tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera December 10, 2017 12:00am-1:01am +03
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to western culture. that you have been to because i've been here for some time i can help them with lots of things that news is forward to me the great thing is it's not just about museums about forming a new life it is part of life it's culture. if you're in beijing looking out the pacific ocean you'd see american warships when miss somehow time is aiming to replace america and going to run the world well the chinese are not that stupid these guys want to dominate a huge chunk of the planet this sounds like a perp aeration for our first president george washington said if you want peace prepare for war the coming war on china at this time on a just see it. this is al jazeera.
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hello i'm success and this is the news hour live from london coming up. dozens injured they're arrested across the occupy palestinian territories as day of rage protests continue against the u.s. jerusalem moon and i'm sure the arab league has foreign ministers coming down the u.s. for isolating itself from the international community. i still defeated prime minister the analysis the armed group has been completely driven out of iraq. and the former president of georgia is rearrested in ukraine four days after his supporters freed him from a police found. time in sport but usually of mexico or into the semifinals of the club world cup when the windows rolled up supplying the setting of the last.
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we begin in palestine where dozens of people have been injured and arrested in the fourth day of protests against the u.s. decision to declare jerusalem the capital of israel in occupied east jerusalem israeli forces fired stun grenades and tear gas at protesters who were peacefully demonstrating alan fischer was there and sent this report. i thought it was good. it started as a small protest handful of people but it's the walk towards all jerusalem time one of the city's busy shopping streets there was blocked by police and soldiers told they had no permit to march that they were blocking the road they were forcibly pushed back to the. inner city where anger has been close to the surface since donald trump's controversial decision it sparked a series of running confrontations with. police sent in
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horses to break up the crowds screeching noise spread anger and panic this has been a pattern throughout the afternoon as crowds gather by the side of the street the horses have been sent ten at some pace to try and break those crowds up the writers have even been using their weapons it really is quite frightening for the people who are standing here watching these horses racing towards them. god will see that we are struggling here because i want to tell them to take down and then yes i know i will never give up this is our country would save it was a work ethic that i was given at the end in jerusalem was. this using. was. the security forces using grenades and there were reports of injuries from rubber coated steel bullets if anyone produced a palestinian flag it was taken from them forcibly sometimes violently the flags destroyed in front of their face
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the. then the woman we spoke to earlier was arrested the police couldn't tell is why the this is what's happening and generously in jerusalem it will be still and that if you base here in jerusalem it will be still the capital of palestine. throughout the afternoon the security forces backed off the crowds gathered the police moved up and the whole cycle began again. the security forces tried to grab people they thought were throwing stones at them identified by police photographers who'd been in the crowd by nightfall the situation had stabilized but the under come to tension and the anger was still there but she was no sign of going away alan fischer al jazeera in occupied east jerusalem elsewhere funerals happen held in gaza for two hamas fighters who were killed by israeli air raids on friday israel's
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military says it was targeting hamas weapon sites in which salutation four rockets fired into israel late on friday at least twenty five palestinians including six children were also wounded in the thing bombing according to the palestinian health minister separately two palestinians were killed by life fire while protesting on friday. thomas decision also prompted an emergency meeting of the arab league foreign ministers the kyron meeting roundly criticized the move saying the u.s. had isolated itself from the international community arab league general secretary of a boat guy said the u.s. could no longer be an independent mediator in the middle east peace process. this decision threatens jerusalem's legal status and affects all the arab muslims and christians and the islamic world all together we would like him to be frank and call things by their real name the decision taken by the american administration to
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recognize jerusalem as the capital of israel and to move the american embassy to jerusalem is unacceptable and very dangerous palestinian foreign minister riyadh al maliki has called for the support of the international community. got to go to spain we expect friendly countries who recognize palestine to confirm and reaffirm their recognition of palestine as a state and east in jerusalem as its capital for muslims and christians alike this illegal decision means those countries need to support us on this we hope they'll be a ministerial lot of arabs to talk to the countries of the world in order to support the palestinians and further the palestinian cause. and the cattery foreign minister shaikh mohammad. vali also attended the meeting of arab leaders in cairo he said the u.s. decision was a violation of international law. this causes
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a problem for muslims and christians throughout the world it is a flagrant violation of international law including the un security council resolutions this supports all the measures taken by israel to change the status of jerusalem. and this is syria says senior political analyst says the arab states seem to differ in their reaction to comes decision. the bit of a contrast is gyptian minister did talk. in general terms but it was very clear about israeli violations and so on so forth and palestinian rights i think the saudi i didn't hear the entire thing but what i heard it sounded like. a real attempt at moderation let's call it that way in trying to avoid any possible misunderstanding that saudi arabia is in any way standing up to the united states while from the qatari surprisingly we've heard the words like denunciation of the
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american decision calls for lobbying international organization international community and speaking of the grave dangers because of this american decision so i think the tone was of course much more alarmed if you will on the part of qatar a much more general on the part of egypt and perhaps much more quote unquote moderates decaffeinated if you will on the part of saudi arabia how will that all come together and culminate in any serious decision or action plan i doubt it but we can speak to ali abd abu nima the count co-founder of electronic intifada an independent online news publication that focuses on palestine and he joins us from chicago on skype thanks so much for coming on al-jazeera we have been paying attention to the emergency meeting of the arab league foreign ministers just in the last couple of hours larry response to present tense decision to move the israeli
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capital do you get the impression from your perspective that enough is being done by the other arab nations to line up behind the palestinians and to really give them supports when they're in facing this. no of course not and the arab league meeting at the arab league summit will amount to nothing as it has amounted to nothing for decades all the statements being made by the arab regimes are strictly for public consumption because the arab publics are clearly outraged as the massive demonstrations in cities across the arab world showed but you halla to most of these regimes saudi arabia by trade in egypt and jordan of course a very close to israel they either have all ties or tacit ties and so they will they will do nothing in practice other issues statements on
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a wider perspective you're of the safe from the electronic intifada but it's thirty years since the first intifada how does it differ now compared to then and particular i'm thinking of the social media around the way possibly that can galvanize international support out something that the region well i'm actually old enough to remember very well the start of the first intifada and the massive impact that television pictures had of the brutality of israeli soldiers remember that the defense minister at that time it secular bean and ordered israeli soldiers to crush the uprising with force might and beatings and the break the bones of palestinians so it was really a shock to the world when people saw the television pictures of israeli soldiers actually literally brick. ansley. we are now see sadly very simple. else what you can
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or i think it's all. i'm afraid we are unfortunately losing the sound to allie abbott name very sorry about that i think we got the gist of what you were saying thank you for joining us. coming up on this news hour from london firefighters in southern california come under pressure to contain six raging wildfires as a president declares a federal emergency. the agony of the escaper wrenching girl wails a harrowing story of being shot she tried to leave. and sports a japanese baseball star is being compared to babe ruths major league team. iraq's prime minister has declared the end of the war against eisel in iraq. they
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has been congratulating iraqi troops they say they are now in complete control of the iraqi syrian border and follows an iraqi forces operation to push the last ice of fights us out of the area and houseman marks the end of the three year war to drive eisel out of iraq. and out of the calm at the head right honorable rocky's your land has been completely real approaches your cities and villages have been returned to the nation the dream of liberation has become a reality we achieved victory in difficult circumstances and with god's help such vastness of our people and the bravery of heroic forces we prevailed. the former president of georgia has gone home to strike any crane in detention center according to his lawyer mikhail saakashvili was rearrested in ukraine four days off to his supporters freedom for. he says the charges against him are politically motivated it's a shock as well. we have sucker speedy was rearrested late on friday following
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a police raid on an apartment block in kiev the former president of georgia have been hiding there since his escape from custody after being arrested on tuesday. to crush myriad confronting of the cifers campaign to end preach ukrainian president petro poroshenko criticizing his failure to hold corruption. secretary's press secretary confirmed his arrest he was the lizard. really was detained and now judging from the number of police men he has kept there they don't let anyone in i don't know who managed to get in there i can't get in there at his press secretary i hope there are lawyers in there and more of our people. dozens of supporters gathered outside the detention center vowing to stay until his release. they are trying to set up a regime like that in russia and belarus here if people don't rise up against it now ukraine is finished it will be no fight with corruption no change and no
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investment because no one will want to give money to a corrupt country like in extraordinary scenes on tuesday ukrainian security agents dragged the former leader from neighboring georgia across a rooftop after seizing him from his home in kiev then bundled him into a police bus i therefore we could be driven away supporters managed to free him four days after their botched attempt to take him into custody police tracked him down on friday. back in custody again his future looks bleak. he's now stateless because he's been stripped of his ukrainian and georgian citizenship and he faces extradition back home to georgia or is wanted to face corruption charges allegations which are tonight he's also denying the accusations in ukraine and started a hunger strike in an effort to clear his name peter shop al jazeera. the u.k. foreign secretary boris johnson is due to meet iran's president has some rouhani in
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teheran on sunday to push for the release of a british charity worker johnson held talks with foreign minister mohammed java does arief on saturday not the names ago iraq cliff is serving a five year sentence for spying which she denies johnson has been accused of jeopardizing her case after he said she was in the country to train journalists to her own has used that statement as proof that cigar iraq cliff was a threat to the government al-jazeera is demanding the release of its journalist heard her saying he's been in an egyptian prison for more than eleven months a saying is accused of broadcasting false news to spread chaos which he and strongly deny and saying has repeatedly complained of mistreatment in jail he was arrested on december the twenty s. while visiting family polls have closed in assembly elections in india's good states in what's seen as a test of prime minister narendra modi's popularity. has been
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a stronghold for modi's. jannah party b j p for more than two decades the opposition congress party is highlighting the j.p.s. unpopular policies including introducing a sales tax and removing high value back from circulation. a nine year old girl has told on how she survived after being shot three times. as you just store it is not an isolated one the military is accused of deliberately targeting children escaping a crackdown in iraq. shall start for the poor something cowardly refugee camp they cox's bazaar. but his grandmother can't hold back the tears. it's a miracle the nine year old girl is a lawyer. she to says she was shot three times by myanmar army soldiers
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as she fled her village of torm bazaar three or four months ago. the bullets went through her right leg her left arm and her right armpit me and more soldiers shot her mother and father dead. says you two was trying to escape in a boat with a young boy when the army opened fire at them and you know how your little long we were running and crying trying to escape he says i got in a post and heard gunshots was in a different blood when the ministry shelter jeter they were around the jammy turn away from her after seeing they had shelter i felt i don't know i am bound to die. the bullet wound on the infected and won't heal. infections are common in the camp with hundreds of thousands of other refugees it's not known how many children have been killed by the myanmar military in this recent crackdown on the river injure
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the myanmar government is refusing any kind of independent investigation but what's so shocking about this case is that having spoken to two witnesses and the medics treating her all the evidence suggests that the myanmar soldier knowingly shot at a nine year old girl from close range. is sort of indicative of a hard life the weapon and i watch caliber bullet of something of a seven sixty nine i'm like a five five six bullet which would tend to hit in bath ran and do a lot of internal damage given also the trajectory we think that it would be with him for fifty made a range limit the shooter was operated on in the malaysian government field hospital near the refugee camp and tiny pieces of fabric from the clothes she was wearing when she was shot infected the wound. doctors hope as each is physical agony will eventually subside but it's unlikely the terrifying memories of what she
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and her grandmother saw in me and mom will ever disappear. chance trafford al-jazeera think carly refugee camp bangladesh. u.s. president donald trump has declared a federal emergency in california are the worst bushfires in is all still raging president trump has promised additional government help to rebuild child homeless six wildfires are burning in the state's south forcing two hundred thousand people to flee their homes. from los angeles. well the fire fight continues on many fronts here in southern california and everything is going to depend on the weather firefighters and residents tired of all the flames in so many areas got a bit of a break over the last twenty four hours the winds calm down a little bit firefighters were able to divert resources from structure protection for protecting neighborhoods and actually attack the fire and they have made
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progress on many fronts on these many fires however what happens in the next forty eight hours is going to determine fire behavior the national weather service does have a red flag warning up there saying that there's a potential at least for very high winds through the end of this weekend winds that could gust to eighty or ninety kilometers kilometers per hour those are the common santa ana winds that happen every winter here but when they happen and there's some kind of fire ignition those fires can explode and that's what we've seen over the past week or so for now we're in a bit of a holding pattern we'll all wait and see what the weather brings over the next forty eight hours u.s. president donald trump is visiting jackson mississippi for the opening of a civil rights museum the event has been mired in controversy with a number of civil rights leaders deciding to boycott the event because they say the president has a record of racial division as scientists blaming both sides for the violence at
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the charlottesville rally anticipate this is among the n.f.l. players needing during the national anthem to protest racism despite the protests the boycotts and boycotts the u.s. president trump went ahead with his to pay tribute to america's civil rights leaders that is what medgar evers' was use a great american hero that is what others honored in this museum were true american heroes. today we strive to be worthy of their sacrifice we pray for inspiration from their example we want our country to be a place where every child from every background can grow up free from fear innocent of hatred and surrounded by love opportunity and hope today we pay solemn tribute to our heroes of the past and dedicate ourselves to
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building a future of freedom equality justice and peace. has more from jackson mississippi. president trump's visit here to the new civil rights museum here in jackson mississippi was very controversial many civil rights leaders boycotted his visit did not actually attend the opening of the museum because trump was here they said that they were seeing this is a one photo op for trump a man if they consider to be someone that hasn't done enough to bridge the racial divide in america however we spoke to several people that listen to trump's private speech here including many black americans who they said that they appreciated what trump had to say that he tried to reach out to african-americans in the struggles that they have had for many decades in the civil rights movement in the last century or so in the united states and many people said that they did appreciate
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trump visiting here this museum he toured inside looked at some of the exhibits and then spoke talking about how he thought that this was an important museum. graduating the people of this state that made this happen so in one way trump very much offering a conciliatory message one of peace and one of trying to reach out to black americans. on sunday the international campaign to abolish nuclear weapons or i cam will be awarded the nobel peace prize in the lead up to the ceremony we've been exploring the increasing nuclear capabilities of countries around the world and the impact on . setsuko thurlow was living in hiroshima when the u.s. air force dropped a nuclear bomb on her hometown in one nine hundred forty five my name is sets course i was born and raised in hiroshima at the age of thirteen i
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experienced the atomic bombing in hiroshima in those days japan was losing badly in the war so ordered able bodied people were sent to the front line and we will use a cheap labor at eight o'clock we started the morning assembly major and i gave us the pep talk do your very best we said yes so we will and at that moment i saw the bluish white last one i had again the consciousness i found myself in under the collapsed building in the thought of darkness and. i knew i was facing death as my eyes adjusted i started seeing some dark of jets moving very slowly and i found them to be the procession of human beings but
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it looked like the process of course i think since that experience i could look up my life and i could see how to live the rest. this inhumane thing should never ever happen they get this became the model of the survivors we should never allow this and i made the far i'm going to. use my life to make sure this will never happen again. and you can watch an exclusive interview with this year's nobel peace prize laureate and from icann who will be speaking to us right here on al-jazeera some sunday the tenth of december at sixteen hundred g.m.t. much more still to come on the program including thousands poor onto the streets in
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paris to say farewell to the man known as the french elvis plus. i'm tony a page reporting from south africa on how sinful big international brands have been linked to a corruption scandal. and we're playing ball with a well trick shop day and it has the action they transport. how i we've got some cold crisp sunshine across central eastern parts of here and this area cloud is making its way through so some significant rain and snow across the generic outs here clear skies to come back in behind that's where we have got the spock ling sunshine but we have got some moderate on the way this big vial of cloud piling in from the atlantic will bring some mild weather in as we go on through the course of sunday but that's not miles west so whether runs into the
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cold air we're looking at turning red lead to snow along the leading edge so rain tends to snow here in london ten degrees in paris it goes through the code hour winds out back in the normal a four degree celsius for london possibility want to snow showers there into the southeast of england and some wintry weather too just coming down across parts of central germany i mean eastern policy france whether the wintry weather that will make its way across the alps and what's the weather to coming in across a good part of spain and portugal but a bit of cloud across northern parts of africa meanwhile call this a little vial of cloud here just make this work as northern areas of egypt that won't cause any problems but increasing clouds spinning out of spain and portugal will bring some very heavy writing to the north of morocco as we go through monday with the possibility of some localized flooding.
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this boat is a pacific society unspeakable matter compiled testimonies of victims of congolese mustnt. as this intimate evidence finds its way to into the maximum cold of the central african republic is plunged into further. and intricate details of his people and a nation's critical i've recently struck. a africa to africa to talk solutions at least time on al-jazeera. one of the really special things about working for al-jazeera is that even as a camera woman i get to have so much empathy and contribution to a story as well we cover this region better than anyone else working for us as you know it's very challenging vividly but the good because you have a lot of people that are divided on political issues we are we the people we live to tell the real stories are just mended is to deliver in-depth journalism we don't feel inferior to the audience across the globe.
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welcome back her mind of the top stories here on al-jazeera the arab league has condemned the u.s. for recognizing jerusalem as israel's capital warning it's isolating itself from the international community that ebony's foreign minister call for the league to consider imposing economic sanctions on the u.s. funerals have been held for two hamas sponsors and to protest a three were killed by israeli airstrikes and shootings in gaza on friday. iraq's prime minister house declared the end of the war against eisel in iraq he has been congratulating iraqi troops who say they are now in complete control of the iraq
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and syria border. it's thirty years since the first palestinian uprising known as the intifada began in gaza it became a watershed moment in palestinian resistance to israeli occupation as in the years that have cost the situation has only become worse when it's met reports from gaza . the first intifada was sparked by the deaths of four palestinians in december nine hundred eighty seven. by the time it ended in one thousand nine hundred three more than one thousand one hundred people had died sixteen thousand people had been detained palestinians had already spent two decades struggling with the injustice of living under israeli occupation. intifada the first time palestinians from all parts of society began such an intense resistance the protests evolved from boys throwing rocks and people marching to fighters attacking israeli soldiers and military targets palestinians went on strike and boycotted
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israeli products yet to demand the police pursued our young people because they refused to turn themselves in. the intifada was called by a number of groups affiliated with the palestinian liberation organization the p.l.o. . the group hamas stepped in as well saying on the resistance was the only effective resistance to israeli occupation. from the moment hamas shifted from a peaceful resistance to an armed when israel started to feel the real power of the intifada. israel's military back thousands of palestinians were arrested on in one thousand nine hundred to four hundred twenty five many of them hamas members were exiled to lebanon former political prisoners say the israelis tortured them. were tied under an
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iron chair during interrogation they hit me in the stomach and genitals. the second intifada began in two thousand when al sure on visited x. a mosque in jerusalem he was leader of the opposition likud party at the time and said every israeli had the right to go there. palestinians outraged. is one of the holiest sites in islam more than three thousand palestinians and one thousand israelis died over the next five years this is the spot in a refugee camp where the first intifada started thirty years ago an israeli patrol it was surrounded by hundreds of teenage boys in the soldiers ran for cover into the buildings here and from there fired indiscriminately into the ground since then life for the palestinians is only gotten worse there are virtually no opportunities for the young people here with gaza and the blockade the palestinians who will tell
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you that after twenty five years almost all of talks with the israelis they've seen nothing to come from. burnouts with al-jazeera. ramzi abu read was a child when he participated in the first intifada this is his story my name is on the upward one. eight years old i. was born in bethlehem and grew up in that if you can of what i'm audie to d.m. musician. and composer and activist i think this was on the first these of the intifada uprising. in that if you do chemical. and at the time i would remember that nice bunch of soldiers. who came and just. you dated a lot of space which was the camp they would clean or the kids you know we don't play in the house because our house is very small and in the street is your
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playground you know and then we suddenly students really started to understand. that this is the fire from the story that our grandfathers and mother were telling us i remember that there were many soldiers i don't know what's happened but i just ran. towards soldiers and i want to read it too to go as close as as much as close to to be able to kick them out of from the camp. the. first intifada show you how we were all involved and having one object of you know what and all together we missed that because we are confused between if we are free or i'm free we are in the new regime that we supposed to have a state but we don't have a state that's why we don't have a common. a common goal. today every time i try to go and travel
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or go to other city to all these checkpoints and all the settlement i get angry lucky today because i have an instrument. that helped me to express myself differently and still get my message to the world that i am unhappy. hundreds of women in south sudan's capital juba have taken to the streets calling for the end to the suffering in their country millions of people have fled their homes since fighting broke out in december twenty thirty between government and rebel forces the u.n. says half the country's population is in need of humanitarian assistance heber morgan was at the march. rids of women have come out to march on the streets of south sudan capital juba calling for an end to south sudan's war which is going on to hear the tape their mouths shut but really the signs and posters that they're carrying the tall they're tired of the war they want their men back from the
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fighting and they want but if we care for their children there which broke out in december twenty third team has resulted in tens of thousands being killed and a quarter of the country's twelve million population displaced. we the women of south sudan have decided that we have had enough of this this war has been going on for a long time we thought independence has come in the war has come to an end ten to thirteen happened and nothing has changed twenty sixteen happened and the still the work continues to intensify women continue to be raped and killed and they don't have access to their homes there's no humanitarian access for people they need as we are tired and fed up of this and we want our leadership to understand that this is it this is their chance their final chance to bring peace to this country because we are tired the u.n. says six million people should have of the country's population is in desperate need of humanitarian assistance and that one point two million are risk of famine if humanitarian assistance is not delivered by next year now there is a peace agreement which was signed in august and if you feel but it was largely
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regarded as over when fighting broke out in the capital in july last year there are efforts right now to try to revitalize the peace process to bring together all the whirring five and put an end to the conflict which the women say have taken so much from them and their future. protesters are accusing south african president jacob zuma of allowing businesses to control the government by corruption capture is a kid issue for the governing poets of the african national congress is choosing a successor to president jacob zuma next week tanya page reports from pretoria. these activists are among the south africans who say president jacob zuma has allowed some business leaders to use corrupt practices to take control of the state the. particularly members of the gupta family both the president and the group does reject the corruption allegations but the scandal won't go away in fact it's widening recently several international brands have been linked to the scandal
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british public relations company part and it's a pay the german software giant as well as order to escape p.m.g. and several banks the u.k.'s h.s.b.c. and standard chartered and india's bank of baroda they've all had to defend themselves against allegations they either knowingly or unwittingly facilitated corruption and south africa the banks aren't commenting other than to confirm they're cooperating with investigators all of the international companies involved have apologized and taken remedial action ranging from firing senior executives to repaying money earned from gupta accounts neither the group does nor the president would comment to us half a world away in the united kingdom's houses of parliament former n.t. apartheid activist lord peter hain has taken a stand he's convinced financial regulators and the serious fraud office to investigate british banks he says are implicated in money laundering the profits of
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state capture in south africa millions of homes are being siphoned off from tax through contracts dodgy contracts grants it goes straight into the pockets of president zuma is family all the glitter brothers empire then the money little did abroad sometimes and then is recycled back into the country investigators in the us and dubai are also probing the allegations but president zuma hasn't set up the independent inquiry into state capture ordered by a public watchdog a year ago stake. actually guarantee is beauty and you know people have put in places to actually protect the interest of private interests that are pretty well investigations in britain the juris and the u.a.e. may have some impact on companies and banks based offshore in south africa despite months of allegations it appears to be business as usual for those at the center of a tinier page al-jazeera potoroo. the argentine navy says it's no longer looking
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for survivors from a submarine that went missing last month the stories about reports from where there is some relatives of the forty four strong crew are still hoping a loved ones will be found. the last few weeks have been emotionally tortures one's full we start. a father doing everything in his power so that the rescue efforts continue for his son and his shipmates twenty seven year old daniel was a crew member on the one submarine it would missing almost a month ago with twenty four on board this week that nearly would have graduated as an undersea weapon specialist. the navy says that they can only last for a week with oxygen but there are so many variables they calculate on forty four people surviving and what i say is you know what if only two people survive explosion or one the amount of oxygen would increase so if only one survived are we
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not going to try to save him the address and one was last heard from on the fifteenth of november sailing from the southern argentine city of course why yeah the commander of the vessel made contact with a base to see that water had entered the ship resulting in a battery malfunction not long after an explosion was detected not far from the submarines last known location the navy says that they will continue searching for the submarine but they insist that they do not expect to find any survivors they also announced that they're investigating three specific points close to an area where officials sources say an explosion was registered twenty four days ago. the search for the missing sub has been an international one russia and the united states have taken part but weather conditions have been difficult in the southern atlantic the argentine navy says they will once again search the area where they
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nischelle i believe want to be but if on successful they would start shifting their hunt to the north towards the submarines final destination. it's like trying to find her cigarettes in a football field that's what we're talking about and how difficult it is we are mostly focusing around four thousand square kilometers it has been checked twice but now will do it with the help of the united states. until last week much of a information surrounding the at us on one was considered a state secret even though the navy has said the submarine was focusing on illegal fishing the relatives want to know more. now we will have access to what the submarine was doing and the conditions the vessel was in what generates doubts is what was the sub doing what was the mission all experts say the sub has no capacity to expel illegal boats fishing in the area we have many doubts because everyone lied to us from the beginning. the arjen time government insists there is nothing
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to hide and we. he has not lost hope that his son will come home alive. delegates from an alliance of the world's sunniest countries are meeting in india to probe the use of solar energy international solar alliance or s a was launched in twenty fifteen is made up of one hundred twenty one countries that receive sunshine for around three hundred days per year i mean to raise more than one trillion dollars worth of investment for renewable energy projects by twenty thirty thirty nine members have already signed up to a framework agreement which would commit themselves to expanding their use a cell a power well ira now how gauche is the chief executive officer of the council on energy and fire ants and water he says that the cost of solar power will be reduced if countries work together in twenty ten india had less than eighteen megawatts of
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solar power installed that's when we announced that we would have twenty thousand megawatts of solar power in twenty fifteen we raise that ambition to one hundred thousand megawatts of solar power so this is an exponential increase in india's ambitions what india is trying to do in about seven to ten years is what took germany about twenty one years to achieve and that's the premise of the international solar alliance as well if we bring together the countries that have the richest solar potential and aggregate the demand we can drive down the prices lower the cost of finance and make sure that solar power becomes critical and central part of the energy system going forward developing countries like india fears about sixty to seventy percent of the tariff as the cost of finance that's because the risks that are perceived by institutional investors seem to be very high so once again if we can you know the risks within an individual country and the pool them across several countries that are members of the international solar
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alliance what you're doing is offering a larger transparent market. it's taken a decade but when i started building in hong kong has finally been recognized by the un as cultural body you know the blue house was going to be demolished until a community stepped in sarah clarke explains all from hong kong. it's color means it's hard to miss but it's not just the brought blue that makes this building a stand out this twentieth century shop front is one of the last examples of what's called tom low cantonese style buildings with balconies the house is just like one to your laughter the home car and but what makes this unique and special is the community thanks to its central location in one of the city's trendy restaurant districts the site known as the blue classed up face demolition by developers but locals tenants and conservation groups united against the plan and secured
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a government grant to protect and revamp the site we try to not just keep his sorry buildings in good shape and update it with more than. the center of us that's essential. to hit the neighborhood alive the original architecture has been saved inside and out downs to is dedicated to telling stories of the neighborhoods history upstate is home to some of its original tenants we've lived here for up to three generations it's that multi-functional approach that's now secured international recognition winning a unesco award for conservation in the process of. repairing their heritage we're actually we pairing it come with a thing that worked that what we have a studio in this part of this is the first project in hong kong to secure a unesco prize at this level of excellence and while it's recognizing heritage
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conservation the judges think about the communities unprecedented effort in one of the most high pressure real estate markets in the world to focus on restoring the cultural fabric of this neighborhood. linked bridges and walkways were built between the apartments to encourage residents to connect and i have kevin is one of the new tenants he's paying higher rent than the original residents but that's been reinvested to maintain and build on the sides first time preserve a project that the neighbors can stay here and also they can have people continue to live here this is a one of a kind of whole the community is also hoping its success and this unesco award will be an inspiration to other districts who came to hold on to their cultural heritage sarah clarke al-jazeera hong kong. still to come on the program the bubbles burst for the english premier league's defending champions and they would explain in sports.
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singapore is being accused of expanding its coastline with illegally dredged satins of some of the islands off the coast of indonesia and literally vanished it's a big business smuggling you sample and they will take the say on their own fill the sand is our parent you see this beautiful beach but behind it is something that's not so pleasant the tragedy is that people are just not aware and ecological investigation into a global emergency sound walls at this time on al jazeera and then reported on i j z the us and british companies have announced the biggest discovery of natural gas in west africa but what to do with these untapped natural resources is already a source of heated debate nothing much has changed they still spend most of their days looking forward to for the dry river beds like this one five years on the syrians still feel battered or even those who managed to escape their country have
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been truly unable to escape the war. undertow of thousands of people have lined the streets of paris for the funeral procession of johnny other day about a known as a french elvis that's the reports. of the role of motorbike engines filled paris's prestigious avenue the shells the say it was a rock n roll farewell for france's most famous pop star johnny hallyday fans lined the streets for the funeral procession. this was
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a chance to celebrate and remember an artist regarded here as a national icon whose music in strolled fans for six decades joining us it's time to time jonny he's a legend he's more than a minute he's an idol he's my whole youth i've loved him from the start. i only had one god he gave me such happiness and today he's gone so really francis over all ages and that's because the holiday really appealed to people from all generations and also many tell us is that his music company their lives is part of our generation also direction of our burns for example you was what percentage of. the first three years ago so it's very special to me and i remember my dad singing journey. to the running through holiday break through in the one nine hundred sixty s. as a teenager inspired by elvis he soon became a sensation of france's highest earning music star the use of the years he adapted
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his style to changing the school tastes it was one of the keys to his success at the historic madelyne church family friends and past leaders gathered for a service on the steps outside france's young president pay tribute. to. he lived through nearly every experience he knew challenges he knew failures he crossed through time through eras generations and all that divide society it's for this that we are here today. he may have been unknown outside france but few musicians anywhere could have moved so many people to come together in this he has few equals natasha butler al jazeera paris now that's got all the sport with andy. thanks so much sue up a cheek of mexico into the semifinals of football's club world cup in the united arab emirates
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a win over african champions without casablanca putting them into the last for the only goal of the game came in extra time scored by victor goodson the champions of north and central america chuka will now face a couple of its interest winners grimier of brazil in the semifinals on cheers day bit of an upset in the other quarterfinal where hunt seem al-jazeera knocks out the asian champions era were reds of japan again a single goal deciding the game it came from i think it's these al jazeera now have a drain so i guess defending champions right attrit. or reale hit some form ahead of their departure for the u.a.e. they thrashed syria five nil in the spanish league christiane eller scoring two of the goals just days after receiving the ballon d'or award for the fifth star the victory moves that rile up the third chelsea's manager says he's given up hope of successfully defending the english premier league title after a surprise defeat chelsea went down one nailed so west ham after
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a six minute strike by mark owen out of it but while the bubbles burst and so neo-con say it was a big day for david moyes his first victory since taking charge of west ham we've we've kept a clean sheet to dig we've got a goal and look we were we with a good organization to see who we could try and hope chelsea well but the obviously try and make sure the quarter in that ability was going in was going to be over run through. a bow due to the result of the defeat i think the reason is abuse drainage. leave. these default defeat in the system in sixteen games. when will you have these of these thugs and is it possible to think that you are. indeed at the race. is it possible. in the late game unless they came from behind win three to
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newcastle earlier bernie maintained their impressive run with a one no one of its had none what for them harry kane school two more goals as tottenham beat stock five one now peru's counts in an all time record goalscorer is set to a pale against a dumping ban which would say missing next year's world cup palekar eric tested positive for cocaine but his legal same claim it was the consequence of him drinking coke at st to get over an illness the former bond munich player has been handed a one year ban and that would rule amounts of perris first wealth cup apparent since nine hundred eighty eight. everybody was very confident about the ruling favoring guerrero in all of the sudden he has a one year suspension so that's where there's some inconsistency there is specially because it wasn't consumption of actual cocaine it was because of one of the chemicals within the coke being able to be within the list of banned substances used as a stimulant in many cases but there's been presidents that have been established in
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the past where many of these types of chemicals have been found in traces of blood or traces of urine in whatever the case may be that's been found but then also they've been he was it well ok we understand what happened. formula one world champion lewis hamilton says he's hoping to go even faster next year how much then has officially been handled one hundred the title silverware and events in france them aside his driver for nine out of twenty races and set a record of seventy two career pole position us lewis is great to me lewis obviously is a four time world champion not just a world champion you know he is a star among stars sports are driven by stars they're driven by personalities he is both the is a larger than life personality an incredible start and doing something on the track that just you know realistically is beyond everybody's wildest imagination he's fabulous now the japanese baseball player who's being compared to babe ruth has chosen to sign with the los angeles angels twenty three year old shohei holly was
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the subject of a frenzied bidding war is jude to his red sea way skills as both a batter and pitcher and also because he was a bit of a bargain the m.r.p. places a salary cap of half a million dollars on foreign players under the age of twenty five though the angels have paid a twenty million dollars fee to his japanese saying well earlier on we spoke to cats and i got suka who's a sports writer based in tokyo he's been giving is some sense of how the story's been received in japan. it is a massive news you know like baseball is a big sport in japan and all attorney has been the biggest star without a doubt in the last five years so you know his transfer although he came in japanese baseball like declaring eventually he would go to the mets make a baseball now it happens officially and that everybody is looking at all those news on television on radio and in newspapers and magazines it's
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a massive lot of japanese baseball fans are disappointed about this news we all knew that eventually the from japanese baseball so it's not like it came as you know came out of the blue it's not it's not a surprising news. although it's a disappointing it's a lot of people. think this is a like or near now this is the time for him to do it i would put it this way in a short time it's going to harm big time because by far the biggest star in the last few years in for japanese baseball but at the same time japanese baseball has a long history he started in night back in nineteen thirty six and so he has a history mauled more than eighty days and during the during the over the course of the year because you know the japanese baseball has produced so many star players many star players you know so it's all done is just one of them. from basketball
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fans around the world i found the opportunity to post videos for the second annual world trick shot by the hall of globetrotters have been doing this sort of thing for nearly a century but i've come up with a bit of a fresh are they hey take a look at this forty six meets a short drop from a bus pass on the roof of a museum in st louis and there it goes through the hoop of. r.k. that is high school's looking for now let's get back to see you in london. thank you randi that's it for maisie it's time for this news we're back in just a moment with more of the day's news.
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