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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  November 14, 2017 5:00am-6:01am AST

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but we struck up a relationship this is a dialogue tweet us with hash tag stream and one of their pitches might make them actually join the global conversation at this time on al-jazeera tracing the fall from prosperity to financial ruin this is precisely the moment where we hear lies that nothing worse first will be in the way the devastating impact to save the bank means also to save the deposit simple ordinary citizens and the failure to prevent disaster banks and political leaders are the people who needed to learn the less i go are from democracy to the markets at this time on al-jazeera. this is al-jazeera.
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hello i'm rob matheson this is the news hour live from coming up in the next sixty minutes at least four hundred and fifty people are dead and some seventeen thousand are homeless following an earthquake on the iran iraq border iran's president is expected to travel to the hardest hit area on tuesday. saudi arabia says it will ease its blockade on yemen but the u.n. says the move doesn't go far enough. a possible breakthrough over the long disputed south china sea ahead of the final day of the summit. and the italians couldn't do the job the four time champions are out of next year's football world cup after a goalless draw with sweden. iran has declared tuesday an official day of mourning after an earthquake killed at
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least four hundred and fifty people sunday's quake has also left thousands homeless and injured the u.s. geological survey puts the epicenter on the border between iran and iraq semi autonomous kurdish region most of the deaths reported so far are in iran's mountainous kind of moncho province the worst hit town appears to be south poles a hub on the iraqi side there are reports of extensive damage in the nearby town of daraa bondy khan solid balance reports. this is the a.p.c. enter of damage after sunday's earthquake on the iraq iran border. it's supposed to have county income and sharp province more than three hundred of the dead lived here thousands were injured and i was under the rubble of a destroyed wall it collapsed on my head. the remote area is overwhelmed this is what's left of the only hospital in the county medics improvise in an open field
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iran's government has sent in twenty helicopters and created four field hospitals using trucks of medicine and buses to treat the wounded those whose injuries were too severe were transferred to the capital tehran. there were no facilities no access to electricity no water i'm not good. for eighteen hours. in the seconds that the earthquake rolled through at nine eighteen on sunday night and used to make should seventy thousand people became harmless iran is one of the most seismically active countries in the world several fault lines across the country twenty six thousand people were killed in a single earthquake in two thousand and three. in iraq they are less common but this time the destruction cross the border. the building was flattened by the earthquake that struck yesterday at a fellow a seven member family we managed to rescue only five of them or the other two were killed was the first time i've ever seen an earthquake the divine act that no one
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can prevent because to be a losses it's believed to many people are still under the rubble search and rescue dogs have been brought in and over to play their work will see the death toll rise . ada streaming in via air and rose the turkish red crescent deployed fifty five cargo trucks and nearly one hundred staff to iraq on monday you had the french. help you stop war in iraq president hassan rouhani will travel to the worst hit area of kermanshah on tuesday as a show of support and to oversee risky work the true cost of this earthquake still becoming clear charlotte dallas. al-jazeera arabic correspondent i mean. the iran iraq border and sent us this update. we are here in the area of daraa banda can search west of silliman it seems that this recent earthquake
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that hit the area last night has caused serious damage to this. large cracks can be seen in the body and bridge of the day the manager of daraa band told al jazeera that initial estimates show large damage has been caused to the x. turn of face and body of the day. but he said that assessing the damage internally would require sensors to make more detailed evaluations a specialist team who specialize and have traveled from baghdad and another team came from an arab able to assess the diabetic and specialized u.s. army team will be arriving soon to assist in assessing the volume of the damage and destruction that affected. the rocks which fell from these mountains caused massive damage either to the or the surrounding properties and other structures the tremor caused rocks to fall from these mines and spread more than five hundred people have been injured seven from this area and one from diyala which is in the sights of this area aid groups are preparing to send the much needed supplies to yemen after
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saudi arabia said it would start reopening some of the country's ports and airports so he placed a blockade in yemen a week ago after the rebels fired a missile at the u.n. is warning that millions of people could die in the world's worst in decades unless the measures are lifted completely thousands of tons of aid meant for yemen is stranded in djibouti from where muhammad reports. for human. humanitarian agencies say they in a race to respond. slauson solve tons of food and medical supplies distin for human stranded in djibouti port the pro-government soda led military coalition which is fighting hole through rebels has imposed a blockade on ports in yemen. easing some of the restrictions. we're working day and night we operate three eight hour shifts a day we want to be ready to move as soon as we get the go ahead. i'm i didn't see
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it is you are transported from djibouti by and by sea is small. but due to the huge backlog created by the blockade this is having to use much bigger vessels this particular consignment consist of medical supplies for the call and response collapsible. water purification tablets as well as food for human children enter this is saying any further delay in the delivery of this aid to the loss of lives aid workers say yemen stalks of fuel and drugs in school drawn out soon that is a tragedy unfolding and children are the silent weak timms since the current blockade the humanitarian community has been unable to bring in the essential food nutrition and medical supplies including vaccines that are one million children at
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risk of diseases such as polio measles and t.v. if the essential vaccines are not brought in urgently. strategic position between the gulf of aden and the red sea has long been prized by military powers. following the military lead an astonishing a major presence. significance increased in the past two years because of the civil war in yemen just one hundred sixty kilometers from its coast. this wild food program hub in djibouti contains grain silos and climate controlled storage for existence and other essential medical supplies and there is always has been issues and has a happy he said the person is a very very close to little human. being t. all four times person for such us like ports and the airport. infrastructure in yemen has been destroyed by a war they didn't talk about
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a pandemic which killed at least one thousand seven hundred forty people in the past seven months in addition to many more war dead the u.n. says the conflict has pushed seven million yemenis to the brink of funding. aid stuck in djibouti has never been more needed to have it at all just djibouti. saudi arabia's ambassador to the un has been defending the kingdom's announcement that it's only partially lifting the blockade in yemen diplomatic editor james bays has more. saudi arabia has announced that aid is going to be allowed in but only to places that are controlled by its military coalition aid is not going to be allowed to ports and airports which are under who think control the problem with that is that eighty percent of yemen's food normally comes in through the data port and that is under who think control with regard to the u.n. their statements on this are very careful because of the political sensitivity but
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if you read between the lines what they're saying is this is too little too late into the ports that we need access to or the ones where the humanitarian needs are the greater so that includes data and salif. sea ports. obviously we welcome the opening of other other ports but those are the ones that we need later in the same room saudi arabia's ambassador flanked by the ambassador of yemen and the deputy ambassador of the united arab emirates took questions from reporters they were asked why they were planning to lift the blockade selectively doesn't this lay you open to accusations of using starvation as a weapon of war no no far from it we are we are saying that we have had to take measures to control the safety and security of our country and we have taken these measures on a temporary basis and for the short and limited period of time we are lifting the siege in the areas where there is no threat of smuggling we are taking steps to
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improve the verification mechanism in the other areas and in the meantime we have not stopped the supply of humanitarian aid to all of you haven't from saudi arabia and from from elsewhere the saudi ambassador denied reports that the president of yemen president had he was under house arrest in saudi arabia. it's perhaps remarkable at moments later he was asked exactly the same question about hariri the prime minister of lebanon who resigned in riyadh last week and still in saudi arabia. saudi arabia as u.n. ambassador also addressed the recent anti corruption crackdown in his country he said detained members of the royal family will be granted jew process crown prince mohammed bin salman has had dozens of high profile saudis detained in recent weeks including billionaire prince. those arrested are accused of money laundering bribery and exploiting public office for personal gain critics have dismissed the
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move as a power grab by the crown prince but a more ahead on the news hour including the russian president says his work with turkish counterpart is producing concrete results on syria plus. hero's welcome for the french president one of paris struggling suburbs but critics say he's anything but. and honduras old joe will tell you why their coach wanted the media out of his training session that's coming up in the sport. leaders in china have agreed to start talks in drafting a new guideline for the south china sea the philippine foreign ministry says that countries will negotiate an effective code of conduct over the long disputed territory but his spokesman gave no details on why in the talks will begin for more
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than a decade the leaders of the ten member bloc have struggled to reach a deal with china which claims most of the strategic waterway. well let's take a closer look at what's at stake and who claims what in the south china sea china bases its claim on the so-called nine dash line which considers virtually all of the south china sea as its territory beijing maintains its claim is based on historical evidence dating back two thousand years. but six others vietnam the philippines taiwan malaysia and uneasier have overlapping claims disputes along similar between them but intensified in recent years as china moved to cement its claim the un estimates the south china sea carries one third of global shipping the major trade route also has abundant fisheries natural resources as well as possible and gas reserves but bride is live for us now in manila rub the ass and embarks on the beginning of the negotiation of the code of conduct for the south china sea is
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this actually big breakthrough in this dispute. it is something of an achievement especially because it has been so long in coming they started talking about these talks back in two thousand and two. is often accused of being something of a talking shop the doesn't achieve very much so yes this is a success but it does show just how slowly the wheels of dancing and can turn the problem rather think as you mentioned there are the trying to accommodate these competing demands of asian neighbors who all have claims especially mineral wealth claims to the south china sea and also how they interact with china the biggest claimants are claiming almost all of this is straight to water the philippines for example in recent times has become far more pragmatic in its approach talking about
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developing resources jointly with china rather than disputing claims with china that's despite an international ruling in its favor against china last year whereas viet nam is far more robust it accuses china of bullying and takes a far stronger stance in its dispute with china over say the parasail island so you have these competing demands which presumably will still be competing whether or not you have the. code of conduct try to sort out the differences rob donald trump the u.s. president has been on a twelve day tour of asia and choose day marks the end of that tour is it being looked at as a success and if so by whom. well if you were following mr trump's twitter feed then definitely yes it is a success he's been talking about the billions of dollars worth of trade deals over the past week and a half and it is true there have been big deals signed we've seen those in china
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for example all of these deals according to the american president is good for american business it is always disputable just how many of these deals would have been signed in any case but yes there have been deals possibly more important is the strategic significance of this trip meeting for example with allies south korea and japan they face off against north korea and also talking to other countries in particular russia and china in trying to win support for their position on north korea so that's been important i think personally for donald trump this has been something of an achievement if only because the lack of any disasters there has not been the kind of gaffs or mistakes that we have seen on previous visits he does seem to have stayed on script it has been something of a record as apparently he has been reminding his traveling press corps about this
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twelve days in this part of the world is the longest in recent times by any u.s. president so that is something of an achievement and you remember of course that when he was campaigning last year he made much of his powers of in jewelry and his boundless energy which seems to have established that although it has to be said on this last leg here in manila he has it time seemed tired and dare we say it almost low energy. bride life for us in manila rob thanks very much indeed. un chief antonio good to me and mars leader aung san suu kyi to allow right hinge refugees in bangladesh to return the us and someone here again expressed his deep concern over their injured crisis suchi who was attending the same meeting remains silent on the military crackdown that's forced more than eight hundred thousand to flee her nation she's been criticized internationally accused of in action over
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what the u.n. says is ethnic cleansing i cannot hide my deep concern with an emetic movement of and that is of thousands of refugees from myanmar to bangladesh it is a worrying escalation in the protracted. and the potential source of instability in the region and radicalization seems the beginning of the crises and beyond the end of violence i have called for humanitarian access to affected communities and the right to say voluntary and dignified return of those who fled to their places of. airstrikes in a market in a rebel held town in northern syria are reported to have killed at least sixty two people the syrian observatory for human rights and says three strikes hit the countryside near aleppo it's inside one of the deescalation zones agreement between turkey russia and iran it's not yet clear who is responsible for the strikes and the war in syria was on the agenda at a meeting between the russian and turkish presidents in sochi that amir putin said
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their work on syria is producing concrete results. and said he agreed with putin to focus on a political solution to the conflict he said the deescalation zones had provided the necessary groundwork. we have discussed the most recent developments in syria deescalation zones have done a lot to reduce violence in the region we have come to the same understanding that there is now sufficient grounds for resolution. chalons has the latest from sochi. this was a curious sort of press conference in the topics which we had been led to believe was going to be the main discussion point here syria was actually talked about very little when the two men came out to meet the press afterwards of course they did discuss syria in the press conference so we can hear some of what putin had to say about it here now when you. of course we discussed the syrian issues in the
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background of the success of course you terrorism we decided we need to coordinate our efforts to ensure long term certainly to the situation we need to promote the process of a political outcome. the president the joint communique was approved to ensure the integrity and sovereignty of the country in syria person also pointed to the asked on a process and its deescalation zones co-sponsored by russia turkey and iran as being responsible for a marked decrease in violence he wants to keep that going and also say that he should meet as often as they possibly can but mostly this press conference dealt with trade before the incident two years ago where turkey shot a russian war plane out of the sky over the turkey syria border these two countries have had a very productive trade relationship that was completely shattered by that incident and over the last few months they have been working towards getting that back on
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track again russia has been lifting the embargo put in place and getting frozen infrastructure projects like energy pipelines and nuclear reactors bringing those out of the chiller and getting them moving again we haven't quite got there yet they said in this press conference but the relationship is almost back to where it was before lebanon's president says he's happy to hear prime minister saad hariri will be returning to beirut and is. centering taking back his resignation how dare he made those comments in an interview in riyadh on sunday the instability in lebanon has sparked fears of a wider conflict with israel paying particularly close attention how the forces reports from my sources of. israeli troops rehearse another war with hezbollah these exercises the largest in one thousand years took place in september two months on some are wondering whether lebanon's political crisis might set the stage
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for the real thing that is causes or who would in fact have great concerns over the developments in the middle east the fact that the prime minister has fled to another country obviously led to destabilization in lebanon and there were already several areas of instability behind those fears and the extraordinary events of the last ten days which have seen the lebanese prime minister side hariri summoned to saudi arabia and announce his resignation and the leader of hezbollah accuse the saudis of declaring war the israeli media have been full of speculation about the intentions of the saudi crown prince mohammed bin sandman one theory is that he's trying to destabilize lebanon in order to spark a war in which israel would defeat hezbollah and deal a blow to their common enemy iran even if that theory were correct there's little sense among analysts here that israel would at the moment be willing to play along it will certainly be an enormous tested an early stage of the recent warming in relations between saudi arabia and israel. not least because since the last lebanon
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war in two thousand and six hezbollah has soldiers have been battle hardened in syria and its missile arsenal has swelled in size range and destructive power on the israeli side defense minister avigdor lieberman has repeatedly this year promised that in any future conflict israel would seek a decisive clear victory all of which would risk a largescale conflict than eleven years ago just because both sides have incentives not to go to war doesn't mean they're not going to go to war all it takes is one miscalculation of you know from one side of the other response to you and then there's a response to the response and back and forth. and all of a sudden you're fighting a war that you didn't want i really gave a t.v. interview on sunday raising the prospect of his return to lebanon and even to office if he's uneasy partners in power has stopped intervening in the war in yemen is a sign at least of a potential deescalation in a crisis being watched intently from israel al-jazeera west jerusalem al-jazeera has obtained an exclusive audio recording of deposed egyptian president mohamed
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morsi in court in cairo on monday the homily that was sentenced to death in twenty fifteen in connection with a mass jailbreak during egypt's twenty eleven revolution he's also been sentenced to lengthy prison terms in three other cases. since september the twenty fourth i've been completely isolated from the court there are double grasp areas i've tried to talk about the case but the court has not seen or heard me i can't a witness is and i can't talk to them and i should communicate with the court when i have things to say and the previous sitting i heard the witness and i want to comment on what she said but i couldn't she said folks words that are not true i'm being tried in absentia but they say i am present i don't know where i am now al-jazeera continues to demand the release of a journalist mark who's been in an egyptian prison since december the twentieth is accused of broadcasting false news to spread chaos which he and al-jazeera strongly
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deny mahmoud has repeatedly complained of mistreatment in jail he was arrested in december while visiting his family. for the first time in sixty years italy's football team have failed to qualify for the world cup the four time cup winners drew near all know with sweden in a qualifying playoff but it was a game they had to win a legendary goalkeeper before announced his retirement ending a twenty year international career that included winning the two thousand and six world cup. but. there was nothing to say it's the way it was meant to be they were terrible qualifying for the world hope it's a shame it's a shame that. they didn't really want to win and everybody underestimated the opponent in the first leg as well even now no one was really trying to score everyone was saying we were strong but it's not true because sweden is going
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through and we're going home. as a presenter of fox sports history he's joining us via skype from sydney adam this is really a shock. i don't know if you can hear me madison at al-jazeera this really is a shock the fact that italy after all this time is not going to to the world cup. i'm sorry about that we've obviously lost in sydney we're going to try and get him back but in the meantime still ahead on al-jazeera a more open border reform minded back leader has boosted ties between two mistrustful central asian neighbors plus. i'm sure. where scientists. all of here are one cow and they're close to bringing. to market. this and f.l.
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will never turn his back on the game again details coming up with joe in the sport . from sunset. to sunrise. metropolis the weather's looking pretty quiet across central and southern parts of china over the next comes as a. damn whether it's the summit times perhaps just creeping into hong kong. a little further north as well. be fine and dry to went to taiwan and not see bad across parts of the philippines whether that's pushing through the south china seas heading towards central and southern areas of eventually we will see this pushing over towards southern parts of china but to see some rather wet weather coming in here in the next i'll say philippines brightening up behind manila.
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parts of southeast asia through malaysia down into indonesia there we go with that cloud of rain pushing into southern vietnam into cambodia as we go through wednesday some of. the way across thailand yet again and they stretch to across a good part of the goal so heavy rain coming into the southeast of india that is a little more cloud up towards the northwest pushing across northern parts of pakistan northern areas of india that will help to flush out pollution and small at least temporarily the heavy rain continues to the southeast. the weather sponsored by cats.
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documentaries back. at this time. the story that. there were no. right on that spot at the time. that finds the story it's the story. that i want the viewer in malaysia like al-jazeera english because the news is not . any of the news any.
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you're watching al-jazeera a reminder of our top stories this hour at least four hundred fifty people have been killed by an earthquake in the iran iraq border about six thousand others were injured the magnitude seven point three quake has caused widespread damage in both countries aid groups are preparing to send much needed supplies to yemen after saudi arabia said it would start reopening some of the country's ports and airports but the main supply route to the port of only reopened once the saudi led coalition is satisfied the can not use it to bring in weapons and leaders in china have agreed to start talks and drafting a new guideline for the south china sea the philippine foreign ministry says the countries will negotiate an effective code of conduct over the long disputed territory. ok let's go back to that story we were talking about just before the
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break for the first time in sixty years these football team have not got through to the world cup the four time cup winners drew nil nil with sweden in a qualifying playoff it was a game they had to win we can now go back to adam peacock is a presenter at fox sports. just give us some indication of why this went wrong. if there is a whole nation of. silence around the world there are scattered in all parts of the world including here in sunny all destroyed who are asking that exact question this morning watching the game it was just that i became bereft of ideas towards the end i just ended up resorting to the lumping it in that suites the back four for sweden which just immense and the why that i defended what i had to defend was incredible and i would deserving of going through or saying the peaches and then celebrating with the a moment crushing the desk of the guy and our fantastic sense from their point of view for italy there's a whole heap of soul searching going on and
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a few of my might sue who live around here in sydney are just in a state of shock pure shock because not only their fathers not only died i don't know of italy being in a world cup their fathers as well that's how long it goes back is there any indication of what the fans everything is pointing to about where the problems lay with this result. yeah i heard or read that article ten minutes ago from with quotes from kind of our eyes brother and kind of are of course won the world cup in two thousand and six it was the captain he was fantastic on that occasion including baiting australia in a controversial round of sixteen clash that we all remember down here but. kind of hours brother was signed that it's to do with the foreigners is to do with the the lack of action from the italian football authours in terms of linking what's going on to the national team as well you look at any time you have contact and he did so well with the squad that he had in not that long ago before he moved to chelsea.
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then sure of the new boss bicycle left at the same crop of a few younger ones coming through but i think there's a there's a glut of problems that professional level for young players in italy and they're not getting the chances that perhaps the development believes that they should have in terms of the quality of the development that produced some great players but it's just that finishing touches that they don't get between the ages of sixteen and twenty that seems to be the problem and it's created this this generation that hasn't quite got it when it comes to the big moments and that's not the think there's some adjustments going on in italian football a moment in the younger riders that will say that something like this doesn't happen of course we'll have to wait and see to see if it doesn't happen but steps are implies the football isn't just a national sport for italy of course it's kind of woven into the fabric of italian society what kind of response are the team going to get when they return home. well they are home that's the problem but think they're not going to not sleep
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they're not in milan but when i go after their respective course they're just going to cop it left right and center from there. your allies find stories of when italy get back when they have underperformed an international tournament. from a gino airport there and run like all the tomatoes from a few fans and that's been me but it's going to go on for a long time and my mind is that the cards there were reports that the cards did resign after demise he hasn't gone out of what he's trying to hang on for but even in this part of the world there's just that many discussions going on in the coffee shops along on straight melbourne also not in straight locker never any other part of the strategy where there's a concentration of italian heritage there's so much emotion involved especially with the italians when something like this happen because i believe it's a god given right to go to a world cup at the very least and then actually compete for that will come but that the end of those four weeks in when they walk up spins around every four years but that's not going to be the case in russia next year is going to be a lonely old existence for talent or friends come next summer yeah but it might
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make for a very interesting world cup this time around i don't peak our presenter of fox sports a story a thanks very much for your time. ok another story we're watching the final day of the assy and some much for the south china sea north korea have topped the agenda russ feingold is a senior advisor to d.c. international it's a political risk consultancy firm i mean is joining us now on skype from taipei let's talk about this the south china sea talks that have been a to. this dispute over the south china sea has been going over on for well over a decade what's different this time round that has prompted them to hold these talks. well at some level these talks happen every time there's a regional sourness of a notion or the concept that they're talking about stock trying to see sovereignty disputes at a regional meeting multilateral meeting that by itself is not new but obviously was she jinping having just come through the party congress and setting out
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a path for his continued leadership that the timing is very good to potentially reach a deal or at least reach some level of understanding to avoid you know the recent run of disputes in no one wants to see violence or a shooting war break out in this region so there is incentive from the leaders of the claimants to reach some kind of code of conduct we have seen in the last few days this tentative agreement amongst the asian countries on the trans-pacific partnership we've also seen now china talking to the us in nations about the south china sea do you think that we are seeing the start of a global split in the dynamic of power if you like between china and its allies on one side and the u.s. and its allies on the other. probably a little premature to make that conclusion the trump administration is still relatively young days it's only ten months in office asia policy from the trunk
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administration is still a bit of a work in progress although president truck made some very clear points on trade in north korea during his trip even offered to mediate the south china sea dispute and a lot of the countries that are claimants to parts of the south china sea they're not looking to take one side or the other in any disputes between china and the u.s. whether it's over trade or sovereignty or other issues clearly the members of ozzy for the most part have an incentive to maintain excellent relations not just which china but with other great powers such as the united states who are india or russia so we need to keep these things in mind and not consider it is zero sum game where the members of ozzy on are seeking to accommodate china at the expense of their relationships with other major powers many of these countries of course have some of the strongest and best performing economies in the world do you think that we're beginning to see evidence that that is giving them greater leverage when it comes
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to making decisions about what side of the fence if you like that they should fall . well certainly there are countries in oz eon who welcome inbound investment from china and china has been very aggressive and successful frankly at infrastructure investment in our young countries they also invest in resources in other sectors however some of the scene countries depend heavily on exports to the united states so again it's not easy or some game where the ozzie on members are looking to accommodate one at the expense of their relations with the other and the history tells us that members of ozzie aren't do a very good job of managing relations between the united states and china and that's a notion that i that i see on has operated under throughout its existence they want to be everybody's friend and it's worked very well for the i.z. on countries russ feingold always good to get your opinions on this thank you very
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much indeed for your time french president emmanuel mccall has paid tribute to the one hundred thirty people killed in the paris attacks two years ago marco met the frontman of the band eagles of death metal who were performing at the back on concert hall where ninety people were killed gunman and suicide bombers attacked the back lawn as well as the national stadium bars and restaurants the only surviving suspect slum has refused to talk to investigators. ok staying with friends and as promising increased investment in jobs and education to help the struggling hosing projects but some residents say that six months into his term his policies favor the rich over the poor reports. it was emanuel mccall's first visit as president to. one of paris's most troubled and well known suburbs and the welcome was grew up was in that community leaders and
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local politicians unemployment is particularly high here and there are a few opportunities mike ross says he wants to revive towns like this giving tax breaks for investors and reducing class sizes are you mr president what message did you bring the need to directly support the c g. i convey a very clear message of hope but not a naive one of the commitment of the whole nation. clichy sous bois is trying to shake off its reputation in france as a no go zone twelve years ago two teenagers were killed year by electrocution while hiding in a power substation off to being chased by police an incident which sparked three weeks of violence and revealed the depths of discrimination felt by so many there's been some improvements since then but people have been waiting for years for a metro line the would provide a desperately needed link to central paris. or the metro has to persist with
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the project because without it for young people studies training. is suffering. because you i'm really happy he came here to meet us and see what it's like there's no doubt the people here hope that a man or michael will keep is election campaign promise to help people in the suburbs but there are others who say he's already been in office for six months and the social policies that he's posed to so far have been more. helpful to towns like this because of well they've been tax breaks for the rich the poor have been hit with housing benefit cuts local authorities have been told to slash spending to help reduce france's deficit the sense of too much so there's there's a sense that he addresses the concerns of elites rather than ordinary people this visit is welcome it's symbolic but it needs to be about action words a fine but suburbs like ours need more than that past presidents have failed to
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fully address the concerns of people in the suburbs seeing them as a problem rather than as an opportunity it will be up to macro to prove that he's different natasha al-jazeera. has the climate change conference and continues what we eat is a big part of the agenda research says the global meat industry produces more greenhouse gas emissions than all cars planes trains and ships combined the scientists and the other ones so they're close to bringing meat grown in the laboratory to the market. reports from amsterdam. indeed future this is what making a beef burger might look like taking cells from a piece of and letting them multiply into cultured meats this university professor says he can grow ten thousand grams of meat from just one piece of muscle and he says we better get used to that in effect means that we can reduce the number of
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cars worldwide from one and a half billion to maybe ten thousand. and then we won't have the methane emissions we won't have all the resources that go into a car because a cow is a terribly inefficient animal so this process is going to be more efficient. so that it reduces less resources and it's not as polluted and you can look at how live as the world's population increases the demand on food supplies will also grow dramatically meat production takes up eight percent of the world's water huge amount of land and contributes almost a fifth of the world's greenhouse gas emissions average european it's about eighty who knows if you need a year that's about four hundred of these characters but what if in a few years from now a burger grown in the last will taste exactly the same and be the exact same price as the ones here which one when the consumer killed this woman is one of the
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world's leading food scientist she believes that what we might find palatable today might be normal for the next generation i mean there are many things people have to learn to eat. that their grandmothers didn't eat certain food to the vegetables but also certain types of fish that people didn't know about or or snails for example that many people did not they depart from the french. i think it's a it's a fallacy to think that food habits are in more vile in time in fact we eat quite different things from our grandparents parents generation that at a burger restaurant the manager has mixed emotions he worries about the damage too much meat planets but he's also suspicious of the idea of eating meat so there are the fish feel like eating plastic or something even though you say that they do you have the exact same taste but well for now it's a one step before i cannot think of meeting that. science means that the cells of
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just one cow. could pre-fight enough meat for the whole of europe to first lab burgers are expected to be on the market within three years but even if science could solve the massive issues caused by our meat industry the question remains will we eat it fairly al-jazeera the netherlands the indian government struggling to tackle a public health crisis that's now into its second week the capital new delhi has been choked with toxic smoke leading to a spike in hospital admissions people there said they've been playing by pollution for years and they're demanding the government to do more but in a haunting a closer look at why the air they're breathing is so dangerous. at first glance it looks like delhi is blanketed by a thick wintry fog but the sheer number of people covering their mouths shows this is something more sinister for almost a week people have been gasping for breath and hailing
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a toxic combination of microscopic particles and noxious fumes many have heeded the warning to stay home but some are getting tired of that we are worried about our health that's why we were we were all right in the segment for the last four or five days but finally without knowing how much we're going to write i will say this is i will be clear. at times delozier has been almost ten times worse than the chinese capital beijing a city based on known for its special with pollution. here's what makes the smog so dangerous air quality is assessed by counting measure with a diameter of less than two point five micro meters we're talking absolutely tiny here around thirty times finer than a human here so small it can only be detected with an electron microscope and small enough to get into your lungs and pass into the bloodstream causing heart and
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respect tree problems the air quality and experts the upper limits for good ear at no more than fifty and the highest and most hazardous level on that index is three hundred plus the count for delhi at times of the last few days has climbed to double that up past six hundred mosques my make people feel better but they offer little real protection from pollution like this experts say it's the same as smoking forty to fifty cigarettes a day construction projects vehicle fumes and home fires during winter are all being blamed but most believe farm fires are the main culprit here farmers in neighboring states clearing their fields by burning them it's against the law but it's also cheap and easy and every year state governments are accused of turning a blind eye emergency hospital admissions have risen between twenty and thirty five
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the scene government leaders have ordered the closure of more than six thousand schools halted construction and to limiting trucks to only those carrying essential supplies forecasts of rain in the coming days my office some response might but forecasters say it will only be temporary in the meantime those who can a staying home but many others in delhi simply can't afford to nor do they have the money to get to hospital when the smoky grey has becomes too much to be here. does either. a north korean soldier who was shot trying to defect to the south on monday is undergoing surgery for his wounds the united nations says it's opened an investigation into the circumstances that led to the man being found fifty meters south of the military demarcation line it says his north korean colleagues opened fire on him as he attempted to defect in the border area of panmunjom millions of.
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citizens are enjoying improve ties between their countries after years of frozen diplomacy that follows the death of president islam karimov last year and the coming to power of a more reform minded successor robin walker reports from the border. he's meeting his family at the newly reopened da stick crossing between kyrgyzstan and. the hundreds of thousands of people who like shit ali have relatives business on the other side of the border life is becoming a little more normal. in more than a quarter of a century since the breakup of the soviet union the relationship between kyrgyzstan and its biggest fan has been one of mistrust and suspicion. if i wanted to just go see my relatives in his back is down they wouldn't let me through i'd need a telegram of invitation for a funeral or a wedding that was the only way one would be allowed to enter. seven years ago was
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becky stan sealed the border after interethnic conflict in kyrgyzstan but since the death of his back a stone's longstanding president last year relations have dramatically improved joyful seems marked the reopening of the dusty border this september. the changes followed a groundbreaking meeting between mr stern's new president chavez had to be to see you if on the left and his kick his counterpart but that. will show you the credit goes to the president of respect to stan that this day finally came a day which two nations have been waiting for more than twenty five years. the two have so far results eighty five percent of disputed borders a soviet hangover they've also pledged cooperation on trade and energy but where as was becky stan has been ruled with an iron fist kyrgyzstan is an impoverished often chaotic democracy. after.
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but. from this differently. people can travel and trade more easily between kyrgyzstan and as. the hope is that regional leaders across central asia can all learn to put aside their differences cooperate and make life easier for their citizens instead there's a new crisis ok. on the kick kazik botha when kyrgyzstan's president accused because like stan of interference in elections this october these gates closed. and his family will enjoy the full with his becky stone for as long as it last. al-jazeera on the king. story an
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m.p.'s have been given three weeks to prove they're not also citizens of other countries following a crisis that's led to the government losing its majority in recent weeks m.p.'s from several parties have been forced to resign as a strenuous constitution bans people who hold joe nationality from sitting in parliament still ahead and al jazeera the corruption crackdown afifa sees three more former officials appear in a new york court details just ahead with jo in sport.
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time for the sport here's joe. well that is it it's really out of the world cup for the first time in sixty years that's right the four time champions failed to do what they needed to in the second leg of their match with sweden the swedes went into this one holding a one male lead from the first match in stockholm and this nil no result means that they go through to russia twenty eighteen and it's only out while island's coach is urging his players to draw inspiration from the euro twenty six team play off against both nia ahead of their world cup qualifying showdown with denmark there at home for the second leg on tuesday off to holding the danes to gold a stroll in copenhagen in two thousand and fifteen island want to know in dublin after drawing for us like we've had the experience of a couple of years ago most almost of the day. and those were. in. the evening in dublin it's really fantastic against bosnia and like you know i
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think some of the press can draw on some part of that but i think they're probably trying to create their own experience just. as you mentioned the crowd are really. really important if you know. you know much is needed even given this phenomena and so forth and you know i think that. sometimes i think history is well. everyone is fifty. we just have to continue after the game in copenhagen which ended just. take tonight's next ninety minutes and try to get a goal that these men go. if we get one goal they have to score two so it's obvious that we will be doing that we what we did in the copenhagen which was . actually very good after that of planning because we had a ball a lot be created chances enough to get
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a go but sometimes you don't succeed well with sweden's place now decided with that win over italy there are just three places left to be decided ireland and denmark of course are out for one peru play new zealand for another and australia take on hunger is to see who will go through the socceroos true no mail in the opening leg in central america without star player tim cahill has been nursing an ankle injury the team flew back on a specially chartered plane kits that with high tech recovery quitman cahill now says he'll be fit to start on wednesday when you just had to be down there to get us to the stage we choose to finish it off even now it's about enjoying the moment you know i don't really fazed about the occasion or more can't wait for the opportunity to create more history and also for us to write our own script because . i want to be the star of fly. by in the sit up. you know i'm looking forward to
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a positive result cahill may not be fazed by the occasion but the hunters coach was a little stressed at training earlier he argued with a fee for official to try and close the session to media there's plenty of bad blood between the australian on hunger and media in the lead up to the first leg and jorge luis pinto believe someone may have leaked inside team information to the australians ahead of the game as been more than two years since u.s. prosecutors launched their early morning raid on free first top echelons at a meeting in switzerland it was possible widespread corruption investigation into football's governing body and now three former officials are facing racketeering and bribery charges and a new court shows a maria maria in the former president of brazil soccer federation will stand trial alongside juan and health. who's the former president of south american soccer's governing body con mobile and peruse former federation chief manuel berger the former quite tamal and so-called chief is already serving an eight month sentence
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as part of the same investigation fans who go to watch live sports will know the role but you always keep your eye on the ball one n.f.l. on pile will never turn his back on play again after this jeff rice was blindsided on a punt return during denver's game with new england and landed on his head he stayed down for several moments and was later carted off the field by medical staff and that is all the support from our more later doug jones going to be here in a couple of minutes with more i'm. like. with.
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al jazeera. where ever you are. what began as a small extremist group in africa's most populous country we learned that there was indebted to from the government to just shoot you soon turned into a battle front for the nigerian government. tried out yet why. the tourists for
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abducting more than two hundred schoolgirls the killing and displacement of thousands of people al-jazeera investigates the origins of bloody rise of local iraq at this time on al-jazeera. with bureaus spanning six continents across the globe. to. al-jazeera is correspondents live in green the stories they tell. us about it. al-jazeera fluent in world news. at least four hundred fifty people are dead and seventy thousand homeless followed .

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