tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera September 14, 2017 1:00pm-2:00pm AST
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in a disaster the internet can be restored by a truck. in a minute this truck can drive itself and right now this child is being treated by a doctor from six thousand miles away this is science fiction and cisco networks are making it happen. because when everything is securely connected anything is possible and there's never been a better time to change the way. this is al-jazeera. hello i'm adrian for again this is that he was a live from al-jazeera headquarters in doha coming up in the next sixty minutes more than twenty students are killed in
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a school for malaysia. north korea provokes more tension by threatening to sink japan with a nuclear bomb. zimbabwe rolls out a new election system for next year's poll but some worry that it could lead to voter fraud. and i'm sorry how much with the latest sports news including the host for the twenty twenty four and twenty twenty eight in the big games are officially concerned about corruption allegations continue to swell previous games. at least twenty people have been killed in a fire at a malaysian boarding school most of them teenagers but they say that it started on the top floor daltry of the religious school on the outskirts of kuala lumpur lopez said on reports. it took more than an hour for firefighters to put out the flames that the dottle put on the funkiest school in kuala lumpur. by then many people
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mainly teenage boys had lost their lives. such as we can see from a certain angle their hands waving out for help when we had no choice but to ask them to jump out and we tried to catch them we did try to enter the house but the fire was way too hot until certain point there was a blackout when that happened the building started to fall apart we withdrew after that the fire started near the dormitory on the top floor first thing in the morning and quickly ripped through the entire building. the interior of the building is one hundred percent destroyed the mattresses books and all other things in the very damaged but the cause of the fire is still unclear we're still investigating it would have been difficult for the boys to escape as the rooms had barred windows and the fire blocked the only exit. through the window we dismantled the window grip opened the window and clung don't know if we force a window grill open at the time we couldn't think much of fire department
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representatives says their bodies were found on top of one another suggesting there was a stampede to try and get out a community religious leader led prayers for the students who described the boys as cheerful when they held religious events in the community a happy group many of whom have now lost their lives under tragic circumstances. al-jazeera the direct fire and rescue department today in drummond says that it appears the building regulations one followed at the school. this initial investigation done by all. of us not issued by a local government and also by departments across investigation carried out some. men when the show drawing this i mean that. approval. because that evolution of legal action that by our departments to make sure that at least they are. there
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should be. in this school. because of the student cannot get out on the field because the only exit been blocking the fire and spread very fast and some people consider the cause of smoke inhalation usually the routings. ground floor second second floor of the building itself and of course based on any field the common that i would have found one it's very clear that if i said this. i too would too you know business just want to. number of bad. i think sharon end up with the senate become. varia one shouldn't do it at the exit looking at that now but the bad. side of the rule if they have no party there now but that the six be just nice but because that is what did to me if. the
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foot in that's a little bit i mean almost sixty percent of the standard what it was to be used but not. all that. i'm pleased to see these things happen and it's why i. remind the operate there of the so-called. competition it must comply completely. by its. mass. produced mohammed is a journalist with the laziest new straits times he joins us now live from outside the school sky parties good to have you with us firefighters were on the scene very quickly when this blaze began and there are any theories yet as to why it spread so quickly and claimed so many people. ok.
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but i've been. trying. to fire. back in one room about thirty five students so. let's. put it. quickly this isn't the first fund. this isn't the first five so that affected an independent school in malaysia we heard just a few moments ago from the director of the fire and rescue party said that fire regulations want followed is that much of a problem. in malaysia. in malaysia we have many top few schools that have taken steps to ensure. that few schools want.
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a new pope. north korea has threatened to use a nuclear weapon against japan after the un impose more sanctions against pyongyang the state run korean central news agency says that japan is no longer needed to exist near us it went on to say that the four islands of the japanese archipelago should be sunken into the sea by the nuclear bomb japan's cabinet secretary russia hita suger has condemned north korea's threat. this announcement is extremely provocative and outrageous and raises the tension in the region and it is unacceptable let's get some analysis now from others here as craig leeson who's following developments for us from tokyo. certainly this threat was considered and expected by the japanese because of the support that this country is giving to its alliance partners the united states over the recent strengthening of the u.n. sanctions against north korea but japan is taking this threat very seriously given
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the recent hydrogen bomb test that took place two weeks ago a bomb that was ten times stronger than the one dropped by the united states on hiroshima and the missile that was launched across the north of japan so it is a very serious threat the defense systems here have been strengthened or will be strengthened we've been told certainly that japan is hoping the united states in that regard by shipping fuel out to these ages destroyers these anti missile destroyers that are in the sea of japan these are part of a range of defense mechanisms that been set up by the alliance which include the fed missile system in south korea. and we have the patriot battery here in japan and of course the a.g.s. ships contain interceptors which are capable of locking on and taking out any missiles as they launched into space so certainly japan is in readiness the united
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states says that the defense system here is strong enough to contain any missile threat that should come from north korea u.s. secretary of state rex tillerson is in london right now for talks with britain's prime minister to resume a he's arrived at ten downing street where he'll also hold a meeting later with foreign secretary boris johnson to listen will then attend the meeting on libya along with representatives from france italy egypt and the u.s. take you live to downing street al-jazeera sleeve baka is there so what are we expecting from this to happen in this libya meeting later need. has been goal here from downing street to meet the british prime minister to resume a largely a courtesy call. ahead of what is the main event later on the stuff to do talks largely about libya but also north korea too he will sit down with his counterparts from the u.k. but also other special delicate sort of come over here from italy from france from
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egypt from the u.a.e. and also the u.n. special representative to libya lovely to map out the possibility of future political talks over libya going forward they may well also discuss u.n. plans to send between one hundred fifty to two hundred fifty peacekeepers to libya we believe there likely to be nepalese soldiers to of course help stabilize the country but also to keep the peace between libya's warring factions instability is rife in libya ever since all ghibli the nato led bombardment of the country that led to the ousting and death of colonel gadhafi back in two thousand and eleven they may well also discuss a report that came out in june from the united nations that allege that the u.a.e. had broken a weapons embargo to libya by supplying a renegade command with attack helicopters and other weapons so there may be some
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forty issues that need to be dealt with before they can move forward as i mentioned then north korea also a key priority after pyongyang carried out its six and largest and you kill or weapons test earlier on this month really the question is now is what options are open to the international community going forward they have many thanks they backa downing street in london. you know the news out from al-jazeera still to come on the program. and i think that we're going to see we're going to see a scale up of emergency very quickly the situation gets worse the u.n. says that more help is on the way we'll tell you more. and staying put victims of last month's month's slides in sierra leone refused to relocate despite fears of another disaster there. and in sport a band about racism disrupts a major league baseball game in the united states so i will be here with all the details a little later. representatives
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of the syrian government and opposition groups are meeting in kazakstan for a sixth round of talks aimed at ending the civil war the talks of a start up brokered by russia and iran it's take you live now to. stratford is there so what does this latest round of talks aimed to achieve. well it's the first day of two days of talks here in a star we understand that they have been piled actual meetings going on the smalling in the hotel behind me between the garance is all of this in this conference the russians the turks and the iranians participating also the delegation from the syrian government but we also understand that the opposition are staying in another hotel and haven't actually arrived here yet despite these
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talks having started a few hours ago very much the focus of these talks of these four deescalation zones that was a plan that was signed by russia turkey and iran in may we understand that the focus is going to be very much on the area of italy of the province in northern syria which is one of these deescalation zones there are big questions being asked about how viable a plan it is because of the specific groups in control in that area groups that members of the international community the syrians and the russians say are terrorist organizations is also going to be discussion about the very power paramita is all of these deescalation zones exactly where they start and finish so we expect to hear news lines about mapping out the zones in the specific areas and also crucially discussion about who will be monitoring the zones which countries will be offering potentially forces soldiers on the grounds to make sure that this
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effort to try and hold the violence in these specific areas can continue for the six month period which is the aim so the russians say up this plan. this is the sixth round of talks is as we said very little has been achieved by the previous rounds any any more reason to think that this round can go further than that any before. well there are potential pitfalls everywhere you look and listen forget that during the last round the opposition delegation actually walked out for a period of time because they said that the areas their positions were were being formed as the last round of talks was going on the opposition are hugely against any suggestion of either the russians or the iranians for example being involved in any kind of monitoring force it has been put on the table the suggestion that
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people troops from kurdistan or kazakstan may be involved in some sort of potential monitoring mission but that is very muted at this stage then there is of course as i say italy province hugely problematic the groups in control there are considered to be terrorist organizations we understand from people on the ground there today our sources in italy that they may actually be groups with in that umbrella organization an organization called tata sham that may actually be defecting all splitting away from them concerned that they actually may be targeted and we've also heard from civilians in those areas as well who say that despite the cease fire as despite there being a deescalation in these areas so far the fighting has continued so it's a very complicated situation on the ground and certainly the talks that have happened here so far have actually gone a very little out zero chance strafford reporting live from a stand a chance many things or many victims of the war in syria are critical of the
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representatives at these talks saying that they're too far removed from the situation on the ground caroline malone reports. this is the kind of violence that you started talks on syria aimed at reducing the last round in july delegations from russia iran and turkey talked about creating four main deescalation. one of them is in the north of homs province where around one hundred eighty thousand civilians. men women and children live under the control of a rebel alliance and i said. i'm the chief of police in a village that belongs to alcohol i feel sorry to say that the last talks gave us a negative impression they talked about ceasefire but we only saw the opposite yesterday there was an ongoing mission in the sky. another deescalation zone is in the north west of the country including northeast latakia western aleppo and northern hama is home to more than
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a million civilians people in some parts have suffered years of war and we're glad to see some relief since july but it hasn't lasted long enough. laws than the previous talks gave us nothing except a truce on warplane activities the average number of reconnaissance flights and the artillery shelling is the same i expect nothing but the same failure from the coming talks nothing is expected but force displacement. the last round of talks was aimed at getting rebel groups backed by turkey and government forces supported by iran and russia to stop fighting for six months and to get syrian president bashar al assad's government to allow humanitarian aid into rebel areas but moscow tehran and i'm correct failed to agree. with the sun on well it was something we were hoping the last round of talks would let us see good results but in no way every day in alcohol or there is an escalation of violence we still hope the next round of talks will decrease the escalation here i expect
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a new era in syria that needs new faces and new leaders so as to sort the crisis out once and for all. the syrian opposition is being represented at separate un backed talks in geneva with damascus to cooperate in the fight against isis they want to see a political transition to remove president assad from power but that's the sticking point for the government delegation whose focus is on getting rid of those calls terrorists. syrian civilians still hope food real progress on talks whether in a stand up or geneva to bring them security and peace after more than six years without caroline malone al jazeera. two news is parliament has passed a controversial law granting amnesty to public officials who are accused of being corrupt before two thousand and eleven as arab spring the session was temporarily suspended before the vote when the opposition walked out in protest bill's been the subject of months of demonstrations opponents say that it's
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a setback for democracy recolor fabiani is a middle east north africa senior analyst at the eurasia group he joins us now live from london recolor good to have you with us what practice what does this amnesty actually mean well this honestly doesn't really mean that much anymore the earlier versions of the draft have been watered down every time because of significant opposition by both political groups and to a society organizations that have opposed this project from the very beginning initially it was supposed to include both businessman to have been involved in corruption cases before it does and eleven and government officials at the end of a lot of negotiations and pushback by your position in civil society are we now have a draft that includes exclusively government officials and basically hopes to achieve a degree of restarting basically projects at the bureaucratic level and basically
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you inject confidence in bureaucrats and civil servants that they would not be pursued and that they can do their job with a certain degree of confidence that built them so these are people who are affected we were carrying out orders from from above this is that right in the may have led to corruption. well this is basically the current version and. i would say the largest and most widespread interpretation of it is that we're talking about basically public officials who were involved in corruption cases but did not benefit directly from this and were executive orders from coming from above so basically we have narrowed down quite a lot. of who can benefit from what is effectively an amnesty ok
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what about the tension between the ruling coalition and opposition lawmakers as as you said there have been huge protests over this is that a tension that that's likely to continue. so we have seen tensions not only between the majority callie's should and the opposition but even within the majority coalition itself we d. is them is party and not expressing doubts regarding this project and leading to a watered down version of it and obviously the main tensions have been between a majority coalition authorities and the opposition in the civil various civil society organisations now these tensions obviously are not going to disappear overnight just because the project of the draft has been approved they are likely to continue however in itself this project this law is not i in my opinion enough to actually trigger a new round of of tensions an escalation in tensions between the authorities and
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civil society this is still an issue that obviously is seen as important by many donations but there are other more pressing priorities and issues that the opposition and civil society believe that are more important which is all about it can be economic recall very and jobs except there are so i believe that basically tensions will continue but they will not necessarily spill over in the next few weeks recolor good to talk to you many thanks indeed ricardo for biondi there in london. a woman and child of drowned when a boat carrying raw hinge or refugees capsized in the river separating bangladesh and be a man most of the thirty five other people on board managed to swim to shore aid agencies along bangladesh is border have been overwhelmed by the number of ranger entering the area since the military crackdown in myanmar began in late august the u.n. says that the scale of emergency requires a swift response. bangladesh has
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traditionally been quite complex and the government has. preferred to certain choices in terms of their presence on the ground and so forth this was before this big emergency i think that now that the emergency requires a very urgent response his presence could be scaled up very quickly we've had already an airlift of goods from the emirates other organizations are also. that are going to. get the latest on the situation on the ground from their child. in bangladesh near the border with.
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very still. trying to cross in a mine explosion. we're going to weather update with. next here on. still to come on the news. spain's catalonia region standing their ground despite threats of a rest. and sport. champions league. coming up in around twenty minutes. from the neon lights of asia. to the city that never
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sleeps. however we have stormy weather heading for vietnam and japan. on a storm that is pushing away from taiwan and another system there as you can see just heading towards vietnam and to try first no less than two time first time for duck siri and also typhoon tallinn now in the case of typhoon talim that is in the process of pushing away from taiwan it passed pretty close by the size of the us the eye on the storm there well organized system this one but thankfully it only gave a glancing blow to taiwan heavy seas as you can see some very rough weather but it's now starting to pull away and things quieted down nicely that it will push toward japan over the next couple of days the sustained winds of two hundred ten kilometers per hour make it the equivalent of a category four hurricane on the surface and since gas has a similar kind of intensity to the sort of winds that we saw with just a touch below that and significantly high gust at two hundred sixty kilometers per
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hour that wet and windy weather will run up towards japan by around sunday rather more eminently though we do have typhoon talk syria making its way towards vietnam sustained winds of one hundred twenty kilometers per hour it will gradually make its way further west was making landfall sometime on friday. the winds are sponsored by cat time riis. victim. being his past as an instrument of pinochet's brutal dictatorship a father tries to forget. but his son's quest for answers reveals there are often two sides to even the darkest of stories witness the color of the chameleon at this time on al-jazeera. sometimes pictures of the. story and. some of the latest you can regain technology to
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make sure these images are. to be. is not just behind because it's a good thing. with the. political refugees being aware of different kinds of stories. it is good to have you with us adrian for getting here with the news from here our top stories more than twenty people have been killed in a fire at a boarding school most of them teenagers the local fire chief says there were too
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many people in one room and the proper safety measures to get to be the to be approved. north korea has threatened to use a nuclear weapon against japan after the un impose more sanctions against the regime in pyongyang japan the threat saying that the announcement was extremely provocative. the united nations high commissioner for refugees says that aid relief for over three hundred eighty thousand. will soon be dispatched aid agencies along bangladesh porter have been overwhelmed by the number of entering the area since a military crackdown began in late august. police in the u.s. state of florida of opened a criminal investigation into the deaths of eight nursing home residents they're trying to determine whether a lack of air conditioning in the wake of hurricane was a contributing factor rob reynolds reports. answering an early morning call for
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help police found patients inside the rehabilitation center at hollywood hills dead and dying in sweltering heat one hundred fifteen patients were evacuated immediately to a hospital located a block away. most of the patients have been treated for respiratory distress dehydration and heat related issues the thirty five year old building at lost power in hurricane erma it had a backup generator but police would not say whether it was working they say there was no air conditioning inside temperatures in miami have been about thirty two degrees celsius for the past several days still it appears staff made no attempt to move patients to a safer place where exactly how hot was it there you have any idea. i'm not going to release those figures but i can tell you it was very hot on the second floor that patients relatives were desperate for information you know that tell us
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anything nice you know like you know you have a place where we don't know not flora mitchell sr was a patient at the center i used to be a nurse and i'll tell you straight out there's a nice you know me it's not. police say a criminal investigation is now underway into what happened here and they've ordered checks on more than forty rehabilitation and nursing homes around the area late wednesday afternoon eighty five patients at another miami area nursing home were evacuated as a precaution the florida health care association says one hundred fifty such facilities in the state do not have full electrical power in past us natural disasters nursing home residents have become helpless victims during hurricane katrina in two thousand and five thirty five patients at st rita's nursing home in louisiana drowned after staff abandoned them to the rising floodwaters. state
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legislator gary farmer said florida's regulation of nursing homes is lax if we find out that this facility left these residents here unintended under these conditions to me that manslaughter. a natural disaster combined with appearance human blunders and a lack of government oversight spawning a tragedy long after the storm passed robert oulds al-jazeera hollywood florida india's prime minister narendra modi has met with japan's prime minister shinzo head of talks in the city of ahmedabad. started india's first bullet train project which will run between the western city of about and one by its one of the the projects that japan and india are working on together as they deepen economic ties let's hear now from ritchie to barry who's a senior research associate at the institute for defense studies and analysis she joins us live from new delhi good to have you with us mr modi's promise to make
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vast improvements to india's rail network its antiquated network the bullet train one of his key promises in the twenty fourteen election is it going to be as he claims an economic transformation for india. it will definitely. so i think it is a positive. step. ok so it's just one line it's between mumbai and the moment is that going to address the country's main economic needs.
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spread throughout the twenty four storey building in the early hours of the morning the investigation is expected to look at several factors including building regulations and the response of local government. joins us now live from outside the inquiry in western house this inquiry going to work to be in what we heard so far in the opening remarks. much outside methodist church in the shadow of. that terrible fire occurred some three months ago and relatives survivors. have been gathering and listening to the judge. who has been speaking for the last hour or so at a separate venue in central london outlining what he's going to do he says that they're going to be two phases he's going to look at the specifics of how the fire
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began in that high rise building how it spread how the emergency services responded and then in a second phase he's going to look at wider questions of building regulations for high rise residents whether they were in this case the response of the central government he says that he is aware that this process could be extremely painful for many of those who have to give evidence that his desire is that evidence will be given as openly as publicly as possible but he needs the people not to have that exacerbated if you like that the inquiry is not to find people guilty it is that to establish the truth and. lead to criminal prosecutions in the future well so be it. away from any conclusions because in fact one of the family's been been saying to be ahead of the beginning of this inquiry.
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well i think it's pretty clear that so martin more big is up against some serious headwinds i suppose you could say there is a great deal of suspicion and animosity from people caught up in the file there's a feeling frankly that he wasn't necessarily the right person to be in charge of the inquiry calls for him to be replaced feeding that he was a man of the establishment a white male of a certain age you wouldn't necessarily relate to people who are caught up in the disaster and these are to do with if you like the divisions of class and race in modern day britain a feeling that the inquiry was too narrow in its scope some of the victims wanted it to look at wider questions of social housing and indeed wealth inequality in this part of london so those are the sorts of difficulties that some martin will be is going to have to overcome to establish trust with people who were caught up in
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this fire. many thanks tens of thousands of people in sierra leone whose homes were destroyed in a landslide last month still waiting to be. hundreds of people were killed in the mudslides on the outskirts of the capital freetown from when nicholas hawke reports . i said to bangor and her husband were fast asleep when they heard the hill above them tumbled down her husband leapt out of bed and round for shelter leaving the rest of his family behind. i said who stayed caring for her children. hundreds died in this landslide the army has now told residents to leave this area saying it's too dangerous fearing another disaster. but i said to her husband tells his wife they need to stay put their life is here he says if they leave they will lose everything. if we leave will the government actually take care of. one
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working and supporting the family my husband depends on he interrupts he says i have a problem with my eyes i count toward this is my home and i want to stay here until i die. there are other families like them refusing to leave but seven thousand five hundred people have left some have lost their homes others fear the same thing would happen to theirs. they live in government run makeshift camps supported by the un and aid agencies there so months ago before the end of the rainy season people here are receiving food shelter and medicine to prevent water borne diseases like cholera this is where most of the international aid money is going to camps like this one i said to her and her family don't want to come here they say this is a temporary solution to a long term problem. people here are growing impatient they've been promised new homes. for now soldiers are busy setting up more tense the world food
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program are no longer just distributing food but also cash to help people get back to work what they need now is not food but they need support to recover to rebuild their lives. construction is underway to build affordable homes some thirty miles outside of freetown too far says i said to she spent her life savings building this place from here she runs a small restaurant bringing enough money to keep her family and husband happy. she says it's a risk worth taking at least for now nicholas hawke al-jazeera freetown police in kenya have used tear gas to disperse young men who broke into a hotel to attack women who were attending an election meeting people who attended the gathering in. of the main smashed windows used chairs and they attacked the cities in opposition strongholds most voters are expected to support raila odinga
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who's running against the incumbent who are kenyatta in a rerun of the presidential election to a certainty. zimbabwe is bringing in a new voter register head of next year's presidential and parliamentary elections via metric technology will be used for the first time but some people worry that it will only increase the chance of vote rigging reports from. peter first in one thousand nine hundred eighty when zimbabwe won independence from britain he's participated in every election since then now the eventual commission is compiling a new voters role using registration technology peter has concerns he worries ditching the manual process in favor of technology may not be a good thing for. the day using new technology by the election is to be. the end. of the problems of electricity. it's the first time by major technology is being used to register voters in zimbabwe
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officials conducted a practice run in april to test the system for years opposition parties have been demanding a new list of voters they accuse president robert mugabe's rulings on party of manipulating the current register you have thousands of people. and for. most of these dead voters. because their votes. zanu p.f. officials deny the accusations more than six million voters were on the electoral roll four years ago. the starting the process from scratch everyone who's eligible to vote has to register. at least seven million people. but only four hundred out of an estimated three thousand registration kits are available electoral officials say the rest of the equipment is expected to arrive in the country in
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a few weeks we appear to be stampeding into the registration process. without necessarily having a full appreciation of what the entire process is about so it's important that we do get a new one and it's important that we start the process but without adequately planning for the process well setting ourselves up for disaster the presidential and parliamentary elections are next year the world's oldest elected leader is running for reelection when the date for the polls is announced. anywhere in the world is perfect but he just hopes to. win at least be acceptable to many. brazil's former president lula da silva is being questioned again by the country's top anti-corruption judge. front runner in next year's brazilian election is facing multiple charges for allegedly accepting bribes the same judge sentenced him to more than nine years in prison in july for corruption. oh so you're not going to do that. i don't accept anyone saying that i'm trying to block justice because if i
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would not believe in justice i would not be in politics several mayors in spain are remaining defiant as they face threats of a rest over their bid for catalonia independence more than seven hundred mayors continue to back the referendum which the central government says is illegal palace reports. catalonia is mir's a standing firm against threats that they'll be arrested by spain's top prosecutor because of the a bid for independence. i got when i did that but i have nothing to hide when we have to go to declare we will say the same thing we have always said that we owe it to our people and therefore we will continue working so they can express themselves freely in the polls that as many as eighty percent of catalogs i've requested it. the spanish supreme court has ruled the october first independence referendum illegal spain's public prosecutor jose manuel mansour isn't forcing that decision
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on wednesday he ordered police to arrest more than seven hundred mayors if they failed to turn up the questioning over their continued support for the referendum. prosecutors earlier ordered the seizure of ballot papers and other voting materials me as have also been threatened with charges of civil disobedience abuse of office and misuse of public funds a prison aboard faints if they allow public buildings to be used for the voters. past the drumbeat for independence is on the state people home or than a million people took to the streets of catalonia capital barcelona on monday the regional government has resolution its belief that these people deserve a referendum. when more than seven hundred mayors are persecuted by justice then it's not the mayor's you have a problem but the spanish justice system itself it's the spanish justice system
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that has a problem. catalonia last experience self rule three hundred years ago it's the wealthiest region in score trickle all grades spain's king philippe has spoken out about the constitutional crisis for the first time saying the spanish constitution will prevail and a unified spain is the pillar of its a you name the ship with spain's government clearly determines not to let castle or near go it alone the question now as you move the region's me is be tamed by madrid's and they go through its shell of dallas al-jazeera. just ahead here on the cleveland set a new winning record in major league baseball saga has all the details when we come back.
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when you're flying right over the newsroom. thank you very much adrian while international olympic committee president thomas back has described it as a win win and capital lima past in los angeles and we're concerned as the host of the twenty twenty four and twenty twenty eight summer olympic games it follows a deal struck earlier this year. the decision everybody knew about has finally been confirmed the capital of france paris to host the twenty twenty four olympics while los angeles in the united states with staged event four years later it's a deal that suits all parties particularly the i.o.c.
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who have struggled to track bidding cities in the end just paris and l.a. were left with budapest rome and hamburg all pulling out this is a win win win situation for paris was a jealous and the anti-air olympic movement it's the third time paris will be hosting the games and twenty twenty four marks one hundred years since the last stage them and one of the candidates quit the race due to cost concerns para say they would use the olympics to regenerate one of the poorest parts of the city with paris twenty twenty four we've built our project on sharing. sharing the passion of an open celebration you know magical city. it would be a lympics number three for l.a. with the last games in the us being nine hundred ninety six in atlanta organizers now have eleven years to convince the locals that pouring money into the games is money well spent we don't perceive the twenty twenty games as eleven years in the
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future we know that the games with your help begin today. with the host city for the summer olympics locked down for more than a decade v.o.c. now have to make a success on next year's winter games in south korea so well malik al-jazeera. while they are calling it a good news and allegations of corruption continue to swirl around the limp dick movement brazilian police and connecting with french prosecutors are still investigating claims of vote were aborted to when the right to host the twenty sixth in rio games our sport correspondent leeway in says that the i.o.c. has some serious issues to address. as always yes i mean we thought we'd moved on from years ago the clean up of the salt lake city but again there are allegations of vote by yet again we see a big governor thomas bach while the likes of blacks use of the free hates comparisons with favre but talking about bad things always pinned and blamed on
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individuals there are bad apples at our organization or how many bad apples do you need until an organization itself is bad there has been plenty of problems where they. say it's almost box y. of dealing with this is often just to brush over them as if now these aren't a problem it's always so it's so much with rio in the real difficulties they had with it's problems are not going to go away it's what isn't going to go away as well the situation in south korea he says there's no problem with the tensions with north korea. because the situation is not looking like going to the moment and you can't just sweep these things under the carpet real difficulties for them but one of the business hosting of that decision that was confirmed in power. football now christiane or another and the comfortable start for real madrid as they bid for the third straight champions league title when although scored twice in a three win over. penalty has now scored
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a record twelve times from the spot in the competition he was the striker's first game in a month and he's been serving a five game domestic ban for pushing a referee. yes inquired he is a key player for us he is important he is always there for us he always scores and i hope he will keep it this way we will not hurt him next sunday and i hope that it will be the last game of the season without him. also a liverpool drew two to our home with sylvia filipe continua came off the bench to make his first appearance all the season out for the reds man city's paul the fan or return to competition after fourteen years they beat the dutch team for an l. and two goals from hurricane help tottenham to a three one win over brucia darkman at wembley stadium i think today is important because it means more than three point is when the perception that we need we should be change for our future. i think to be that
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confident ransome wembley is so important for our fans of course for us. and when it's so important. there at the quarter final stage in south america's biggest club competition they called doris what a father and graeme drew nel now in the first leg of an all brazilian matter despite dominating possession current a breakthrough to beat the home side. i mean while salaries o.-r. edging closer to the semifinals they be.
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