tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera October 20, 2017 12:00pm-12:34pm AST
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you found a young mom her name is regina i'm going to show you happy to hear this is a picture that fattal took of her when you first approached her how was she when she talked to you when you fall. september. first of the september when you're finding people's incredible long interviewing new people with human rights watch. i was asking everyone like if you have someone who lost. their family their child. the lady she was near to the. school where it was having interviews peoples and we're going to. she was just very silent up to my i was very curious to find our how she was i mean interviewing people i ask her she was like traumatized she was not she was not talking and she was not feeling too i mean feeling secure to talk
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with ours and i was saying that i am just native language and like you brother if you share our story to us it will be very good for you community and the world will know what happened to you and then she stopped crying she couldn't. describe what happened then i was getting into the in her like what happened and she starts crying like. it's very unclear and then i. figured that she lost her baby one year and for four months let's see the stars for resume. there is nothing but pain. and i got a little roll of the my baby was in my lap when the soldiers hit me and he fell out of my arms didn't they pulled me closer to the wall and i could hear that he was crying then after a few minutes i could hear that they were hitting home too. she tells us soldiers
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from me and mars army had set a fire outside the house they were in and then the unthinkable. my baby was thrown into the fire and then they raped me these are pictures of resume a son sadik he was one and a half years old and very playful a happy child she still can't believe is gone. i feel like i'm pinning on the inside. then she breaks down. as she wails in agony resume screams out for her mother. a mother who is also no longer alive mohammed. how could you even bad to listen to that tell that
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story and report at the same time has even possible. sorry. but emotional. i mean that is pain on. that is almost unimaginable and. you know. he was great to he had spoken to her and he said all this up we wanted to tell her story and we wanted viewers to hear her words about what had happened to her as hard as it is to hear that. but you just try your best to. to get through that and you try to be as
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sensitive to the situation. that resume is in. you know that story got a huge response and we were contacted by some aid agencies and they have since been in touch with resume and her husband and hopefully she will be getting some counseling and some help soon. but the story we heard from. is the kind of thing that we heard from others as well. others some people didn't want to talk about it. resume i wanted to share it in order to tell the world what was going on and. yeah it's it's a necessary thing to try to tell so that people can see with their own eyes what's going on. but. yeah it's just horrible and very very sad and often. you know as you were talking
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a lot of the comments coming in are wondering about the actual ability of a journalist of a view to in this case to keep reporting even when you see especially that it seems not a futile but that this story that historically doesn't get a lot of attention is continuing to not get you know the coverage it deserves a douglas saying we saw your down to earth human and honest coverage how did you enjoy these tough and heartbreaking conditions fadi we heard from you know obviously you're thinking about maybe how your subjects' and the people you're meeting are enduring the conditions they're living in but but how does it affect you personally and how did you overcome that. during the interview. that's true we don't understand the language but we were crying. i turn i turn my head and i saw also our translator crying i left just turned left to him how much he's into you so
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even if we don't understand the language that was happening and when we when we were editing and. how much he's a great writer he had all this beautiful words. after we finished editing we were watching the package before we send it to go and put it on. we said to each other this is this is too powerful. it's so emotional. and we look at each other and really like we were crying so. when i when i was filming her keep rolling the camera is very hard you have to stop sometimes but i couldn't stop i left the
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camera rolling and i turn my face sometimes to just. control myself but it's really so hard to film someone in pain like that. suffering like that. i'm just thinking here in the last few minutes of this show the reporting that you did with. what would you want the impact to be i see the u.n. between a lot of the stories that you are sharing and they're sharing them and trying to get the word out but what's what's the point how you what do you want to achieve. we want as many people as possible to hear the accounts the testimonies of these or injure refugees in their own words and we hope that that will have an impact now throughout the entirety of the time that we were in bangladesh i was getting so many messages from people asking what they could do to
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help and all i can tell people is if you want to help i would say the best thing to do is to find an aid agency that you trust and to donate money to them because at the moment these are our hands are refugees need so much help need so much aid. the people of bangladesh have been have been very generous to them they're trying to help them as much as possible bangladesh also is a poor country these aid agencies need help to get more supplies in there to distribute the aid and the international community as far as we understand right now has not been pledging enough to meet those demands so i would say that's the best thing to do if some of the reporting we have done has brought this to the fore so that people could understand can see how miserable the conditions are that is a good thing and i hope it continues and i hope more journalists go in there because it is a story that deserves so much more attention and i would just want to add one more thing we tried to showcase as much as possible the conditions the appalling
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conditions at these camps the misery that these people are living in forget the pain of the trauma of having fled me and more but what they're living in there in these camps right now the conditions and i just want to say that you know the did such an amazing job with his camera work trying to show how miserable the conditions were and these were not easy conditions to shoot in and to get the pictures in the videos that he did and that's one of the reasons why the stories are power and mohamed he really wanted an amazing job and the materials point and so i mean you know a lot of people commenting on you know and they come out on you tube watching live saying it seems that this is all lasting our short attention span we need more long term coverage. thank you so much mohamed to friday ron had for being part of our program giving us a reporter's d brief on a story that continues here on al-jazeera and we just remind you that we are now streaming live on you tube and we invite you to join our online community and you can do that any time we're going to al-jazeera english on the you tube page and
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look at upcoming live streams thanks for watching everybody see next time. a new television station in afghanistan is turning the focus on women it's on t.v. they are on camera in the guest chair and in the control room the founder of zone t.v. says this project couldn't wait this theme is for those mothers on those to sit on
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those wife's living in afghanistan there's all this talking about their rights but they didn't see anything in a nation where education was forbidden for girls as recently as two thousand and one a network just for women is a mark of progress there's also a very real element of danger of course we are threatened but because just sit in the corner of our homes we have to go forward and develop ourselves and help bring peace and stability to our country as we embrace new technologies rarely do we stop to ask what is the price of this progress what happened was he was started getting sick but there was a small group of people that began to think that maybe this was related to the kind of disclosure in the job and investigation reveals how even the smallest devices deadly environmental and health we think ok we'll send our you waste to china but we have to remember that there felicia travel around the globe death by design at this time on al-jazeera.
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valued as a general of africa nairobi has gone through many changes over the past decades took to al-jazeera travels to the kenyan capital to hand from those who witnessed the city's progress to becoming a metropolis and discusses where it's heading now at this time on al-jazeera. are. fighting breaks out between curtis and iraqi forces as they battle for control . of the north. you want to know just your ally from a headquarters and. also a heads russia warns any break up of the iran nuclear deal could impact the
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situation on the korean peninsula. unwilling to engage the u.s. secretary of state blames the four arab countries blockade in qatar ahead of his visit to riyadh and doha and china's president takes a page from aus little red book she jumping thoughts is set to be enshrined in the communist party's constitution. while fighting has broken out between iraqi forces and carrot especially northwest off her kook. book tour. there are reports that this america is battling sea on militia in the same area and that a bridge has been blown up the kurds took up new positions on the road between erbil incur a kook on thursday three days after they pulled out of the city. the russian
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foreign minister sergei lavrov has warned that abandoning the iran nuclear deal could undermine the chances of curbing north korea's nuclear ambitions he was speaking at a nuclear nonproliferation conference in moscow and north korean delegates are at the meeting in what could be a rare opportunity for a dialogue u.s. president donald trump has been denouncing the iranian nuclear deal while at the same time applying pressure on north korea over its nuclear program fred we're following the story for us and joining us from moscow to tell us what more the foreign minister had to say about the deal. well secretary minister lavrov is a polished diplomat he reiterated russian policy but he clearly showed the deep concern that the russians have about the elements of unpredictability that are creeping in to nonproliferation in general but it was
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respect to iran and north korea in particular. like veiled in a veiled way criticize the united states for playing around with the iran's deal for threatening it and he said that anything that at this point removes that critical deal from the table can threaten the whole nonproliferation regime in the whole world and particularly upset possibilities for any kind of go seeded settlement in north korea so in this respect this conference brings together an awful lot of people it's all the people who are engaged in nonproliferation studies activities military intelligence diplomats academics and of course are giving set piece speeches but whatever is happening around. the chemistry that must be taking place here in this hall maybe we may really contribute to
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a better you know some movement in these areas. well there's a bunch of them initially but the but in tackling the nuclear program on the korean peninsula we must prevent an armed conflict that would inevitably bring about a humanitarian economic and environmental disaster it was an all parties must show restraint and reserve let me remind you that in every un security council resolution on the korean peninsula its side sanctions their statements about the need to return to negotiations there is no alternative to a diplomatic settlement. the russians as you can see here from that are really worried that the equilibrium is being upset. in in north korea that the the united states is pushing hard for more sanctions and so on the russians are going along with that but what he's saying is up to a point because any any thing that really ruptures the status quo
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can lead to what he said were cooked that would be catastrophic consequences ok prague where thank you. back to our top story we were telling you about the fighting between iraq and kurdish forces happening right now we'll cross over to stephanie decker she is actually on the erbil kirk who cry when stephanie you're just about thirty kilometers from the front line what are you hearing on these clashes. they've been going on since around eight o'clock this morning mortar fire machine gun fires began by border between the kurdish peshmerga this was their last checkpoint before the city of kirkuk so they've been fighting with iraqi forces the army also the shia militia known as the we've seen here at least ten ambulances move some of those with sirens heading to that frog we've spoken to the hospital here there are some push in all going for just how many now we're hearing from all the forces that they have taken the area of all can put out which is as
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you mentioned around thirty kilometers from here choying to push the peshmerga a little further back we don't know what the plan is some soldiers are saying that they're planning on staying there others are saying perhaps they'll want to push a little more for the towards the bill again it is unclear but from what we understand the fighting is still ongoing and certainly judging by the amount of ambulances we've seen here they do expect some more injured but the sense of some sort of context for us because ultimately what you have is two groups or two u.s. allies funded by u.s. weapons supplied by u.s. weapons. and incredibly complicated situation on the ground are read if you look at the are any of. exactly one year to the day that both the bush and the iraqi army launched their offensive against eisel to clear it of mosul happened that was the day that her cook was retaken by
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the iraqi army was the kurds the question how can two thousand and fourteen when the armed iraqi army for. isis bonzes it's a very complicated situation on the ground and people would have told you while we were focusing on the offensive against isolate for the last year or so that the real question the real challenge will be the day often because google has territorial ethnic sectarian tensions that will not go away they have always been there part of that is why you see the creation of groups such as myself so a lot of challenges here as you mentioned these are two more than two american allies meet each other the pretty much stayed out of bed i did bump into a group of jordan soldiers yesterday they are here training the peshmerga they put that on hold i was talking to them they were saying the recess in the situation on the ground as to whether they were getting going to continue training because they didn't want to be seen to take saudi so again this is something very very fluid that is playing out yes it is between the two forces that put together against isis
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and their allies of the united states and now they're pointing their guns also both issued by the united states at each other. all right stephanie decker thank you for that update. u.s. secretary of state rex tillerson has criticized the four countries imposing a blockade on qatar for refusing to engage in talks to ease the crisis he's kicking off a week long overseas trip with stops in saudi arabia and qatar in june saudi arabia the united arab emirates egypt and behind and closed airspace and sever trade and diplomatic links with qatar they accuse it of fostering terrorism charges doha it strongly denies this the department says there is little hope of agreement anytime soon. we want to see these come countries keep their focus on the areas of mutual cooperation that we have and that includes the fight against terror terrorism and other things of that nature so i think the secretary is you know
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certainly discouraged that nothing has been resolved just yet he's talked pretty consistently although folks haven't haven't. bunch attention to it reese recently about the disappointment that the nations haven't been able to solve the g.c.c. crisis we hope that they will we hope that they'll sit down and have talks but it seems like they're not ready to do that yet your leaders are resuming meetings in brussels aimed at breaking a deadlock over breakfast talks british prime minister to reason may is seeking to expand negotiations to include trade but leaders want more progress on citizens' rights the u.k.'s financial obligations and the border with northern ireland the deadline for a final deal is march twenty nineteen. he has more from brussels.
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