tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera October 10, 2017 7:00am-7:34am AST
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people of all faiths fell victim to suicide bomber in manchester but if the bomb was indiscriminate was the placing of blame this is nothing to do with us this is about an individual who. they were. just as muslims responded to challenging questions and the. people in power manchester united at this time. to his president says washington's decision to hold a visa service is a saddening as a diplomatic spat intensifies. hello and welcome to al-jazeera live from my headquarters in doha with me in the purana
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also ahead and washington a war of words between president trump and a key republican senator. a mass trial of more than sixteen hundred suspects is underway in my derian rights groups while they're being denied due process and caution on us high court asks for extra protection from spanish police as pressure grows on the regional president to declare independence. to his president has described a u.s. decision to suspend most of these the services for turkish citizens as upsetting the phrase as a response to the arrest of a u.s. consulate employee and istanbul accused of links to last year's failed code immediately imposed for tat measures suspending its own visa services and the u.s. had to culhane reports from washington d.c. . after the arrest of a worker at the u.s.
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embassy in ankara and a warrant issued for another the us took the unusual step of saying they would stop issuing visas for some turkish nationals traveling to america the first explanation was posted by the u.s. ambassador to turkey on twitter we don't know if these arrests are singular events or if we should expect other turkish staff members to be arrested turkey quickly followed suit with similar measures but president rich a type one said he did it reluctantly and on kind of this is a very sad decision and the ambassador has taken a decision and started implementing it so it's a source of sadness. this is just the latest in a growing list of diplomatic back and forth the relationship between these two nato allies started souring during the syrian civil war turkey upset the u.s. didn't do enough against the assad government even angrier when the u.s. backed kurdish fighters and later armed them. then last year's coup attempt and it
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got worse blame to cleric for two of the golan who lives in the u.s. they wanted him extradited for his alleged role the obama administration refused and the trump administration hasn't moved on it either that was a big issue when he first met president donald trump but that was overshadowed by what happened when he left the oval office. turkish security officers violently attacked what appeared to be peaceful protesters outside the turkish ambassador's residence fifteen of them were indicted in u.s. courts and as a result the u.s. stopped a planned sale of small arms to turkey turkey further angered the u.s. when it agreed to buy a russian missile defense system equipment that wouldn't work within nato has indicated he would be willing to trade americans imprisoned in turkey for golan but given that would be hard to do within the legal system something he really wants the case thrown out against her citizen reza zurab who was awaiting trial in the u.s. for allegedly helping turkey of aid sanctions against iran it was
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a matter of wanting it back then wanting the case to go away it wanting him not to testify not wanting any of the details about their role in helping iran evade sanctions coming out in the course of a trial it will be yet another chance for the already frosty relationship to cool even more political hay in al-jazeera washington. to other news now and iran is promising a crushing response and the u.s. designates at some revolutionary guard as a terrorist kind of president trump has been promoting a more hawkish strategy on iraq accusing it of supporting terrorism and exporting violence across the middle east and he's due to withdraw u.s. government support for the two thousand and fifteen nuclear deal this week he has more. in the last few days the headlines here have been dominated by defiant rhetoric from iranian leaders who say that any actions by the united states to impose new sanctions or to abandon the two thousand and fifteen nuclear deal will
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be met with a strong response at a news conference iran's foreign ministry spokesman backroom kasumi has said that it would be a strategic mistake for the white house to place the country's revolutionary guard corps on a list of terror organizations and that he hoped for a more rational response from the u.s. president. position is very clear we hope that the american authorities will not continue their mistakes or commit such a strategic mistake and impose new sanctions that would declare the revolutionary guard as a terrorist organization if they do that iran's response will be decisive and overwhelming the u.s. will not be able to face the consequences we hope that those who are wise in america will take the right steps and stand against such a decision the language in recent days from the revolutionary guard itself has been much stronger the chief commander has said that if the united states was to take such an action then its bases in the region would be considered strategic targets and that its troops in the region would be given the same status in the eyes of the
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iranian forces as i saw fighters and even as countries who helped negotiate the nuclear dealers' the united states not to take any actions to abandon it iran wants people to know that it will need any new challenges from a position of strength it's posturing on both sides that is putting the obama administration's hard won nuclear deal in jeopardy. well tom's wish to withdraw from the nuclear deal has to be endorsed by the u.s. senate but his latest target on twitter happens to be the influential republican head of the senate foreign relations committee bob corker says trump astray from the oval office like a reality show in an explosive newspaper interview he said he was alarmed and concerned by the president's actions from washington helen fisher reports person of course who has a reputation as a reliable republican which makes his attack on the president even more remarkable in that interview with the new york times he accused donald trump of treating the
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office of president like a reality show but he warns his reckless threats on twitter could set the u.s. on the path to world war three such is the risk says the chairman of the senate foreign relations committee that he says i know for a fact that every single day at the white house it's a situation of trying to contain him it's not the first time bob corker has spoken out against the president after announcing last week he wasn't going to run for the senate again he felt bold enough to say this i think. secretary tellers and sectarian matters and. chief of staff kelly. are. those people that help separate our country from chaos that candor seems to upset president trump he took to twitter to claim that corker begged him to back him in the senate race but he refused that he asked to be secretary of state and was rejected and then you know expected corker to be a negative voice corker decided not to let that pass remember this is an open exchange from two senior republicans he responded it's
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a shame the white house has become an adult daycare center someone obviously missed their shift this morning he then followed up with the interview with the new york times hoping and that more senators will really i go to her program has said and really perhaps put some pressure on the white house to tighten their act and really once in control of this president corker is said to be close to secretary of state rex tillerson who held a news conference last week to reaffirm his support for the president after it was claimed he called mr trump a moron let me tell you what i've learned about this president whom i did not know before taking this office he loves this country he puts americans and america first a smart center corker still has more than a year of his final senate term to run and could cause issues for the president and his agenda if his feud with the white house continues and if other senators actually break ranks and express the concerns senator corker insists they also have
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alan fischer al-jazeera washington. officials in the u.s. state of california say ten people have been killed in foss moving wildfire has there been massive evacuations as the five move through the state's northern wine producing region tirana ways and fifteen hundred homes have been destroyed in the blaze flames covered eighty hec days of lead to napa county want to second father and a neighboring sonoma santa rosa police department along with our fellow law enforcement officers throughout the county in the region as well as firefighters have been engaged in continual evacuation and rescue efforts those efforts are still ongoing we do still have new fires flaring up within the city well meanwhile in southern california a wildfire has spread of the more than two thousand hectares and burned at least six buildings authorities in the area are expanding evacuation orders and called on president to hate their warnings well visiting southern california u.s.
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vice president mike pence of the federal government will do what it can to help the state and i want to assure the people california on behalf of president trump and our entire administration and that we'll be working very closely with governor brown and with california to see you through these challenging times and i want to say to the people of california all of those that are in the past of these advancing wildfires that we are with you we are standing with you and the american people will have the communities that are affected in our thoughts and in our prayers. now more than one thousand six hundred people are facing mass trials in nigeria accused of being members of the rebel group. the trials are being held behind closed doors that a military facility writes quote said they're worried about the lack of transparency it's estimated twenty thousand people have been killed and millions displaced during eighty as
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a fighting between government troops and the armed groups for john campbell is a former u.s. ambassador to nigeria and he says the international community needs to keep a close eye on the country's judicial process we should be concerned because we will have no independent way of verifying how fair the trials are but there are other reasons to be concerned as well i think first of all the numbers to be tried are very large sixteen hundred at least at first there are only four judges that have been chosen to conduct the trials. that means the trials will either be very quick or the whole process will go on for a long time and then finally most of those who are being tried have been detained without charge for a relatively long period of time and one has to question whether or not evidence has been gathered by the authorities or whether their detention was simply
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arbitrary the conditions of night in nigeria and places of detention are pretty bad amnesty international for example has estimated that some thousands of detainees have died mostly from disease lack of water lack of food so yes the fact that the trials are going ahead means that there is a judicial process in place it remains to be seen whether it will be fair. now voters in liberia will head to the polls to elect a new head of state in just a few hours ellen johnson sirleaf africa's first female president has to step down after two terms in office the election marks the west african nation's first democratic transfer of power since line nine hundred forty four. british prime minister tories m a says the amount the u.k. will have to pay to exit the e.u.
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won't be known until the country leaves an address to parliament made for the final details versions withdrawal of doom will be agreed at the end of being negotiated a process of march two thousand and nineteen reports indicate brussels could demand as much as eighty billion dollars from the u.k. to satisfy commitments made on the e.u. treaties. now pressure is increasing on the cattle on government to back down from its planned declaration of independence on tuesday france's european affairs minister says her country would not recognize the region if it's the seeds from spain meanwhile catalonia is high court has requested extra security from the spanish national police outside the building in case the declaration goes ahead john hall has more from barcelona. no matter which side of the independence debate one is on this is a sight a few in catalonia would welcome the national police drafted in after a supreme court ruling to guard the high court ahead of tuesday's address to
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parliament by the region's president carlos preached a moment it's a bit scary to see. it in the streets because i am used to see them. used to see so many bodies when she says yes and now they're here. we have them on our doorstep and it's like feeling under siege. these police. have really hit us hard and it's i think it's very bad here at the moment a spokesman for the squadron catalonians police force said it had no choice but to accept the supreme court ruling. we don't understand it at all we have been guarding the spear court of catalonia for the last twenty four years and there's never been any reaction to our service so we don't understand it and we don't like it but it is a judicial distraction so we accepted. the extremely unusual you might call it
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provocative site of spain's national police on guard outside this important building in central barcelona is a reminder of just what sensitive times these are as this region and the whole of spain await a possible unilateral declaration of independence by catalonia on monday madrid again made it clear that an independence declaration would have immediate consequences. not at those terminals but about others but we are ready for any circumstances because we are already vaccinated against the fanaticism of mr pews them all and any hope that he will return to sanity and serenity therefore it's necessary to consider all possible options with worked on all of them one option is to use special constitutional powers to revoke catalonia. if that were to happen they'd be far more to worry about than the national police guard outside the high court you know how al-jazeera barcelona still ahead on the bulletin doubling down
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on climate change denial the trumpet ministrations says it's ending an era drive to limit emissions from coal fired power plants and wild. animals from drug lords and circuses has been shut down. why this guy knowing if asian harbor or off the coast of the italian riviera. follow the weather slushy set fair across the middle east over the next couple of days but we have still got some way to weather just coming out he was saying some rather lively showers all the way down into gaza or actually this line of cloud that will continue to make its way a little further east which as we go on through tuesday say somewhat to weather coming into georgia eventually pushing across into azerbaijan armenia seeing some
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while the weather to the south of that is fine and dry there's the war getting up to thirty six celsius in kuwait city where we get temperatures into the mid to high thirty's across european place and maybe a little bit of clout there just around southern parts of saudi arabia pushing down into yemen a little change as we go on into where to stay another thirty nine there in doha an excess of one hundred in found high still plenty of wall around meanwhile we've got a fair amount of dry weather across southern africa but the eastern cape anything but dry heavy showers coming in here as we go on through the next day or so plus the guys do come back in for where to stay further north you notice showers there just continuing to slide in the way after the democratic republic of congo she was around ethiopian hard as maybe kenya seeing a few showers and those showers extend across a good parts of west africa. the weather sponsored by. it where online we were in hurricane. almost like thirty six hours
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these are the things that has to address or if you join us on saturday. but. this is a dialogue tweet us with hash tag a.j. stream and one of your pitches might make the next show join the global conversation at this time on al-jazeera. good to have you with us on al-jazeera these are our top stories turkey's president has described the u.s. decision to suspend monster visa services for turkish citizens as upsetting the freeze is in response to the arrest of a u.s.
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consulate employee and a stone wall ancora has retaliated with its own freeze on visas for u.s. citizens. more than one thousand six hundred suspects and. the facing mass trials and nigeria the trials are being held behind closed doors at a military facility rights group so they're worried about the lack of transparency and. has requested extra security from spain's national police on tuesday in the event its regional parliament declares independence. the trumpet ministration a scrap and balls which limit air pollution from power plants the head of the environmental protection agency scott crude and else the move in a speech to miners in kentucky he told them that the war on coal is over pro it says the rules alone as the clean power plan will be repealed on tuesday the plan was president barack obama's signature piece of environmental policy several u.s. states say they'll challenge the trend the ministration decision and court. well
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jamie henn works at three fifty dot org an international climate campaign group he says advocates of working to stop what he calls an assault on the environment by the trumpet ministration by moving to repeal the clean power plan president trump administrator pruitt are continuing to just do the bidding of big polluters instead of actually representing the interests of our communities and our children's health and the environment so this is just the first move in a year long attempt to actually repeal this planet some things can be fought tooth and nail on the way the evidence is clear that the clean power plant is a benefit for not only the environment but also for public health and for jobs the estimates were that it would save three thousand six hundred premature deaths tens of thousands of asthma attacks and our kids hundreds of thousands of job hours they're lost every year because people are getting out of attacks and are too sick to go to work on the economic side already in this country there are more than five times as many jobs in clean energy as there are jobs and coal or gas solar jobs are
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growing at twelve times the rate of the rest of the economy so this idea that there's a war on coal in this is bad for jobs as is definition of fake news the real war here is a war on the environment the war on public health the war in our children and our communities and this administration seems hell bent on continuing to roll back the types of protections we're going to need to not only address the climate crisis but to keep our communities safe from the pollution that's been devastating them for decades. a long awaited report on an equality in the u.k. will be unveiled later on tuesday by the british government the racial disparity audit was ordered last year by prime minister turns away and examines how people of different races and backgrounds are treated and better society but critics are already questioning whether data alone can lead to genuine reform paul brennan reports from london. in the eighteen nineties charles booth's maps of the rich and
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poor areas of victorian london showed the glaring inequalities of the age more than a century later on her first day as prime minister to race in may chose to make social justice her core priority to that means fighting against the burning injustice that if you're born poor you will die on average nine years earlier than others if you're black you're treated more harshly by the criminal justice system than if your white. inequality is stubbornly endemic in the u.k. in education employment housing health care and the criminal justice system a person's racial and economic background can profoundly affect the opportunities and treatment they receive it's not overt racism in vats people are saying i don't want to black person working for me but it's more of a subtle things around ok wovens person have a right communication skills seventy six percent of white people are in employment
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compared to sixty four percent employment and ethnic minorities black caribbean pupils are three times more likely to be expelled from school than white children and ethnic minority house sorts or almost twice as likely to live in relative poverty teresa mayes racial disparities orders have been due to report its conclusions in july but then in june came a tragedy which turned the widespread concern about equality international outrage . the ground for tough. almost eighty people were killed and in the midst of recriminations about cost cutting and social housing a shocking reality emerged that in one of the u.k.'s richest barra's the numerous safety concerns raised by some of its poorest residents had apparently been ignored or dismissed by the authorities to some i didn't need to do an audit on rice you're looking at the monk look at yourselves and how you treat and try and work out why
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you do that rather than constantly coming in and doing all day it's what lives are like because our lives will only chimes if you change if you treat us differently. better data should mean better transparency and accountability and reform the charles booth probably also thought that a century ago paul brennan al-jazeera london negotiators from viable palestinian factions felt that and have mass their own car for talks on reconciling their decade long split the deal brokered by egypt follows a cabinet meeting in gaza last week marking the return to work of the unity government but as harry for that reports from the occupied west bank the divisions remain even over the parameters for the upcoming talks. on the way out of gaza hamas officials not for the first time in recent weeks were exuding optimism
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the architecture of a deal had been brokered by egypt now it was for hamas and fatah to start work on the details in cairo face to face. we are going to cairo to discuss the mechanism of implementing the two thousand and eleven karo agreements we already signed with vassar which includes the p.l.o. preparing for elections and forming a unity government. but before the hamas negotiators even left it was clear the other side had different expectations senior. telling our jazeera nothing had come of the twenty eleven agreement instead but i would present a vision for a unified national strategy for hamas to sign up to the most of this do they want to have this is it ever.
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said this is what the. delivery of services would certainly be welcomed by garzon suffering daily deprivation the divide which began with gun battles ten years ago has combined with the israeli blockade seen garza slide into economic and humanitarian calamity a situation worsened by three conflict with israel in which thousands of palestinians died this year palestinian president mahmoud abbas imposed restrictions on salaries and electricity supplies increasing the pressure on hamas to seek a deal now he's insisting that any agreement prevents hamas as military wing from remaining an external alternative center of power. position is that he refuses the equation whereby the palestinian authority governs overground and hamas governs underground so it seems the issue of arms is on the table even though it wasn't in previous agreements. rule of smiles on the show in gaza last week when the
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palestinian authority prime minister assembled his cabinet for a formal handover of power this reconciliation remains at a fragile early stage previous attempts to end the split have ended in failure there is only momentum this time not least as a result of egypt's intervention but now comes the harder test of thrashing out long standing divisions in direct negotiations are a force that al-jazeera. the japanese broadcaster has shown what it says is the final video of the half brother of north korean leader kim jong on before his death in malaysia and february fauji t.v. showed kim jong nam lying on a stretcher at an area next to a lift at kuala lumpur airport he died after the highly toxic v.x. nerve agent was smeared on his face as he waited for a flight to a woman a car early on trial in malaysia for the killing. now the third largest city in colombia is home to an animal refuge like no other for two decades abused animals
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seized from drug lords all the circus have been sheltered in v.l. in the city of cali but now and yvonne mental party say the refuge must close i sound a lot of reports from carly. jupiter delight you might appear to have the same of a cat in the wild around this adopted mother he's no more try to house. he's one of many exotic animals that an authority shelters that. are unique animal refuge and. trade which connects them all is that they were abused in the past yeah on their own she had fun with her head and circus grow a lion and a tiger one lion was crippled they broke his power by lashes another line was crossed side more and more animals kept arriving because the sea legs a space to house wildlife for twenty six years i have done the work of the state at one time police handed over
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a steady supply of animals many seized from drug lords on the road. i cry out of anger and impotence when i see them so abused so by a lated by human beings but their. revenues from three private schools have helped finance the facility supermarkets provide fruits and veggies lend the remains of their livestock for the big cats the alerting us founder as long been praised courage in our work by tory so much so to deserve a statue paid for by a former governor but those days are long gone and now current. it's time to close the refuge. police have now stopped bringing you an e-mail is following at this season by the local environmental authority said. these places need to have conditions that are sanitary for the city and suitable for the animals. the
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fact that this was allowed to legally it's a shame for the city and can't continue indefinitely just because we want to help you get that number at the quantum level meant they could put the elephant people smaller animals should be released but many of the older or disabled creatures could be euthanized. it's unacceptable that they'd kill them after i took care of them for so many years keeping up with for twenty years to just have them decide about his life just because you're lame you're not supposed to live. that question mark hangs over all of the animals. but i'm a promise is to keep fighting for them and this sanctuary from animal cruelty. you know again i'm going to have a problem and the headlines on al-jazeera turkey's president has described a u.s.
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decision to suspend most visa services for turkish citizens as upsetting the phrase in response to the arrest of a u.s. consulate employee in istanbul and ankara has retaliated with that song freeze on visas for you west citizens. powerful u.s. republican senator bob corker has issued more criticism of president donald trump and an interview with the new york times the chair of the senate foreign relations committee said that trying to straighten the presidency like a reality t.v. show and making reckless threats that could steer the country into world war three . officials in the u.s. state of california say ten people have been killed and fast moving wildfires about twenty thousand people have been told to leave their homes in the northern one producing region and evacuation orders are being expanded as another blaze spreads through county in the south. more than one thousand six hundred people are facing last trials in nigeria accused of being members of the rebel court. the trial.
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being held behind closed doors at a military facility rights groups say they're worried about the lack of transparency. voters in liberia will head to the polls to elect a new head of state in a few hours ellen johnson sirleaf africa's first female president is to step down after two terms in office the election marks the west african nation's first democratic transfer of power since the one nine hundred seventy four. british prime minister tourism a says the amount the u.k. will have to pay to exit the e.u. won't be known until the country in an address to parliament said the final details of britain's withdrawal will be agreed at the end of the negotiating process in march two thousand and nineteen reports indicate brussels could demand as much as eighty billion dollars from the u.k. to satisfy commitments made on the e.u. treaties. catalonians high court has requested extra security from spain's national police on tuesday and the event itself regional parliament declares independence
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those are the headlines on al-jazeera the stream is next. facing new realities your president said that there would be a complete audit a hundred percent ordered that orders hasn't happened getting to the heart of the matter so are you saying then that the future of the g.c.c. will be. here their story. on talk to how does it. at this time. high and ok and join the stream live on al-jazeera and you tube what happens if catalonia really declared independence from spain it's been ten days of violence protests and fiery debate there's been a push for dialogue on both sides but the issue remains tense on today's program where hear from you and separatists impossible own now.
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