tv News Al Jazeera October 20, 2015 9:00pm-10:01pm EDT
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>> resounding victory. >> this country's friends all around the world, i have a simple message to you - on behalf of the 35 million canadians - we're back the message to the u.s. from canada's next prime minister justin trudeau could deal a blow to the fight against i.s.i.l. damaging disaster -- dodging disaster. >> the discussions do not
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constitute u.s. support for russia's action in syria u.s. and russia sign a memorandum of understanding to avoid fighter jets. in citing hate red. right wing frenchman le pen goes on trial for what he said and emotional reunions. >> back then we were married. we hadn't called each other darling, not even once. >> families torn apart from the korean war reunite with loved ones. some for the first time in 60 years. good evening, i'm antonio mora, this is al jazeera america. we begin in canada where nearly a decade of conservative rule comes to a sudden halt.
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the liberal party led by justin trudeau swept into office. they not only won the popular vote and the right to set up a new government, they captured a majority in parliament. tad he spoke saying he intended to keep a campaign pledge to withdraw fighter jets. john terrett has more on how canada's turn to the u.s. affects the rest of the world. >> reporter: less than 24 hours after a stunning victory, incoming prime minister justin trudeau reaffirmed a main campaign promise, and it drives a wedge between ottawa and washington d.c. he told president obama he intends to pull canadian jets from the u.s. coalition bombing i.s.i.l. the move came in a telephone call. >> they made an important contribution thus far and we are appreciative of them lending
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their talent and skill and expertise to that effort. we hope that we can continue to count on their ongoing support for this important mission. >> reporter: monday night justin trudeau saw a stunning landslide victory sweeping his liberal party party back to power. >> on behalf of 35 million canadians, we're back. [ cheering and applause ] >> reporter: it ended nearly 10 years of conservative control in canada. >> it's time for a change in this country, my friends, a real change. >> reporter: justin trudeau ran a campaign similar to obama in 2008. not hope and change, but real change now. tuesday, the white house acknowledged justin trudeau's victory. >> the united states and certainly president obama congratulates prime minister-designate justin trudeau on a liberal party victory in the elections. justin trudeau is closer in ideology than outgoing prime minister stephen harper is.
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beyond this issue that doesn't mean he and the white house will see eye to eye on everything. canada is the largest trading partner. 707 million annually. the oil-based economy is hurting. justin trudeau plans to turn it around by running a deficit to pay for infrastructure spending and stimulate the economy, sake it will help canadians buy more u.s. products. justin trudeau supports the pipeline run gs 1,200 -- running 1,200 miles from canada to nebraska. but less of a cheerleader than stephen harper. the pipeline aside justin trudeau is likely to work with the u.s. on environmental policies. while justin trudeau and president obama are close on the environment... ..and the incoming prime minister sl vowing to improve -- is vowing to improve relations, moving to pull canadians out of the combat zone means one of the white house's worst fears came through faster than it probably thought
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yes, we mentioned justin trudeau's victory is having an impact on canada's participation in the u.s.-led coalition against i.s.i.l., iraq and syria, al jazeera's national security correspondent jamie mcintyre joins us from washington. canada is it not totally pulling out. how will canada's move affect the fight against i.s.i.l.? >> militarily it will not be all that significantly. canada contributes four f-18 firebombers to the campaign in the aftermath of their withdrawal, and they'll withdraw on an orderly timetable, not immediately. the other countries that are bombing, 1,100, will continue the campaign, so the bombing will go on uninterpreted. canada says it will be part of the anti-i.s.i.l. coalition, but the contribution will not be in the combat phase, it will not be with trainers or advisors. this is a blow to the united
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states. canada has been the u.s.'s most - one of the most reliable military partners and has been in every coalition the united states has been in in the last 50-75 years with the exception of vietnam, and the u.s. and canada jointly defend north america, part of the north american air defense command. symbolically this is a big deal, and the newly elected prime minister told the president in that phone call this afternoon that he was going to honour his pledge to end canada's combat mission in iraq and syria. >> we talked about canada's continued engagement about i.s.i.l. and we continued to engage in a responsible way, that understands how important canada
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has, has a role to play in the fight against i.s.i.l. he understands the commit iments i have made around ending the combat mission. >> the other fallout from the election. the u.s. was counting on canada to buy upwards of 65 of its new next generation joint strike fighters, the most expensive weapons programme the pentagon had, and is counting on foreign military sales to make up the cost. the newly elected prime minister justin trudeau wants to not spend the money, and use it to build up canada's navy, and go with a less expensive option of a more conventional fighter plane like the f-16s, or go with a french fighter plane. that is what might hurt lucky martin, making the f-35 benefitting boeing which makes the f 18 super hornet which canada night consider buying.
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there's one more place this plays out. united states was hopeful that the conservative government of stephen harper may join the u.s. in ballistic message defense, and it's a lit less likely with the liberal justin trudeau in office. going back to the bombing of i.s.i.l., there was an agreement to avoid accidents in the skies over syria. >> the big thing is the pentagon said this is a memorandum of understanding to ensure safe operations. it is not an agreement in the sense that the u.s. does not agree with what russia is doing. it didn't want to call it an agreement. basically make sure the pirates talk to each other in the air, they have rules for staying a safe difference apart, and there's backup procedures. the u.s. made a point of saying this doesn't change anything, it's a way to operate professionally in the same airspace, there's no cooperation between the united states and
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russia in finding a way towards peace in syria. >> jamie mcintyre in washington. thanks. dave was a campaign advisor to justin trudeau, and joins us from toronto. and serves as the national campaign chair in the 2004 and 2006 general elections. david, congratulations on the victory. good to have you with us. a lot has been made how as liberals president barack obama will have more in common with justin trudeau than he did with i.s.i.l. pulling out of the i.s.i.l., not buying f-35s. that doesn't sound like a great start. >> well, i think that there's certainly a difficult - there always is a difficult set of issues between the two countries, with the largest trading partners. we have a lot in common, as the previous story indicated. we work with the u.s. on
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military matters, i think there was an exception that worked out. canada was not part of the invasion in the early 2000s. so there's a set of tough issues between the country, ith you start off with -- i think you start off with two people that like each other. that are kin dread spirits in the way they think about politics, they have a lot of friends in common. as a starting place, if it's the case that job one for canadian prime minister is to have good relations with the american president. on a personal basis there's ground to think that will happen. >> the liberals will have a majority of the seats in parliament, despite them having less than 40% of the vote. how strong of a mandate is it? >> well, you know, in canadian terms, there's a debate here about the electoral system. there's a first past the post
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system. where you can win a constituency with less than 50 president of the vote. some propose representation, justin trudeau said if this is the last election that is conducted on the first past the post. in canadian terms, it's a strong mandate. no one will question it. 40% of the popular vote is around the level at which most majority governments have been formed. >> what do you attribute the victory. justin trudeau being more charismatic than stephen harper, a leader for the past decade. >> there was fatigue with the existing government and a strong desire for change. 70% of canadians said for several years that they wanted to change in government. and that, in fact, most of those people felt that strongly. this was set up as a changed
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election i'm not sure it was there for the conservatives to win. what made it look like it might win is there was a close race, and which would emerge as a primary challenger to the conservatives. what was settled was the party would bring more change, and the change that people were looking for, and once it happened there was a movement of people. >> talking about change, he's a young leader stephen harper claimed that justin trudeau did not have a necessary experience to govern. do you think he'll struggle. are you confident he has the ability and the people to turn
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his ideas into effective policy. >> you asked what the story of the campaign is. the role story is when justin trudeau became the leader of the liberal party: in canadian terms they pent an amount of money in negative advertising against him. for the last three years, all of which have the tag lining not ready. not ready to be prime minister. they tongue that into the public contest. once the campaign started, in debate. campaign settings, the whole power of the conversation advertising agency was judo said back against them.
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the people made the judgment that he was ready, and i expect him to be strong. >> david hurl, advisor to the prime minister-elect. pressure to have you with us. >> thank you for having me on if canada withdraws from the anti-i.s.i.l., the skies will be crowded with war planes and missiles. the u.s. and russia look to minimise on-air accidents, activists say syrians keep dying. >> air strikes like these killed a number of civilians in syria. the government jets killed men people since fighting began. these are part of a campaign by the russian military. moscow's defence ministry said it hit workshops and a depot used by militants. rebels are fighting government
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forces, as well as further north on the road to aleppo option groups say they destroyed a carrier. the government retook a number of villages. >> the violence forced 35 thous in the region. in the morning there was rockets and barrel bombs, using heavy weapons against us they wouldn't have the had much of a chance to day. most of the victims are civilians. aleppo is 50km from the border with turkey, and was a financial and industrial hub. it's been the focus of a three way strike between rebels, and
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forces for months. now that russia is involved in a fight from the air, there may be a change in power on the ground. there's an impact on people living here as more are forced to run away from home persecution or racial hatred. a former french president is facing prison for comments made five years ago some prisons abandoned to the convicts inside.
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a disturbing report from human rights watch is raising the alarm about horrific conditions in brazilian prisons. researchers say they found extreme overcrowd, terrible sanitation, and the threat of violence. the situation has grown so dire in the state of panambuco authorities gave up control of some prisons to hardened prisoners. >> reporter: in this sell in a brazilian prison, 60 men share 6 bunks for sleeping. no cots, no mattresses, a few hammocks for those that don't have to sleep on the floor. >> you get tuberculosis, skin diseases, germs, everything. the floor is foul. people pee on it and step on it. where do i sleep, here?
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i was laying here. here is someone else's bed, and another sleeps at the entrance to the bathroom. >> the watchdog group human rights watch calls it a disaster. three times as many men crammed into the space as it's meant to hold. faeces, sweat and mould is overpowering. >> i got here a year ago. come carnival it will be a year. >> more than half of the detainees are waiting for trial. >> the lack of any kind of classings system means they are crowded with prisoners. the rate of h.i.v. is 42 times higher in the prison than the general population. tuberculos tuberculosis, 100 times higher. prison systems understand staffed.
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medication scarce. this man says he has been living with a rash for three years. >> i was taken to the doctor. they didn't do anything. >> the prisons are short staffed, with one guard for every 30 prisoners, the worst ratio in the country. the minister of justice says there should be one guard for every inmate. prison guards adopted a practice of the delegating authority, controlling the cell blocks in a prison. they are called kee holders. >> the key holder is a dangerous person, in the sense he has power over life or death. >> they act like crime bosses. extorting payments from inmates. they recruit militias to beat and threaten detainees that question their rules. riots are not uncommon. seven were killed in a riot in the brazilian state. four died during rioting,
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breaking out in a prison in august. two of the inmates were beheaded. another pushed off the roof. >> as crowded as the prison system is, they do not rank first for incarcerations. that goes to the u.s. more than 2 million, 200,000 are in prison. acting for 700,000 for every 100,000. china follows with 1,600 inmates. russia is third with 644,000. and then it's brazil, where 607,000 are incarcerated, breaking down to 300 people per every 100,000. we are joined by the managing director of the american division at human rights watch. i don't know where to start with the report. there's so much. why is it happening? brazil is a significant developing country, and this is
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in violation of its own laws and international conventions that it is a party too. >> yes, the prison system in brazil has been a disaster for years. we knew that, we decided to visit the system. we went to this one, and we, ourselves, having seen this stuff before, were shocked by how bad it is. overcrowding in the prisons is a big problem. nationally there's 60% more people in the prisons than there should be. that's the national level. they have built the prisons to house around 10,000 people, and they have packed more than 30,000 in those prisons. even for us it was shocking. >> you hear about overcrowding and sometimes it sounds like an abstract number of. you have got, i read, in one prison only one bunk per seven
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inmates, people are living on the floor, sleeping on the floor in filth. >> yes. we visited one cell among many. 60 people with six beds, one window, one toilet. people had to sleep on the floor. there's not enough space. many sleep sitting up. so they don't fall over, they tie themselves to the bars. that's how bad it is. >> as we heard in the story, the prisons are disease ridden. the rate of tuberculosis, 100 times that of the general population, that's a tangler to the population in brazil. >> absolutely. part of the problem is there's a tendency, a desire not just in brazil, many places to treat many, demonize and dismiss them. they want to lock it up. and forget about the problem.
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it's a problem that is a haven of disease and criminality. they affect the society as a whole. i read that 60% of the people in this prison have not been convicted. that's in violation of the law. you create a whole - it must be a cancer in that society. >> people have gone in, they've been arrested for a minor crime. in which they should not serve any time in gaol. >> they are thrown in with the worst of the worsts. they will wait months, years, to see a judge. we have a case of someone that is in there for six years. >> you had a case where someone paid in prison after the sentence was over. it's incredible to see that disorganization, and that lead
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to crazy stuff. where you have gangs running the prisonses, including security. >> yes, you have a situation where they haven't just locked people up and thrown away the key, they locked people up and handed the key to thugs within the prison yards that run the cell blocks as if it's their personal thiefdom. >> is there a willingness to do something about it. >> no, they have started a process now of requiring that when people are arrested they are brought before a judge. that may seem basis. the the question is whether there's the will to follow through. if they do, it should reduce the problem of overcrowding. will not soef solve it but be an important step forward. >> thank you coming together - emotional
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plays host to chinese president xi jinping in royal style. >> first a look at the stories making the u.s. paul ryan says he will enter the race for speaker of the house if his fellow republicans come together and decide he is the person to unite parties. a former vice presidential candidate says he was reluctant to enter the race because of his young family, but is more afraid of not stepping up to do the job. democratic presidential candidate jim webb dropped out of the race. he says the political system is broken and does not see eye to eye with democratic leaders. he is considering an independent presidential bid. and the vice president may be closer to deciding the president. joe biden met with top aids and advisors. he will learn that he is likely announce his decision within the next day or so. .
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>> the american cancer society released guidelines for breast cancer screening saying women should begin getting mammograms later in life. the guidelines representatives women screen at age 45, and witch to screenings every other year at 55. before the announcement the society recommended mammograms every year for women, starting at 40. >> ban ki-moon pleaded for piece in meetings with israeli and palestinian leaders. and urged both sides to step back, with the day ending with violence and more loss of life. >> reporter: ahead of his arrival tuesday, the u.n. chief issued a video plea for calm. >> i urge the youth of palestine, as the future of your people and society, to turn your frustration into a strong, peaceful voice for change.
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>> and to the israelis. you, the people of israel, as much as the palestinian people need to see a political horizon to break this cycle of violence and fear but as the ban came to talk, views lifted. fresh clashes in the occupied west bank, these on the outskirts of ramallah. in others, the west bank's largest city, the israeli army said one palestinian was shot dead, after he stabbed the israeli soldier. two hit and run attacks on israeli armies. this one captured by a photographer, and this hit by a baseball bat after stones were thrown at his car. israeli police say it is not clear if he was run down intentionally. the second attack close to an
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israeli settlement. they rammed a car into the israeli settler. against the backdrop of violence, the man arrived in jerusalem, restating the position, but offering little nup. >> we support all efforts to create conditions to return to meaningful negotiations and just comprehensive and lasting peace. >> from the israeli president, a welcome but veiled warning to the u.n. not to overstep its mandate. >> we appreciate your understanding and your intention to bring peace to this complex region, it is important that every step taken will not be seen as giving a prize to terror. >> by making this international. talks will be planned with the
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palestinian leadership. >> french right wing leader marie le pen is facing prison time on inciting racial hate red, comparing muslims praying in the street to nazi occupation. she accused the government of persecution, and prosecutors recommended the case against her be dropped, in a strange twist. neave barker reports on the controversy, from lyn, france. >> reporter: the leader of the far right is rarely out of the news. this is not just a court case, it's a media spectacle. >> reporter: what do you think of the accusations against you. >> translation: those that brought me in front of the court are to blame for a violation of freedom of expression, and
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prevent a representative of millions of french people from standing up to the values of individuals. i have not committed a crime. that is what i'll tell the court. >> le pen is charged with inciting racial hate red, comparing the scenes of muslims praying on the streets with the nazi occupation. the comments made at a party rally five years ago enraged antiracist groups. when the european parliament lifted the immunity two years ago. four human rights organizations seized the moment to press charges. >> she cannot compare people peacefully praying in the streets to an army which made millions. this is not acceptable. >> le pen supporters say accusations are part of a smear campaign. giving her and her party part of
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the elections. le pen has her sights on. the presidential election in two years time. she is not expected to win the presidency. but he is expected to steal votes from the leading party. marie le pen has been accused of purging the party. it's put her in contact with the founder. she was thrown out of the founder. but critics acure marie le pen of swapping anti-semitism. marie le pen denies this. if found guilty faces a year in prison. a final verdict is expected at a later date. >> the small country of slovenia became the latest flashpoint for refugees making a journey through europe.
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an estimated 19,000 people crossed into slovenia since the fence went up on friday. the crush led slovenia to dispatch the military to border the crossing. the leaders were asking the irur to send police officers. as paul brennan reports the struggle doesn't get any easier when they reach the northern border. their progress has been hampered by bad weather. the pressure of the numbers reached critical mass on the border. for the refugee camp. more than 2,000 men. women and children gave up waiting. >> we told them we want to go. we don't know, we don't want anything. we want to go, to complete our journey. >> austrian soldiers and police, stronger barriers across the
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road. it was anything but calm. as the pressure grows, this group came walking down the street. in an unofficial way they are not registered. you can see the authorities are having difficulty in maintaining order. the breaking point was hundreds of refugees, hosting 2.5,000 people. charities, n.g.o.s and local organizations combining. >> these people came to my heart. i empty the closet and took the children's stuff. and bring them here, brought them here to help people because they are wet. >> slovenia, a country of
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2 million people says it cannot stop numbers, the numbers arriving from cree asia outstrip those allowed on to austria. slovenian police reemforce the capability, bringing riot people along the border. austria denies restricting numbers. they are processing refugees as quickly as the system allows. we want them to have aid, food, so they can sleep in austria, there's no limitation of the persons we get from slovenia, we need to have a correct - all the correct procedure to get them. so this is the problem. >> the splits don't lack compassion, and it seems the system cannot keep up. for this group. the journey is almost over. they are boarding coaches, taken
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into austria, once they are closer to the preferred explanation of germany. >> at buckingham palace today. queen elizabeth rolled out the red carpet for the chinese president. wrapping up the first full day of a 4-day visit with a state dinner. new labour party leaders dealt with human rights. prime minister david cameron said china's deflated steel prices are on the agenda nearly 400 south koreans crossed a border re-uniting with family members. many waited six decades for the end of the war. harry fawcett has more on a once in a lifetime reunion. >> reporter: in a hotel north of the border, deepest emotions
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locked up for decades, rushed forward. the prevailing one is love. brother and sister, parents and child and wife. this women was pregnant when her husband disappeared. she has brought their son. at 64, meeting his father for the first time. he says he recognised him completely. >> back then prepare just married. we hadn't called each other darling, not once. >> reporter: they joined 400 others on the journey north. 66,000 south koreans are on the list of applicants, 63,000 died waiting. the system exists for all of this to happen more regularly, depending on the political climate between the koreans. >> 66,000 remained. 30,000 identified. we tried our best to make the
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regular ongoing reunion. soon the buses were snaking their way up the base. et meetings came after they did. six such meetings lasting two hours. given the divided natures, there's a high likelihood this will be the last chance they'll ever have. >> it's a fact lost on no one in the room. no second chances before they, too, become memories. >> crisis management, an emergency meeting in switzerland for f.i.f.a.'s board. the governing body of world soccer looking to stem the blows that keep on coming. and the release of oscar
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governing body into disarray because the president and presumed successor are among those suspended. dave zirin is the sports editor for the nation and author of dance with the devil. the world cup, the olympics and fight for democracy. great to see i. the u.s. announced the indictment of 14 f.i.f.a. officials in bay. now there's a suspension of sepp blatter and his presumed successor. you argued f.i.f.a. should be abolished. did the emergency meeting do anything to saviour mind. >> because it's raising the goose in more ethical environs doesn't mean i approve or anyone should approve of the goose and the golden egg dynamic in the first place. i welcome, and everyone should welcomed the level of
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transparency. i welcome and everyone should welcome the directives recommended. particularly - and this has little media coverage, the directive about the ways in which f.i.f.a. ignored the development of women's soccer and the need to take it seriously. we have to be clear about this. all of this is produced by crisis and protest. the idea that we pull back saying that the system works, to me, would be a tactical mistake. if we want the soccer world cleaned up. >> it's a goose that lays a lot of golden eggs, it's a multi-billion organization. if they move to transparency. taking the term limits and put them into effect. wouldn't that prevent the monarchy that f.i.f.a. has seen, and really eliminate some of these problems? >> yes, i mean it wouldn't eliminate all of them. first of all, term limits at 12 years, sepp blatter has been
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there for 17 years. we are not talking about a great difference, i don't think anyone is saying that sepp blatter started to turn five years ago, and the arbitrary age cap of 74 struck a lot of people as odd. a lot were thinking to themselves - you have people that age running as president of the united states. let's get some blood in here. i handwritingued that the fundamental problem is you need divisional powers. one growing the sport and the other watchdogging. >> you need the watchdog, because it just complicates matters. blatter steps down, but sepp blatter is suspended and can't campaign. what led to the suspension is sepp blatter made a suspicious
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payment of $2 million to michel platini in 2011 for work done a decade earlier. none of this was public. >> and there's no paperwork or paper trail. we are supposed to accept the word that in 1998 i did 2 million of works so sepp cutme a check in 2011. the two guys, in the public sphere, have been bitter rivals on a host of issues. it raises the question how much of that was pantomime, how much of that was kabuki theatre, and was the payment to make sure that this was supposed to give the illusion of internal democracy when in reality it was toothless. we don't want the watchdog of international soccer to be the fbi or the swiss officials. you want it internally, that's
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when you want the checks and balances to come from. >> dave zirin, sports editor of the nation, good to have you with us. south african olympian has moved from prison to house arrest. he will serve the rest of his sentence from home. his case is raising concerns about the wealthy getting preferential treatment in the south african legal system. >> this person seems care flee, greeting a friend in the street. this person is the victim of a miscarriage of justice, imprisoned for 11 years for a murder he did not commit. he said the police forged evidence, and he couldn't afford a lawyer. it took eight years to get a transcript. information that should be readily available and essential. he blames police and the prosecutor. >> i have to let the bygones be
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bygones. and open new pages. if i'm going to look from behind. it's going to help me. going to be a lot on my shoulders. >> milotsi was held in the same prison. the paralympian can afford the best defense lawyers much oscar has been released after receiving five years for killing his girlfriend. >> there's a 2-tiered justice system here. one for the rich, one for the poor. >> lawyers at the resource center have been taking on the case of impoverished sav gans. they experienced a person of means, who is able to afford the lawyers of their choice, versus a poor person with limited access to private representationation and world's
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apart. >> he also has been let down by the justice system, complaining to the police about her abusive husband for years, before he stabbed their youngest son to death. the state-appointed lawyer changed for several times. eight years later. he still hasn't been tried. >> the elder son is in prison for injuring the father in a shooting. both the cases are extreme. but they are not unique in a country where money can mean the difference between freedom and imprison. sometimes between life and death repairing one of the world's famous antick equities. scientists begin the process of beginning.
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and joined a group of buffalos, because of her size she appears to be in charge, but she and other elephants are not safe from poachers. criminal 's have been putting cyanide in water. the demand tore touching is a multibillion industry. it's a devastating blow. they say they are not giving up. >> you have to be optimistic. if you are down and out, you shouldn't be in the industry. we remain positive in the fact that we keep on fighting and protecting. i'm not prepared to give up. we've gone - we've been on a tired and long, tough journey. there's no way we are going to stop. some poachers are caught or killed. wildlife officials say it's hard
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to say one step ahead of poachers much we need to get into applying sophisticated strategies to trick down some of the poachers. the issue of the jones is something that we are moving towards. don't appreciate that we have the border. on the gambian side in botswana. so this is where most of the poachers do come from. national parks say there's not enough money to cope with the spike inside the life poisoning cases. the negative perception that some have has badly affected tourism. tourists are coming. the numbers are not as high as they used to be. >> some of the money from tourism helps to pay the rangers, tries to improve security in the area to protect the elephants.
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>> the poison doesn't discriminate. all are vulnerable. what is making it a challenge is poachers target few animals at a time. possibly to avoid protection. now, our global view segment. a look at how news outlets across the world react to various event. the moscow "the times" says the west lost the right to lecture vladimir putin, that he is exploiting precedence set by the west, and says russia is there in self-interest, to distract from the stalemate in ukraine, forcing leader to deal with vladimir putin. the daily star of lebanon has this cartoon. showing binyamin netanyahu, and palestinian president mahmoud abbas boxing. secretary of state john kerry is locked inside a bird gauge labelled u.s.a., unable to break up the fight, but yelling stop.
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the toronto "star" says this justin trudeau's victory a triumph for decency, saying he rode a wave of revulsion at stephen harper's governing style and canadians will expect him to stay true to campaign promises. >> and the montreal gazelle shows him in a montreal canadian jersy. and shows him with the team's jersey with a c archeologists unveiled a ramp leading to a palace high on a palestine hill. the 7-level ramp was discovered in 1900, more than 1800 years after it was disappointment. restorations got under way six years ago an everywhere to retore king tut-tut's beard is under way. the mask was damaged when the beard was accidentally broken and hastily attached with glue.
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experts think it will take a month or two to repair the 3300-year-old mask. that's it for this edition of world nis. "america tonight" is next. see you in the next hour. it's the city is down. i'd like the health to get better. >> i'm working, surviving without being to be street. >> deconstructing. >> we're giving individuals reasons not to commit this act. >> since april 22nd, took the opportunity to show the bad side. but the young people that i'm seeing they want a chance to turn that around.
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