tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera December 30, 2017 2:00am-2:45am +03
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at george mason university she is also a human rights activist and she is joining us now from merit and cannot again connecticut via skype very good to have you with us on al-jazeera so firstly what did you make of the president pardoning for him already on medical grounds you know did he do it as a compassionate act one of reconciliation is as he says all because he survived an impeachment vote in congress last week thanks to a faction led by for him or the son. oh the evidence points to this being a pardon based purely on political motivations. there have been and number of investigative reports that have come out demonstrating that the pardon was being negotiated as president who was going through the impeachment process even though he and his prime minister repeatedly stated that such a pardon was not going to take place. and i think if you look
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a little further into the situation of former dictator albert the fujimori his health is the average health of a man of his age he's seventy nine years old but he does not meet the conditions that would allow the granting of a humanitarian pardon which is he would have to have a and incurable illness or it degenerates of illness that cannot be treated in his or her in prison circumstances it's important to note that mr fujimori has been howled in a prison built especially for him it's a bit of a chalet he has every comfort and anytime he has. a health issue he is immediately brought to the hospital where he's attended by very capable to fashion a staff so there is no one real. threat according to several reports that
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mr mori should be granted humanitarian pardon based on his house. yeah and this is a move that has been condemned in the strongest. by u.n. experts and we know that human rights advocates are planning on overturning trying to overturn the pardon so could this maybe not be the end a very end of the story for fujimori it is not the end of the story. for who during . the end there are several different venues by which human rights activists are going to challenge the pardon one is in the domestic courts in peru and there are precedents a few years ago an associate of fiji mori actually a businessman the head of a large conglomerate media organization was hurt and he had been convicted of corruption and he'd been pardoned based on humanitarian grounds and
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a few weeks later he was caught on camera in a country club looking quite healthy and the constitutional tribunal overturned his pardon. and so there is a precedent for that kind of thing if a pardon is found to be fraudulent lee granted then it can be overturned by peru's constitutional tribe you know the other venue of course is the international says the interim aircon and system and why and why that is possible in this case is to do you know where he was convicted for two for a series of human rights abuses to very important and emblematic cases the vireos out those massacre of one thousand nine hundred one and the enforced disappearance of nine students and a professor from the land to the university in one nine hundred ninety two well two of those cases received sentences from the inter merican court which found the peruvian state responsible in order to prove the state to investigate process
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prosecute and punish those responsible and that gives the court the right to supervise the fulfillment of the terms of the sentence until the lawyers for the victims are saying to the poor and now this hard in was done arbitrarily based on a project or an argument and we think it needs to be overturned and i have every faith that the court will in fact overturn it must the thank you very much for that is john kerry joining us live from connecticut thank you thank you for having. right to south africa now with a top court has ruled that parliament failed to hold president jacob zuma to account in the scandal over house improvements which cost millions of dollars last year the court decided that zuma had violated the constitution when he benefited in appropriately from state funding for his income the home it's one of a series of presidential scandals which have tarnished the reputation of the ruling african national congress the opposition has renewed its calls for the president to
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be impeached tanya page has the latest from johannesburg. the constitutional court south africa's highest court has found that the national assembly that's parliament failed to take appropriate action against president jacob zuma and relation to gross overspending of text payers dollars on his private home called income for the constitutional court says the first thing that should happen is that the national assembly needs to come up with a comprehensive list of rules and regulations which perhaps could lead to the impeachment of president zuma however they didn't go so far as to say that's what should happen because that would be in breach of the separation of powers the opposition parties who brought this legal action we're pleased with the outcome nonetheless the constitutional duty grant mr zuma in no time will be scrutinized
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will be brought before parliament to be accountable because his own political party has actually failed to hold you accountable and we can with the other day longer we need to be in parliament in no less than did today's before the state of the nation address of twenty eight in their defense president zuma and the speaker of parliament both said it wasn't true that the national assembly had done nothing multiple votes of no confidence in president zuma have been held and they've all been defeated and that's what it comes down to it's a matter of numbers in parliament because impeaching a president is a parliamentary process so even when there are rules in place that could lead to impeaching a president old timothy that would require a two thirds majority and the reality is that the governing african national congress holds the majority and so be extremely unlikely that the numbers would be able to be gathered for an impeachment now thousand korea has confirmed things and
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specter the hong kong webster chip. which is suspected of supplying oil to north korea last month south korea's foreign minister who says it's an example of pyongyang using illegal networks to get around un sanctions blocking oil imports u.s. president donald trump has accused china of violating u.n. sanctions and failing to stop oil supplies to pyongyang robin bryant has more from beijing. china will not be happy with this latest criticism from president trump coming in such a public stinging manner but it's true to say that china has become used to dealing with the united states in a different way over the past year and has been accustomed to president trump's tweets at the ministry of foreign affairs regular press briefing friday in beijing there was no specific reference or reply to this latest attack but the spokes person was asked about the allegations concerning this hong kong registered vessel
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seized in south korea for allegedly dealing in illicit oil with north korea the ministry said that it has been investigated to the chinese customs have no record of this vessel visiting a chinese port since august although it has no records of it whether it visited other ports as far as it knows the chinese government does not know of any illicit activity that this vessel has been involved in repeating that the chinese government is still very much committed to enforcing the u.n. sanctions whether china has known about any trades that might be taking place it's difficult to believe that any illegal activity or transfer of oil at sea could take place without china's knowledge and it would fit with the general narrative of china quietly supporting the north korean regime not necessarily out of any loyalty to an old ally but really as a pragmatic measure to shore up the regime as far as china is concerned it
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a comparable blee live with a nuclear armed north korea not an ideal situation but for china the unacceptable situation is a collapsing regime that still has access to nuclear warheads that for china is the worst case scenario. but to greece now the country has been struggling to do with high unemployment and awake economy for years it's also been a destination for many refugees arriving in search of a better life which is being accosted taken on by going to the government but now one thing with the new arrivals can play a crucial role in filling the workforce larns live reports from calculus and all of them very. language class for this group of refugees in northern greece jason from it live in syria has decided to seek asylum here they all need greek anyway because they'll be here for months or even years so slow is the bureaucracy. jason said he
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wants to study and maybe become a hairdresser. but he's open to suggestions for work. across this country similar scenes are happening the rest of europe has decided the greece can cope more or less greece has got a big problem the economy is still in a hole more than forty percent youth unemployment and at the same time greece is having to deal with the brunt of the refugee influx and the european quota system for sharing them out has fallen apart completely so is the big question if there's not enough jobs for greeks then what to expect refugees to do. in the absence of any other bright ideas some people here have decided to celebrate the new arrivals farmer demetrius makes some dried tomatoes and grows herb's but he has a problem his village like hundreds of others has shrunk by half since the economic crisis as the young people moved away there are empty houses here waiting for families to move in to breathe new life into the community he'd love nothing more
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than refugees from rural syria to help him out you think you could help each other yes if they're if you just work just to stay here we can do it many thinks together. so the idea came from a local organization working with refugees it argues that greece's economic crisis could be partly solved by the refugee influx not cheap labor but co-operative farms giving the new arrivals an economic stake and encourage them to stay refugees that used to be in areas. in their original country or they have experience in farming we think that they can also assist the locals and the locals going to then and in developing the future for both in the camps it's becoming clear what happens when refugees can't access the jobs market a groups are warning of a huge spike in drug abuse by refugees stuck for years in a shipping container cannabis is sold alongside fruit on the road side of the noses
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of the police and the camp male refugees selling their bodies has become common as well they are buying drugs they are the ones that have a some people using headline also. in the camp and they are just because they're plants and just because you don't have any hope. here these last life of. their life. you don't have any hope many greeks here claim refugees get special treatment while they're left to suffer in poverty and their life in the camps hard looks generous there are apparently no greeks to work the fields in this agricultural land and to grow the economy it's only one idea but maybe they're starting to realise you can make a virtue out of a crisis barnsley al-jazeera in all in greece. officials and serbia have uncovered twenty five tons of highly toxic waste after a search of a private property southwest of the capital belgrade works of chemicals found to
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include benzene which is a cancer causing compound that's highly regulated across the developed world residents are being warned not to use water from nearby wells the owner of the property has been arrested. still ahead on the news hour moland struggle to heal the wounds of a decades long civil war. the haitian artists who are turning trash into political art and sport. has a shaky return to the tennis court down on the field coming up. welcome back kid remains desperately cold across parts of north america you see some of the might some temperatures there when a peg minus twenty eight but obviously bit being dark at this time of the minimum
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sun about minus thirty but for toronto minus eight probably seeing temperatures over the next couple of nights dropping about minus twenty also now elsewhere temperatures subzero in many areas even get long way south into georgia and across into texas temperatures are pretty low we've also got some very heavy snowfall pushing its way through the pacific northwest that will eventually clear through on sunday and then cold weather really establish itself once again here further towards the south a lot of cloud but temperatures not too bad for los angeles they're reaching twenty degrees turn into central parts of america showers from the yucatan peninsula southward through guatemala nicaragua honduras towards costa rica and panama but for the islands weather conditions are looking generally draw and fine and the respect to the stay that way as we head through into sunday funday showers across northern parts of south america and showers across the amazon basin as you'd expect elsewhere we've got wanted to have a shower still affecting parts of peru and bolivia come further towards the south things are looking better across paraquat i have seen heavy rain in recent days
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further towards the south it should be a fairly bright one a woman one is aries heis here of thirty four. in the most likely place. talking about a new one. the signal to challenge the sections of africa. and bring photography to this community. the story of hope. in the face of adversity. the new african photography. this time. the offense being a journalist the crime practicing journalism. same detained for three hundred sixty five days without charge. journalism is not
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a crime. scene is not a criminal. free mahmoud hussein. good to have you with us on the al-jazeera news hour and these are our top stories israeli security forces of open fire on protesters in gaza and the occupied west bank enjoying at least fifty people they were protesting against the u.s. decision to recognize jerusalem as israel's capital for the injured are in serious condition. funerals have been held for those who died in a church attack in cairo at least mine people were killed and many more wounded
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when a gunman opened fire on worshippers and police eisel has claimed responsibility and place in iran have used water cannon and tear gas to disperse hundreds of anti-government demonstrators many are angry about economic policies that are increasing the cost of living have also been reports of rallies and passed out on the second largest city. now aid agencies have finished a series of evacuations from the besieged damascus damascus suburb of. twenty nine critically ill people including children have been moved as part of a deal with the syrian government but the u.n. says there are still more than four hundred an urgent need of medical care saying aha there are reports from neighboring lebanon. an appeal from a grieving mother. she hopes that all the sick children in eastern huta will receive medical treatment so that their parents don't
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lose them. lost her daughter but two was ten years old when she died her parents say her life could have been saved but they live in an area besieged by syrian government forces where there is no proper medical care. her sickness started with pain in her teeth knees and heart doctors said there was something wrong with her nervous system and antibiotics didn't help the medication didn't work and she passed away. it's too late for twenty nine critically ill patients are being given the chance at survival that was agreed after a deal between the syrian government and the armed group. that involved the rebels freeing prisoners in exchange eighteen of those transferred to hospitals in damascus where children. hundreds more are of treatment there's a severe shortage of medical supplies the medical facilities in the area have all but been destroyed by the siege meant just over one hundred doctors provide care
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for an estimated four hundred thousand people half of them are believed to be children and. the children are always the ones who are the most vulnerable and affected as a result of the siege there are many children who have cancer they can't be cured because there is no medicine to treat them there are diseases because of the pollution even the water is polluted there are many cases of severe malnutrition in the united nations says one and a children is going hungry up from one in fifty eastern huta has been besieged since two thousand and thirteen but in recent months pro-government forces tightened the blockade closing smuggling routes and tunnels that were being used. humanitarian organizations have been pleading for months with the syrian government to allow the critically ill patients to leave it workers are hoping that the evacuations will be the beginning of more to come they're also asking for safety guarantees from patients are worried of arrest if they go to government controlled
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territory. doesn't have much time she is four years old and her sickness requires treatment that is not available and . it's a difficult time for her mother in law who is hoping that her daughter was the evacuation list. hospital for. my daughter has a kenyan throat cancer doctors told me she needs surgery to remove her throat because the tumor is too big and the cancer cells are spreading i hope someone helps me my child also needs chemotherapy and i can't afford it please whoever is hearing me now i ask for your help. already almost twenty patients among them children have died while waiting for evacuation. route but with a lower house of parliament has approved a bill which would make it illegal for muslim men to use instant divorce to leave their wives the so-called triple a lot of the muslim practice in which a man ends
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a marriage by saying you were divorced three times under the legislation men who tried to use instant divorce could be imprisoned for up to three years prime minister and that in the morning has been a vocal advocate of the bill which will have to be approved by the upper house of parliament before it becomes law. now conflicts are raging simultaneously in sudan and south sudan making life increasingly tough for refugees from both countries who have to share limited resources some have lost their lives in the violence to them all the reports from county in south sudan one of four refugee camps of people from its northern neighbor. this has been a frog nasser's home for more than six years the refugee from sudan fled her home and sought safety in neighboring south sudan she says she no longer feel safe after her brother was killed last year in fighting between refugees and their south sudanese hosts. who lost her brother last year he was kidnapped and killed they
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brought back his body that night we were tucked inside the comes with guns we lost a lot of people during the fight for just my brother but children women were killed in this time. fighting broke out in state after the sudan people's liberation movement north rebelled against government leaders in khartoum the armed opposition group accuse the sudanese government of breaking the two thousand and five peace agreement it allowed state to choose whether to be part of sudan or a newly independent south sudan the conflict has resulted in more than two hundred fifty thousand refugees fleeing to south sudan more than half of them live in four camps here sudanese refugee started arriving here in my band since two thousand and eleven a few months after south sudan gained independence but since then the host country has been at civil war which is still happening that has created an economic and hunger crises all over it have had an impact on the refugees the war in south sudan which started in ten to thirteen also display started in east and resulted in more
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than half of the twelve million population facing food insecurity south sudanese government leaders say tensions are being created because the refugees have freedom to move and reach limited resources in montana. if you. feel better there are advantages and disadvantages of having them here the main problem is that the camps are not first means there are a few g.'s can move around freely and cut trees for domestic use and that is having an impact on the. and with almost no chance of returning home to sudan soon the united nations high commission for refugees says they need to be protected they are here they have needs they have rights and these needs and rights have to be met and so that there has to be a very high level of cooperation between you and the south sudanese government to ensure that that they are safe protected and and that their needs are met
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a friend has no plans to return to the word zone in sudan but she may have to do just that if there's a repeat of the violence between refugees and there's how sudanese hosts people morgan al-jazeera south sudan. to guatemala now where thousands of people were killed during the decades long civil war that ended in one thousand and ninety six but they weren't included in the official death toll and did not receive proper burials now d.n.a. testing has helped in some families come to terms with their loss of the reports. a skull with bits of bones and a children's halloween t. shirt run it's of loved ones on earth from one of guatemala's mass graves. two hundred fifty thousand guatemalans died or disappeared during the country's thirty six year civil war thousands of the didn't is farming families had been a raced from memory until now. but i don't know. they shot my wife
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a bullet to the hip she was washing clothes she walked a couple steps but she couldn't walk anymore and there she stayed my wife was just lying there. through d.n.a. testing families are now identifying their relatives burying them and visiting their graves during the war many farmers were forced into army operated villages it was a way to ensure they didn't join one of the guerrilla groups in the area they were promised food and medical care instead many died from malnutrition and treatable diseases that my audio says that when the majority of causes of death of the children was due to disease due to a lack of medical attention it was limited because of what was happening in the region as well as the measles outbreak in the early one nine hundred eighty s. . people here say they were treated like prisoners so. if somebody for example had to leave to visit a relative in the capital or another province they had to request it in writing
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sometimes well in advance for the army to grant authorization those who left and did not return at the stipulated time would get into trouble and many times that trouble meant. in recent years quite amala as have begun to address the crimes of war former military leader efren rios montt was convicted of genocide in two thousand and thirteen the decision was overturned on procedural grounds and he's being tried again in absentia but. for these families identifying and burying their dead is just one step towards acknowledging the many injustices of guatemala's civil war. natasha going to name al-jazeera. we continue now with our special series that takes a look at the main to stories we expect to see in two thousand and eighteen when the u.s. midterm elections will take place in the event and they could have a major impact on donald trump's presidency all the seats in the u.s.
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house of representatives up for grabs and a republican defeat there with still trumps legislative agenda three points. donald trump has a lower approval rating than any other president in modern times at this point in their first terms of offas and that's bad news for members of congress in his own republican party as they face the november twenty eighth teen midterm elections it's very helpful to have a popular president at the top of the ticket but with this point in pro rating and thirty years i'm not sure how much of a plus donald trump will be dissatisfied action with trump and the unpopularity of his tax cut legislation which is seen to benefit the wealthy has created a big enthusiasm gap between republican and democratic voters that was vividly on display in recent elections when a democrat won the virginia governor's race and even more so when democrats turned
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out in large numbers to help the democrat doug jones eke out a narrow win over accused child molester roy moore in the senatorial race in conservative alabama democrats are fired up we saw some significant electoral movement particularly among african-americans a solid constituency for the democratic party but we weren't sure that they would be enthusiastic in both of those contests they were very enthusiastic and the other group that we've been looking at in particular are white college graduates who see many of whom seem very disenchanted with. many analysts believe democrats have a good chance of taking control of the house of representatives. winning the senate is more difficult for democrats because many of them are defending seats in states which voted republican last year but even control of the house of congress would allow democrats to block trump's legislative agenda for the rest of his cerm ending
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in twenty twenty overshadowing the entire political scene is the investigation by special counsel robert muller of russian meddling in the twenty sixteen presidential election if there is able to show collusion between the trunk campaign and the kremlin it would be a political bombshell and a disaster for the president and his party robert oulds al jazeera los angeles and our series continues on saturday when we visit zimbabwe about two thousand and eighteen well be a significant year after its recent political up but just how much change should we expect when bringing the story from. and not to block parts of the u.s. calls and warnings of hypothermia and frostbite the cold is approaching severe children large parts of the country from the midwest to the northeast temperatures drop to minus thirty five degrees celsius and northern new york state people are
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being asked to look out for the homeless and the elderly well president trump has been tweeting about the freezing temperatures he wrote in the east it could be the coldest new year's eve on record perhaps we could use a little bit of that good old global warming that our country but not other countries was going to pay trillions of dollars to protect against bundle up well. as a climate physicist who was vice chair of the u.n. and developmental panel on climate change and he says charm doesn't appear to understand the issues. there president trump you might have forgotten that it's winter at the moment in the northern hemisphere it's perfectly normal now it's very called at the moment in the eastern part of north america because the jet stream is bringing is bringing the very cold air from the arctic and if the jet stream is doing that right now it's probably also because of global warming because the
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melting of the sea ice in the arctic is disrupting the position of the jet stream and the jet stream is bringing much more called air but. you can be sure that the rest of the word this is warming look at the map after all the year that's ending two thousand and seventeen is one of the third warmest year of the last hundred and fifty years at the global level so what's happening now in the u.s. is not relevant for the climate of the whole year and the horrible. the mexican state of what conservationists have released hundreds of endangered baby turtles into the pacific ocean every year hundreds of thousands of all of. the eggs . many of the. many of the conservationists actually used. to protecting them to try and save the species.
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haiti's capital port au prince a place where people live surrounded by trash. and the part of the resistance will cement again social inequality using art something is not this is love within a society it is just fighting every time someone. you go to meet and it's just these. many of his cultures are based in what he describes as voodoo because of the special place the religious practice has in haitian history and society. all asian people because you don't forget asian people fighting for get your freedom because the first one to me the message here is that art can be done with anything with culture for example are done with all the vehicle parts tell stories and even some of them with human remains you can see right here this calls for example are from the earthquake back in two thousand and ten. an earthquake that
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killed more than three hundred thousand people the remains are from a mass grave in port-au prince. showing reality is crucial ojo though says he's using old clothes sent to haiti by foreigners in his latest painting with my objective is to show haiti to the world your art is not only about voodoo but it is showing the talent and diversity that exists here and they send us old clothes and we send it back turned into art. this is a considered no go zone in the capital mariel way many foreigners do not want to go . but art has inspired some teenagers who say they would rather use brushes instead of weapons and it's you know i would love to become a good artist when i can paint something and do it perfectly. every year we charge morris bring some of the pieces from the artist to his hotel so tourists can take a closer look at the movement where you live in garbage that's the economy they
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have created an economy where you and your neighborhood your people your friends your family they live in garbage and you have taken this garbage and you've turned it into a beauty you've turned it into art you've turned it into messages. the work done by resistance artists has been displayed in museums around the world. but they say despite their success internationally life continues to be a struggle in the areas where they grew up. prince haiti and it's time for sports now has tatyana. thank you very much defending gulf cup champions qatar have been knocked out of this is tournament in the group stage the qataris would have gone through with a win against bahrain but as peter stammered reports that was not to be that day ahead of the qatar bahrain match there was talk of the players not shaking hands before kickoff but in the end there was an exchange of pleasantries before the game
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the gulf crisis not influencing matters at the tournament on this particular occasion defending champions qatar needed to win in order to go through. all they could do and hope yemen be to iraq the qataris took the lead just before half time thanks to a penalty by haslam out hate us i am sorry but the bahrain has hit back twelve minutes into the second period could see of madonna . was. one one it finished and the defending champions face was now in the hands of yemen. unfortunately for the qatari the gimmes put up little resistance after half time against iraq. handed the iraqis the lead before and the fight is r.t.o. doubled the advantage with a penalty oh i'm sure i move i was with ten
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minutes to go become a wrapped up the result big three know when iraq finished. and will play the united arab emirates in the semifinals bahrain will face oman. we're caught our eye out and so will the yemenis who failed to win a game all school go in kuwait peter stammered al jazeera on saturday the english premier league's festive season action continues with seven factions to look forwards to manchester united will look to make up some ground on league eight as manchester city when their high southampton also on saturday liverpool are at home to leicester and champions chelsea will welcome stoke to stamford bridge. well your complete is doing this so well that they commenced their cd and that is very difficult to to think to fight for the title but this in time we have to try to. all ourself in every game to try to get to both to try to give satisfaction to our
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fans to improve our work. andy murray had a shaky return to the tennis court with a loss in abu dabi marie was called in to play the exhibition match at the world tennis championships on friday after former world number one novak djokovic with drew with an elbow injury he had been out of competitive action for six months due to an ongoing hip problem and the thirty year old lost the ones that match to spain's better about things that are good thanks to with the school. felt better as it went on obviously a little bit slower at the start in roberto's one of the best players in the world and. you know when you haven't competed for a long time it takes time to get back up to that sort of pace and i start to feel a bit better. but you need to keep improving for sure so fans hoping to see jack a fish make his return from a five month injury left course have to wait he pulled out of the exhibition match because of a continued pain with his elbow djokovic hasn't played competitively since for
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tiring in the quarterfinals of wimbledon earlier on this here one man who will soon be back on court as roger federer he's hoping to build on his remarkable run last season this west superstar has landed in perth where he'll play in the hoffman cup team event before defending his australian open title in january and he looked relaxed as he got up close and personal with fans and some local wildlife on rottnest island this animal's apparently caught a quicker twenty seventeen saw federal win his first grand slam title in five years in melbourne and then another at wimbledon he also climbed back to number two in the world all of this came after he took six months off at the end of twenty sixteen because of a knee injury. i think anything i would. like that mass of voters got a big surprise because i didn't expect this of everything about thirty six thirty seven as good as i am today it's really about staying healthy and enjoying myself and be very precise of how i practice what terms i play it's just hard to imagine
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that out as good as i did last year some reason. to see this it's been like to go you know meanwhile other players including wild number five dominic tim have started that new campaign is already a team with an action in thursday at the world tennis championship in abu dhabi while the austrian went down to the us open final it has been anderson seven six and six four now ahead of the winter olympic games the world's best men's alpine ski is have been in action at the world cup combined event in italy frenchman alexis painter zero excelled in the slalom and also to his advantage fast run leader dominic paris that italy had some trouble himself we think control about ten days from the finish line this is the sixth year in a row that the frenchman enjoys a victory in an alpine combined event and for good measure he also moves to the top of the disciplines while top standing is also his twenty first career win across all disciplines. now the winter olympic games are around the corner and south korea
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will become only the fifth country to have staged both summer and winter games china's hosting off to seoul hosted the summer olympics back in one nine hundred eighty eight the koreans the came to pass on a show and impress and they're looking to beef up their ice hockey team as well so much so that the country's immigration laws that changed in two thousand and eleven could be about to pay off canada's broke for dunphy won't be brought presenting his native country in pyongyang instead he'll be wearing the colors the south korea he's one of sixteen foreign athletes that will turn out for the host nation in february. and i grew up with. your eyes proud to be free and you know in a sense i'm representing canada to my family and what i'm going to find forty three assault. you know i'm proud to have lived in both countries and when i'm on the ice you know i'm going to do everything i can for team korea and also baseball for now more later and that does it for those. that i will be back in just
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very closely. when libya rose to get close to a dictator the war drums struck an unlikely to be. done . but. the sum total its music was the weapon of choice stronger than bullets with this documentary that this stop on al-jazeera in the wake of the race riots how much can someone take before they crack the fight for recognition is crucial we needed the heads to prevail brothers in its cause a lot of them were people things that were said about their religion and the things that was of the woman was a big disrespect to al-jazeera explores the history and struggles of the lebanese
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