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tv   NEWS LIVE - 30  Al Jazeera  September 22, 2017 8:00pm-8:33pm AST

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didn't see of trump being elected saying that russia. will insure this election. by meddling in us affairs and election process but we do not see any facts but the fact that the democratic. party website was hacked by an insider by the member of the democratic party that was once mentioned in storage in the ministry of foreign affairs and later it disappeared remind about that remind it to your readers there was no there was no meddling it would be one year isn't after all kind of hearings that taking place all kind of prosecutions but we did not see a single fact and we also did not see a single fact about interference in france germany now so sweden is now talking about that as well you know in the soviet union there used to be a prosecutor general andre vision ski. royals when he was
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conducted conducting court hearings and one day or more and he would say that. so acceptance is the king of proof and the question currency on the american prosecutor is went beyond andre vision schemes and they're saying that not limited to. that of accusation is the king of proof. but i do not think that this is a normal process that prevents our relations from it's a healthy development we never tried to be l. lies to each other but we were allies to us and we fought a quiet and successfully together. and now the immense potential of our way by a lateral relations is just being there in vain is our relations a contract in due to risk of a big hysterical international issues that are not been solved because u.s.
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and russia cannot coordinate it because of the reasons not depending on the let's very badly let's look at syria we have a de conflicting all of the so called the conflicts. maybe it's not enough when we're fighting terrorists when we're eliminating their resort and ron kirk harbin terrorist hotbeds look that was. so but in order to. eliminate terrorists we need not only debt confliction but we need coordination and the u.s. military. to cooperate due to budgetary limitations for pentagon they have a ban on cooperating with russia why because legislators come from who find it important not to solve issues in different parts of the world and not to develop new sources beneficial relations with russia such legislators need to have these political signals they did it and that's the reality we live in. thank you thanks
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maria welcome back but what's what you doing in syria you had said you had taken a position that once that is defeated you would want to see all militias and or forces out of syria have you entered the. sort of like a. time frame when you're talking about the departure of all forces from syria are you in discussions with iran is that any permanent presence that there would be a diff despite your efforts a good efforts for turkey in the north and in the passage it's called the law can you tell us what it is and who is going to be influencing that was never never heard of it oh. well now you did so this is i'm serious another heard of a lover of my well anyway so the point is that kindly could you tell us could allay the fears of a de facto partition of syria can you tell us who is getting what in this
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distribution of influence and is that a priority for example the iranian withdrawal from syria and. with that with the time frame not only later on thank you what there was not sure that i would have to say which we have to finish put it put an end to terrorist and when we talk about how to reinstate the unity of the syrian arab republic we have to say the following . we cannot allow for partition it's so that would be fission reaction that would go all over the middle east and when you do that would be something that some people would like to achieve those who benefit from wreaking troubles and chaos and this chaos is beyond control for a long time now so the concept of the escalation zones was initially proclaimed as a temporary thing this six month period. is the
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timeframe. and even in this case it is also says that similar changes lee with deescalation zones we want to intensify their national reconciliation process creating mechanism for reconciliation between the central government and the deescalation zones so that there will be a national dialogue so there is that would be necessary some ground for the political process in addition to geneva geneva up to a certain point there were. prominent syrian politicians there were actually more of a dark horses than those who have been living abroad for a very long time now and the fact that i was to process brought together to one negotiation table both the government and those armed groups which are fighting the syrian army on the ground i believe that this is a major breakthrough. and that this is not less important than discussions
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with immigrants who want to help in this syrian crisis settlement this is a heart to heart talk of those who recently stories in its own words. against each other and father each other and now this deescalation is helping they're going down and they are they're supposed to become allies and stay in fighting the terrorists as for a foreign presence i talked about it for sometimes there is a legitimate it's a presence on the. invitation of the official of the official government the member state of the u.n. rules and there is illegitimate presence by the u.s. led coalition and special forces of a number of countries who were not invited to the syrian arab republic still there were ships there so they could help. direct opposition or is actions.
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and the first step. when the terrorism will be destroyed will be eliminated i'm positive that we have to. get rid of all of those who are illegitimately there now as for those who are being legitimately there that would be decided by the leadership of the syrian republic's arab republic after the new tickle process when will the pull of take place now it's a nice time for you know the time frame. was i believe in what in the year two thousand when the middle eastern quartered adopted the man schools it was said that in one year we have we need to solve the palestinian israeli issue and now it's been seventeen years so we have to avoid some artificially set time frames you can easily timeframes for a political process this is a very difficult crises and negotiations will take some time.
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so in your speech before the general assembly you. praised president trump as you said unilaterally stating it's important to abide by the principle of sovereignty in international affairs and you said that your country russia has defended and will continue to defend principles such as sovereignty my question is about the gulf crisis to what extent do you think that the qatari embargo and conforms or violates the principle of sovereignty as you talked about it in your speech and to what extent do you feel that the security council ought to do something about that in terms of condoning or condemning the other thank you very much and i said. you know what i should just get the problem has been many a time that we have addressed this issue you know soon after formation arab
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countries have published there were no decision president putin. conversations with the majority of the leaders. of the states which were involved in this crisis including saudi arabia including qatar and egypt and i had conversations with foreign minister of saudi arabia of carter. quite recently i was in the gulf area of the emirates kuwait and qatar. saudi arabia and jordan as well. all these contacts with you during all these meetings we send a very simple signal signal to those countries who started to have a shocking new claims against each other when we. are talking about the agreement of two thousand and fourteen which was a confidential agreement between them these agreements has been violated they have these countries have to get down to the negotiation table and try to find literally
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. sceptical solutions and concerns have to be reviewed. and the ways to alleviate concerns. for all partners have to be found and i believe that this can be done i believe than sanctions against carter while it's an interesting example of different treatment. of simple civilians of carter and simple simple civilians of syria as you know the european union and number of other countries have introduced quite harsh sanctions against syria. and. they play quite a role in the serious humanitarian issues that the syrian arab republic is coming across now we have called upon those who have introduced these sanctions for many times the sanctions which are undermining the efforts to deliver humanitarian assistance to bring back normal life for simple people we say that sanctions have to be eliminated and going back to carter president would be much stronger if we
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could go she was called upon to. repeal the sanctions in the parts that they regard the civilians as simple people and it's been three months now since and syria has been for seventy years now so i also call upon repeal mid-off sanctions when they regard the simple people but then after the current season bust down of russia channel thank you mr minister here in new york during the debates with the western leaders we hear pragmatism as the key word. talked about. talked about joint work indian and security council for nuclear problems the problem you talk to boris johnson to stalin barrack don't you think that this general assembly is quite a symbolic one over the past three years and the west seems that. when you go that relations are at an all time low and we have to get back to normal situation well i
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cannot say this is a breakthrough general assembly as for the number of the meetings it's been the same as in the previous years as for the substance of the negotiations i'm also not a lot of changes in the year before and last year when we had bilateral meetings all of the colleagues were saying that this situation is not normal and we have to remedy it maybe you're right maybe it's just more of the issues in a more acute way your solution but for me to hear something. certain words that now west will stop playing these sanctions games and will stop ignoring the interests of our mutually beneficial cooperation i cannot really say that. i i would think that this. recognition will come we never talked to our western partners about repealing the sanctions let's let's
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agree on something we will do something and you will repeal the sanctions we never did it and i believe that life itself would bring us from. this that and the situation this is a most fickle puzzle from bangladesh. as you know the biggest humanitarian crisis is going on in there are crimes. in the. muslim community more than half a million people they took shelter in bangladesh territory so what is your position already got countries positioned to this biggest humanitarian crisis if you have the shells mr was yesterday i met with the foreign minister of bangladesh we talked about at least. we know that myanmar authorities are still in response to that because of the global community started to recognize these calls and then they stand they need to. provide the humanitarian and to think about the humanitarian aspect no one says that there were no extremist or human attacks but none of those
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civilians. who are innocent should be responsible for that. and what we see now is that young mar authorities are now working on their recommendations which were given them through the international red cross committee of the red cross and red crescent committees and they're working together with independent commissions headed by. petrarch one of you can global diplomacy koffi annan. it seems that everyone now understands that this situation has to be broadly in the vein of the political dialogue just like any other country with inner. problems would be that venezuela or any other country. the russian foreign minister sergey lavrov speaking at a press conference at the united nations talking about myriad issues north korea the iran nuclear program u.s.
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russia relations syria the gulf crisis and so on and so forth let's speak to our u.n. correspondent in jordan who was monitoring that press conference rose rose what did you make of what you had. well essentially sergey lavrov is noting that on all of these issues it seems as if the status quo is the predominant situation except for the iran nuclear deal or always we heard reporters and the foreign minister referring to when he basically said the iran nuclear deal is settled and he can't really understand why the united states would want to overturn it or reopen it for negotiations in his view in russia's view the deal is working regarding the situation in syria he rejected suggestions that the russians are pushing for any sort of partition of that country into various smaller states
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he said that is important is trying to end the civil war which is now in its seventh year and regarding the crisis the g.c.c. crisis involving the embargo. mr lavrov noted that the sanctions that affect ordinary citizens should be lifted but he didn't really get into any detail on what should be done to resolve the political disputes other than noting that it is something that has to be addressed. and a that's a picture from the united nations so your lover of just speaking i saw. the u.s. president donald trump has tweeted that north korean leader kim jong un is a madman he doesn't mind killing his people in the latest escalation in the war in response to kim's official statement calling trump to ranged and gangster playing with fire and a barking dog the north is olds are threatening to test
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a hydrogen bomb in the pacific ocean a few novak has more from south korea's capital of seoul. inflammatory threats from north korea are not unusual but it is rare for the leader kim jong un to issue a statement himself. it was read out on state television along with a photo of the leader responding to donald trump's speech to the u.n. in which he threatened to totally destroy the democratic people's republic of korea or d p r k kim called the us president's behavior mentally deranged and said now that trump has denied the existence of and insulted me and my country in front of the eyes of the world and made the most ferocious declaration of war in history that he would destroy the d.p. r. k. we will consider with seriousness exercising of a karst funding highest level of hardline countermeasure in history as to what that countermeasure might be his foreign minister in new york had this suggestion you do
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i think it could be a hydrogen bomb test on the ground of an unprecedented scale in the pacific ocean. there hasn't been an underwater or atmospheric nuclear test in decades they are banned under several treaties considered just too dangerous for people and the environment there was immediate condemnation from the two countries in the region likely to be most at risk from a north korean attack japan and south korea. north korea's remarks and behavior provocative to regional and international security and absolutely unacceptable. north korea should immediately stop its direct least provoke ations that will lead itself to isolation and collapse. but kim jong un says trump's remarks convinced him that he chose the correct path and must continue to follow it south korea's president moon j.n. used his speech to the u.n.
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to repeat that his country does not desire the collapse of north korea and to insist that there will not be war again on the korean peninsula he says the situation must be stable the managed so that tensions will not become overly intensified and so that accidental military clashes do not destroy peace kev you know that al-jazeera. britain's prime minister has proposed a two year transition period after the u.k. leaves the european union in a speech delivered in florence in italy breaking the deadlock over brics it through the may said she wants britain to be allowed to stay in the e.u. single market during that time and she promises britain will honor its budget commitments until its scheduled departure date of march two thousand and nineteen she also promised to guarantee the rights of e.u. citizens. in law but on trade may warn that remaining a member of the european economic area would not suit britain and neither would a canadian style trade deal instead she called for
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a bold new strategic agreement that is not seek merely to adopt a model already enjoyed by other countries instead let us be creative as well as practical in designing an ambitious economic partnership which respects the freedoms and principles of the e.u. and the wishes of the british people and i believe there are good reasons for this level of optimism and ambition well let's get more from our u.k. course won't be philip sousa standing by for some westminster abbey so that we any further forward. perhaps a little bit forward make you had that reaction perhaps from michel barnier the chief negotiator saying that he thought the british prime minister's speech had been constructive but of course he's still looking for more detail on key things like the question of the irish border the rights of e.u. citizens and that very sensitive issue of the divorce settlement how much britain
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is actually going to pay well let's get some reaction now from the probe rexx it side of the argument joined by john mills of the opposition labor party but a big supporter of brics it are you happy with a about two year transition period as the prime minister called it which could mean de facto twenty twenty one britain is still very very close to the e.u. you are right with well it's a bit disappointing in some ways but i think that it's better to have a consensus across the political parties are talking we've largely got i think on the whole the conservative party and the labor party are going to support this transitional period and i think the more united the country is the better really in terms of the negotiations so you would accept that falling off a cliff is as we're calling it now crashing out of the e.u. without a deal resorting to trade organization terms would be a bad thing and something that should be avoided well i've got to get a piece of software rolled out by a matter of minutes from the parent dumping here for me for example something on
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average but i don't think that's the best solution not to get a better solution would be to have an orderly transition and just a friendly with the european union states and to have as much agreement as possible disagreement it would be fair to say would it not mr mills that breaks it is proving to be an awful lot more expensive and a much more complicated process than people like you led us to believe during the referendum well i don't know it's more complicated but i think it may well be bored spends too and i think one of the problems with them. people in this country say. market at all costs around negotiating position becomes and this is why i think we've got to be prepared. for the really bad. happened we should walk away but i hope that's not going to be the outcome. a priority today keeping people like you on board. appealing to the french and german governments and the key
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players. i think to play particular domestic audience and i think you. got a consensus for. the trade today well i think. that sort of thing. is going to get us through the next hurdle which is to move away from the issues that are held everything up so far to trade i want to see what happens. because it negotiations resume on monday if you do indeed thank you very much. for the progress that side of the argument. thanks very much indeed that's a picture in westminster thank you. of the united states is calling for me and ma to take action to end violence in iraq where a military offensive has triggered
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a ranger exodus which the un has described as ethnic cleansing aid organizations are struggling to help the more than four hundred twenty thousand range of muslims who have sought safety in bangladesh when isolates it needs at least two hundred million dollars in aid to help the refugees in bangladesh of the next six months speeding up the distribution of plastic sheeting while a bangladeshi authorities work to erect a new two thousand and eight shelter on is estimated that at least a thousand or injured children have been separated from their parents or off and by the recent violence in myanmar nicholas haq that's a story of one girl who's having to start a new life in bangladesh. asking for money from strangers is no easy task when you have never done it before it's especially difficult when you are a child just a week ago fatima began was playing in the fields near her home in myanmar as reckoned state unaware of the dangers to come but then masked men set her house on
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fire killing her parents she travelled alone to bangladesh here a former neighbor took her under her care. i miss my mother had such hugs i miss her cooking i miss the way my parents made me feel she is not alone according to the aid agency save the children a thousand ringgit children have either been separated from their parents or orphaned and what the un describes as textbook ethnic cleansing by mean more security forces. for decades now mean mars government refuses to allow running of children in state run schools. are denied access to government run medical facilities they live in poor conditions segregated from others and their recent experience appears to have dropped the ring get closer they look after each other. my concern is that she doesn't end up being exploited by sex traffickers or people
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trying to use her she's smart and she's now part of my family. there are brief moments of fun but for the most part running a children have to act like adults they work build homes and search for food. this is the hardest part of the day for. and all the others here he is going to have to compete with adults other children to try to get a small bag of rice and lend and that will be their meal for the day. in the chaos she fails to get irrational she returns to her tent this is the start of a new life as a ten year old refugee in a foreign land nicholas hawke al-jazeera long bangladesh. iraq's kurdish leader massoud barzani says monday's independence referendum will definitely go ahead despite international pressure for it to be delayed or even counsel resigned he was speaking in iraq's kurdish capital of the final rally before monday's front which
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has been criticized by the united states the european union and the arab league amongst many others he says the kurds are happy to fight alongside iraqi forces. again sigh so whatever the referendum result. set about when we tell the world leave the kurds expressed their own rights and decide their own independence we cannot continue any longer to status quo with the federal government in baghdad the referendum is not to risk the referendum is not to draw new borders it is to confirm and insist on our right for independence the real risk is to let others decide your fate. a judge's order the release of six people who were arrested on wednesday in a crackdown by spanish authorities on preparations for an independence referendum approaches to being held in barcelona calling for an end to the government's position the referendum considered illegal by the spanish government as a vote on whether catalonia should gain independence from spain at. rescuers in
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mexico are still putting survivors from the rubble of choose days of quake because the search enters a fourth day officials say it is still a rescue rather than a recovery operation and the hope for them finding more people alive two hundred eighty six people on now confirmed dead. well two thousand more people are also injured in choose days quake but even for many of those it's a life changing experience with thousands left homeless alan fisher is in the town of judgment that ninety kilometers south of mexico city one of the places worst hit . market traders felt she had to be here as they pulled apart the place she's called home for more than fifty years. so badly damaged in tuesday's earthquake the building was in such a dangerous condition she could recover anything but a previous life. is what she wears on me i've lived here more than fifty years
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it's terrible i can find no comfort i keep crying i have not eaten it just feels like a nightmare i i just can't. return centerville hudler didn't fare well in the tremor and just moments buildings which it stood for decades were gone others badly damaged. some people managed to grab what they could others could only watch as diggers pulled apart the remains of ordinary lives changed forever this street which is just reopened gives you an idea of the random nature of the damage caused by earthquakes this house here very little damage a few bricks missing above the galley door but just next door you can see gaping holes in the walls all the way up to the roof a lot of the frontage is fallen into the street the damage here is so bad that this house will probably have to be pulled down. on the edge of the turn they set up a camp for those who have nowhere to go to try to make it comfortable but you wouldn't call home. everyone works together to fill the trucks that regularly pool
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and this takes aid to those in times further away and those who simply won't leave home. so helicity hello didn't know what to do when the quake hit she's due to give birth any day for the moment that has to be the priority. and they helped me with some for me some diapers and clothes for my baby we left our house with nothing we barely managed to grab important documents i'm afraid to return home it's badly damaged. but turn of a who will rebuild in some ways that's an easy fix and years to come the only scars will be those in the hearts and minds of people who've lost everything. alan fischer al-jazeera. mexico. so i mean terrible situation there more on that story and everything else we're covering out right there on our web site of course al-jazeera dot com.
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so let's have a recap of the headlines here on al-jazeera and the leaders of north korea and the united states are engaged in a war of words kim jong un has been branded a mad man by donald trump after he called the u.s. president deranged and barking dog the north korean leader's words in response to trump's threat to destroy his nation is also threatening to test a hydrogen bomb in the pacific ocean russia's foreign minister sergey lavrov has spoken about the situation from the united nations he says everybody involved in the dispute needs to take a deep breath and find a diplomatic solution. but at the mall now the students we need to come down the hotheads and understand that we need pools is we need some contacts if people want to act as mediators i would actively welcome that you believe could be one of the neutral european countries but was talked about by general secretary could have this. britain's prime minister has proposed a two year transition period off the u.k.
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leave the european union in a speech aimed at breaking the deadlock over breaks it to reason made said she wants britain to be allowed to stay in the european union single market during that time and she promised that britain will honor its budget commit its rescuers in mexico are still pulling survivors from the rubble of choose days earthquake as the search enters a fourth day officials say it is still a rescue rather than a recovery operation and they're hopeful of finding more people alive two hundred eighty six people and now confirmed dead after the seven point one magnitude quake . harakah marriage is currently heading towards the taxi maker's islands off to causing death and destruction across the caribbean the storm already has killed at least thirty two people in dominique guadalupe the virgin islands and puerto rico it's currently a category three. a judge's order the release of six people who were arrested on wednesday in a crackdown by spanish authorities on preparations for an independence referendum
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protests are being held in barcelona calling for an end to the government's position the referendum considered illegal by the spanish government is a vote on whether catalonia should gain independence from spain and that's it for me for now i'll have more of the inside story. shocking scenes in st louis missouri this week when an apparently peaceful march against the acquittal of a white police officer accused of murdering a young black man turned violent these kinds of of incidents.

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