's talk of promoting tolerance and respect, but ten years after the tragedy and often hard to anticipate. charley angela, al jazeera london. >> ruling party has won a overwhelming victory in a controversial election as widely predicted. the poll was boycotted be i the opposition, which says the president isn't eligible for a third term. this party won 77 out of 100 elected seats according to the national election commission. >> stilt ahead. >> where you can listen to a painting, at a new exhibit
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putting sound to art. in sport a triumphant home coming joan has more on the latest, coming up.
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time for sport now. >> lauren, thank you very much. we begin at wimbeldon. she is through to the semifinals and so is fourth seed maria sarapova. but first, this was the matter of the one set shoot
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out with kevin anderson. as stewart reports. >> novak had come back from two sets down, before bad lines stopped play late on monday. the battle court number one but the defending champion was once again having to battle against these big serving south african opponent but he finally got the break he needed and clothes out the match the question how much h take out ahead of the quarter finals. >> it was havear difficult match one of the most difficult in my career that's for sure. kevin plays exceptionally well throughout the entire match. >> women's fourth seed also had problems, she was already playing her last eight match but lost a second set tie break. it was the first set she had
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dropped in the entire tournament so far the 2004 champion hit back 6-2 in the decider, she will play serena williams in the semifinal. the other half of the women's draw is wide open, and number 20 seed, of spain is into the last four, after straight sets win. new territory for the 21-year-old, her first grand slam semifinal. al jazeera. australia sport has been plunge intoed a racism controversial. has described one of his countries olympic legend as as blatant racist.
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who is now 77, suggested australia's should go back to where their parents came from, if they missed while playing sports. they should be an exam of the younger generation, a great country of ours. if they don't like it go back to where their fathers came from, we don't need them here in this country, if they act like that. >> she was reacting to apparent show of descent, the player who is of greek and malaysian descent was warned for swearing and even appeared to give up trying to return the ball. he has since apologized for her comments. the brother has also jumped into the tennis players defense. >> ives born here, i am just as much australian as anyone else.
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i am esparissed for australias a a whole i can imagine what journalists worldwide are saying about that. >> the newly crowns world championship have arrived home in the united states, the u.s.a. beat japan in the final on sunday, rob reynolds joined me from los angeles with a team are parading their trophy, i know there's a slight delay, but it seems this team has already caught the attention of the fans judging by what is happening behind you there. >> yes, you should have come and scene this just a few moments ago, when the team was actually on stage. the crowd was so loud, so intense, chanting, u.s.a., u.s.a. u.s.a., calling out the names of their favorite players. hope sole he, and of course carlie lloyd who scored that incredible hat trick in the game against japan, many the final, we will just show you
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a little bit of -- still quite a few colorful characters here, a lot of people in red white and blue. and the crowd itself was -- i'd say at least a couple thousand, but that is no comparison to the enormous number of people who watched that final game on television, the biggest television audience in -- for a soccer game in u.s. history. 20 since .7 million people watching on various channels. that breaks records not only for soccer but also for things like last year's world series in payable. which is an annual event, the this year's nb arc final, in basketball, which is also an annual event to the united states really got behind these women on this team, and there was an enthusiastic vibe in the air today. for sure. >> absolutely, such a huge
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boost for women's football all together, thank you for joining us. >> cyclist at the tour de france could face nighttime raids from doping investigators according to the president of the sports governing body. brian cookson announce add new measures as cycling continues to work from cleaning up it's image after a series of drug scandals. meanwhile the tour has a new leader tony martin won the stage across the cobble streets by three seconds to take the overall lead ahead of 2013 champion who is 12 seconds behind. pakistan cricketers have produce add record run chase to win their test series clenching the third and deciding test by seven. unbeaten 171 helped pakistan chase down a victory of 377 to win the series 2-1, it is the highest successful chase in pakistan's history and
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the 6th highest of all time. hit the winning runs pakistan's first series win since 2006 moved them to third, in the world ranking. australia and england's captains have heated warnings to be responsible for their teams behavior in the ashes series. especially enwith it comes to sludging. the oldest rivalry has previously seen verbal insults being traded they have promised they won't allow their players to cross the line. england and australia first played for the 133 years ago australia are the current holders i certainly understand the regulations and where that line sits. >> i have made it very cheer in the last series if
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somebody oversteps that mark it is me, and after all the bailed up they can't wait to get going. >> and his plays. >> al jazeera we have been following the troubled times on the national football team. this following defeats of 30-nil and 38-nil. in the previous matches. the goals with three games 46-nil is an international record defeat, tied they aren't recognized by goving body unlikely to go into the back court.
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>> that's all the sport for now. >> thank you very much. now what do you hear when you listen to a painting? i may sound like a strange question, but new exhibition opening wednesday, promises to let viewers hear paintings and see music. jessica baldwin explains. >> painted by answer the youngner 1533. listen to the music made by a violin with only three strings. it is intense, reflecting the broken string in the loop and the historic tenses as the powerful king of england sought to break with the catholic church. >> an unusual tension within the spears and i think it is palpable and the constant shifting and the hovering.
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and commissioned to compose electronic music. changes as one mirrors the picture, just as the unified form of the painting dissolved into tiny points. the sown of the music, they force you to experience
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something, it is a very voice rail experience, so i would love people to take away an emotional connection. ♪[music]♪ >> an american composure chose the wilton a portable piece made in the 14th century. the music is meant to encouraging you to look deeper, and look through and down, and here we have the bell, and for me a bell should remind you to look somewhere else. >> listening and looking all designs to slow the visitor down. and provide a new way of seeing art and appreciating it even more. jessica baldwin, al jazeera london. >> that's it for me, lauren taylor for this news hour, in just a moment with another full round of the day's news, i do is that with us for that, bye for now.
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>> the greek prime minister arrives in brussells but they say he has proud nothing new to the negotiation table. >> >> held he there and this is al jazeera live from london. also coming up. >> so don't get too excited. >> negotiators say upbeat as the iran nuclear talks miss another deadline. >> songs of waywar in the pattle for south sudan an exclusive report fighting to bring down the government.