tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera January 14, 2018 7:00am-7:34am +03
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and i did just what the president say. investigation the only go this time on the fringes of some of. this is the beginning the. areas where. the. sustainable. communities are this is the type. to continue. this time. and employ the push the wrong button a false alert of an incoming missile of rattles hawaii the governor admits that was human error.
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and welcome to al jazeera live from a headquarters in doha with the elizabeth purana also ahead please. the congolese army moves against rebels blamed for the killing of u.n. peacekeepers they turn is in government office new aid to the families and then attempt to stop the protests. against the good will. you know. and why the legend of johnny cash lives on in some of america's toughest prisons. why is governor has apologized for the accidental message sent by the state warning of an imminent missile strike the mistake and triggered panic among many hawaiians who scramble to find shelter the emergency management agency later confirmed it
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walls a false alarm pain looks at how the mistake happened. u.s. president donald trump and north korea's leader kim jong un have been trading claims about who has the bigger nuclear button so you might expect the u.s. state of hawaii in the middle of the pacific would be on edge i was the first place they're going to drop a bomb it's crazy you know living here it's awesome but the same time you know killing going on like secure all the time that might explain why when this alert was sent out to every cell phone on the island people panicked the warning a ballistic missile was coming seek shelter this is not a drill so people just are it's starting around time to get into that room so how is it going to go girls who are eating and some kids are crying and nobody really knew what to do people on twitter found out about ten minutes later from emergency officials and politicians it was a false alarm those not on twitter had to wait much longer before
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a correction was sent out thirty eight terrifying minutes how could this happen in the first place the explanation itself is baffling it was a procedure that occurs at the change of shift when they go through to make sure that the system is working and employing pushed along but that's right officials say one person pushed one wrong button the government says it will investigate but for the people who live through this panic that's little comfort i just ironic and we went to this author place to be a living that was it people were just running on this story they were all desperately. there was nothing at all the guy had one job right and he messed up so all that's crazy a false alarm in the face of an actual threat making the people of hawaii realize they might not be ready for the real thing patty call hane al-jazeera washington. to other news now at least eighty three countries have been affected by
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a salmonella outbreak at one of the world's largest dairy farms french dairy giant lect alice says twelve million boxes of part of baby milk are being recalled more than thirty children have been poisoned and solo and a victim's group says hundreds of lawsuits have been filed the french government has closed the factory until further notice. israeli security forces have used tear gas to break up a protest against the detention of a palestinian teenager. the supporters of sixteen year old i had to meet me have been marching in the occupied west bank demanding have release she was detained last month when a video of her slapping israeli soldiers went viral you know a say i had could face jail time if she's convicted of the charges which include assault she's due in court again on monday and i'm on congress on the same covering the protests before and after fighting broke out. protesters gathering outside of the house of i head to mimi and there's really two messages that they want to
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impart the first is to the palestinian leadership they want determined nonviolent resistance movement the other of course is to the israelis that i mean the family now we saw like this whole area will not be bowed will not be broken and that they should release both the mother and i had to be me as soon as they can now this is ahead of a cool to parents taking place. on monday now we've been speaking to palestinians here this is what they've had to say still no message today isn't really liked wing government but united behind it behind her passion behind her resistance we are all here. from all over was going to include more people to this program i have is not alone to me family is not alone not be solace is not alone in the other hand we ask our friends all over the world to show a bit of a sort of duty and to start really create action to isolate israel and increase the
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cost of a completion. and try you i want to tell the israelis we as palestinian people and palestinian children we will continue to defend palestine we will get x. a mosque in jerusalem back and we will make jerusalem the eternal capital for palestine. it's right to start firing tear gas canisters into the crowd to push them back. now this was a peaceful protest the protesters are now very angry and the israeli army are using as much as they can to push them back. to pakistan now with a serial killer may be behind the rape and murder of a young girl that led to massive protests in the country that's according to the home minister of punjab province seven year old zainab on saadi was found dead in a garbage dump tuesday d.n.a. evidence has led to death to at least five other cases of child abuse and murder in the area eight people are being questioned including two of her relatives
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protesters across pakistan accused police of not doing enough in the case. now syrian government forces continue to retake territory from rebels in the southern aleppo province. and the possible government have taken control of of around forty villages the soldiers are advancing towards the rebel held them in the neighboring province one hundred twenty thousand people have fled from a rebel held areas in the past three weeks so they have a pull from a refugee camp in the northern syrian village of loosen. this is rama refugee camp in northwestern by the turkish syrian border there are five thousand refugees here who came after december fifteenth when the syrian regime started it's a strike on civilians and. most of those people are from mr muhammad and they are mainly very poor families you see the kids they are walking around on barefoot they
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don't have shoes to wear and people need immediate humanitarian assistance we have been talking to the people who have been residing here and the people in charge of the camp they're telling that the medical equipment they have is not enough the food they have is not enough for those people they need extra medicine they need extra food to feed those people here and there are some other expert camps around this area close to the border people crowded fled their homes from it's there in hama after the airstrikes started. to the democratic republic of congo now that the military has launched an operation against an armed group of suspected of killing fifteen tanzanian peacekeepers and december troops are targeting members of the allied democratic forces near the town of beni and the north kivu province shiela ballasts reports. the beginning of an offensive by congolese troops on
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rebels hiding on the border the ugandan group known as the a.d.f. killed fifteen peacekeepers in an ambush on a un base in north kivu province in december it was the biggest single most of peacekeepers in nearly a quarter of a century those killings triggered this response. vehicles transported three hundred troops to the area with tanks and armored vehicles to port said. we decided to launch an operation against the i.d.f. and all other groups in the area this is the last operation and we are prepared to fight to the end so we can restore security and peace in the region. the congolese hope it's the last but it certainly isn't the first here is a joint un and congolese task force starting an offensive against idea fighters back in twenty fifteen. originally ugandan rebel group have been rooted in the
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d.l.c. has run the national park for twenty years they retreated here after a failed bid to turn uganda into an islamic state they also oppose the ugandan president yoweri most affinity who's been in power thirty one years. the i.d.f. has a brutal reputation it's blamed for seven hundred civilian deaths and binny over the past three years as well as mess right and recruiting child soldiers. the december ambush that killed fifteen peacekeepers and injured more than fifty came just two months after the idea if killed two other peacekeepers. the d.s.c. is the un's largest mission and now one of its most dangerous it says it is planning to bet congolese forces against the rebels but is yet to engage charlotte dallas. they tennessee and government is hoping a boost an aid to poor families will help contain growing discontent are the new
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austerity measures as pledged an extra seventy million dollars after protests across the country but as reports the economic woes are far from over. and. does the really starts his day ensuring his staff offer the best services to their clients ruby was a banker but twenty years ago he quit his job and started his own business an environmentally friendly hotel in a town south of the capital tunis it's saturday the restaurant was fully booked in advance but with the growing violence in tunisia most of the bookings have been canceled. i mean i've been. here for most of the people are afraid to go out used to serve up to two hundred guests at weekends but look around what can i do. there are twenty people here who work full time growing plants
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harvesting olives and selling organic produce to tourists. has been a farmer for almost ten years he says he works hard but he does but we need a secure income. below. i want to make a future for my kids i want them to go to good schools and end up having a good comfortable life. business was booming before the two thousand and eleven revolution when it was packed with tourists but into a thousand and fifteen a gunman killed thirty eight terrorists in the resort town of seuss creating the worst crisis for hotel owners likes really her saw his revenues declined by ninety percent. every day on my way here i think about the painful decisions that i've been delaying for quite some time who should i fire to cut expenses it torments me i want my staff to stay makes me happy when they show up
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every day excited about they were. revie hopes to see the political crisis come to an end soon so that his clients can return and enjoy a quiet time in this mountain landscape cinesias biggest challenge is to find a way to cut the budget deficit increase revenue through taxes and those same time deliver on the promise to carter poverty and unemployment seven years after the revolution people here say they are frustrated with the government's track record they continue to worry about their and their country's future how about al-jazeera that one. still ahead on the bulletin how efforts to prevent the spread of caught a cholera epidemic meant to rioting and zambia and away from across the desert and of robots confiscated dhaka valley drive this could destroy part of the country's heritage.
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from a fresh coastal breeze. to watching the sunset on the australian outback. winter propose returning once again to turkey in the caucasus with snow showing in the forecast attention buckers been around for five degrees for a few days it's on the radar once more but south of that and there's not really much of a hint of of winter in iraq but it's by does temperatures twenty one degrees above what it should be it's a bit showery and breezy on the coast of lebanon by route sixty degrees but less sherry less breezy and slightly warmer on monday because not much in it to be honest have the winds change out of nox by dogs temperatures down brought the snow down through as a barrage on to northern iran on lansford took his time as well something that's fairly quiet twenty one here at city but the breeze picking up down the gulf not immediately obvious on sunday twenty five in dyer har and in riyadh that's not by
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this time the generally quiet weather there's no obvious sign of a very strong breeze but i think we've got a few something of a northerly curate and the cattle now it's dry she is listed north and central africa and in fact to get to the line they expect to be wet at this time of the year still there is wrong just catching zambian tons of it's really wet in madagascar the northern boundary gaskell once again for the most part south of that it looks lovely. the wave is sponsored by qatar. in two thousand and eight al-jazeera documented a groundbreaking scheme. preparing some of india's poorest children for entry into its toughest universities. ten years on we return to see how the students and the scheme a helping change the face of india. super thirty at this time.
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good to have you with us on al-jazeera these are our top stories why as governor has apologized for an accidental alert warning of an imminent ballistic missile attack a trigger panic among locals with scrambled to find shelter emergency management agency later confirmed it was a forceful arm and that it's investigating the case. at least eighty three countries have been affected by a salmonella outbreak at one of the world's largest dairy farms french dairy giant lacked alice says twelve million boxes of part of baby milk being record. the
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military and the democratic republic of congo has launched an operation against an armed group it blames for the killing of fifteen taliban peacekeepers last month troops are targeting members of the allied democratic forces near the town of beni in north kivu province. now the head of south africa's ruling african national congress has promised to read the country of corruption and restore nelson mandela special several around a part of the man most likely to succeed president jacob zuma outlined his vision during the party's one hundred sixth anniversary time your page has more from london in the eastern cape you. see they represent two different versions of the african national congress its past and its future one is facing hundreds of corruption charges and was booed by the crowd.
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is riding high after winning the agency's top job loud cheers greeted him several of them up or so used his first major public appearance as the n.c.s. new president to inspire while making for me about references to his predecessor. has become. a foreign source. if the boos made president jacob zuma uncomfortable he didn't show it they were not listening to the people. you want to see if you look at them what he's going to say to their president it's wild. fires. in the new president's vision is to rebuild and renew the party of nelson mandela to use new policies including changing the constitution to allow the government to take mostly white owned land without compensation and free education for poor
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students to realize the hopes and aspirations of millions of people. the celebration of. welcoming sarong up on him to take his place. and then. there is a. but after the party speculation is rife it could be a push within the a.n.c. as top structures to force president zuma out of office before his term is up next year that for there to be real change zuma has to go tanya page al-jazeera east london south africa now the zambian government plans to reopen a school and some shops in the capital new soccer this week there were close to prevent further spread of a cholera outbreak the city lockdown prompted riots with protesters calling it a draconian emergency measure they seventy people have died of cholera since
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september mariana haunt has more. street vendors had arrived early only to find they were legal market stalls shut down they quickly turned their anger on the security forces broughton to send them home they'd sit up shop in defiance of emergency mages that banned public gatherings and imposed a curfew the government says marketplaces like the a breeding grounds for cholera and while it excepts the new rules that tough it isn't backing down we find it extreme and acceptable. that this more click of individual citizens. to break the law when so many citizens have really been cooperative and have been open to the situation we know that we are touching on people's livelihoods
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but this is much as we are talking about matters of life and death and the very responsible government must make sure that people's lives are protected times. the riot happened in kenya amma a low income township that is home to more than three hundred fifty thousand people it's one of two townships on the outskirts of the capital lusaka where color broke out in late september the disease quickly spread to the city and infected almost three thousand people in about three and a half months color is a bacterial disease usually spread through contaminated water left untreated it can kill within alice last week the government deployed the army to enforce a ruffed of new measures to try to contain the national health crisis specialist cholera treatment centers closed off to the healthy and intensive color of vaccination campaign and a ban on public gatherings that includes funerals church services schools and
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marketplaces like this one in lusaka just last week st sellers here had pitched in to help the military close it off now they are opposing them and as the impact on livelihoods grows so too will the concern at the possibility of more civil unrest before the color a crisis is contained medium the hond al jazeera. at least eight people have been killed in an apartment building fire north of the portuguese catalyst been far far to say the place started when a wood burning stove exploded and the two story building. well ocky all of us have won that the dachau value poses a serious threat risk to parts of covers generic geological fabric they wired about fictions formed from fossil deposits dating back millions of years marianna sanchez reports from the desert and southern province.
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this is the world's epicenter of geo glyphs animal or geometrical sand and stone figures enigmatic drawings on the desert floor in southern experts say they are solar and lunar calendar engine peruvians used for agriculture they are spread over more than four hundred fifty square kilometers north of the nascar lines a world heritage site and on this territory the tracks that the car run left behind critics like engineer alexander who's been studying the origin of geo glyphs for years here say they're horrified. places like this one with archaeological remains dispersed around everywhere need more care so it's incredible that the desert is being used for such a competition when it's unheard sometimes. it is this or dispatched with geo cliffs archaeological remains and whale shark another prehistoric fossils millions of
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years old experts say in previous years that the car vehicles destroyed parts of produce heritage government officials say this time many areas were made off limits . in the area where we've had the park as national reserve we can say we've had zero percent impact there everyone strictly followed the protocols and we've been strictly monitoring the area. because government paid six million dollars to hold the car racing officials say they coordinated with race organizers to keep the fia outside protected areas archeologists say it's not only the pilots and their big. but the people who come and watch the competition who leave the terrain damaged thousands of people hiked the rough tracks to watch the rally go by dozens of park rangers were deployed to keep people out of restricted areas but the territory is immense. in the past we've seen cars going over the geo cliffs and probably that's
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happened again when it's too many vehicles that are in danger the archaeological area. and archaeologists say much of. treasure are under the sand much still to be discovered by the. that and the atomic age we are in there as a lot of talk of hacking but about foreign computer or election so what if you're han could be added to that list sabah security expert so why that such a court. and to that of things could make vulnerable to tamp right reynolds reports from the annual consumer electronics show in las vegas. really by now you've heard all about the internet of things or i.o.t. so-called smart homes feature internet connected t.v.'s washing machines
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thermostats door knobs and locks all controllable by smart phones there are web link security cameras smart showers and yes you guessed it online toilets the internet of things also includes underthings as model of speier explains simply put it right here the gizmo attaches to your bra or your briefs and gives you feedback on your health incidentally our clothes are going to be informing us about how to make the small baby step micro decisions that actually lead to better health by twenty thirty the io team a and fourteen trillion dollars to the world economy according to the management consulting firm accenture sounds great doesn't it but the more connected people in their products become the more at risk they are for a digital attack it opens up the possibility for risks of security natures of these
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are computers that have some computing power always on always connected and they're very appealing to the bad guys and the problem is as you're rushing to put the stuff on the market sometimes you use products off the shelf and they have bugs in them and you you distribute those bucks to your customers in recent years we've seen how vulnerable even formidable institutions are to hackers like to cry. that reporting agency equifax the movie studio sony and the us super spy bureau the national security agency big defender is marketing a box that will defend all your systems and online connections it's a complete solution it's a multi think of it like a sandwich at technologies that basically employ our machine learning in ai to understand the behavior of connected devices and figure out when something nefarious has happened unfortunately cyber security is not the top priority for many device makers or it seems for many consumers at this point the
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convenience and wow factor and excitement of new electronics are essentially winning the day consumers might want to consider whether smart devices are making their lives better or putting them and their families at risk robert oulds al-jazeera las vegas. well fans of the late senator johnny cash are remembering the concert he recorded fifty years ago before an audience of an mates and one of america toughest presence at highlight of the haas conditions and made cash a country music legend tom ackerman reports. a little i'm johnny. johnny cash said prison audiences were the best and not just because they were captive listeners the song folsom prison blues won him many fans behind bars three golden rule and around being. silly in the sun so. i don't believe i'm snug in the pool the. time he did. in one nine hundred sixty
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eight cash played the song before more than a thousand inmates and guards at the maximum security penitentiary in northern california the album he recorded there sold more than three million copies and revived caches of flagging career one that had been hindered by his addiction to prescription drugs half a century after his two performances on that day the inmates at folsom still appreciate cash his appearance their site he looks at us like below the low but little things like that kind of get your mind out of the you know the audacity of prison life despite his outlaw image cache never spent more than a few nights in jail for petty offenses but his sympathy for prisoners was the theme that also ran through another hit san quentin blues then clinton what good do you think you do. do you think i'll beat her and when you're through.
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my heart in my name you wore glasses. or your stole walter love blood a little gold. gas went on to perform in prisons across the us and campaign to improve their conditions a cause that still resonates in a country which incarcerates more than two million people and has the highest prisoner rate in the world tom ackerman al-jazeera. now actor mark wahlberg is donating one point five million dollars to the time's up campaign a legal defense fund for victims of sexual abuse was paid one point five million dollars. in the movie all the money in the world his costar michelle williams made less than a thousand dollars for the revelation highlighted gender pages in hollywood had to be. on the project amid accusations of sexual misconduct.
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the headlines on al-jazeera why is governor has apologized for an accidental message sent by the u.s. state one of an imminent strike the emergency management agency there to confirm it was a false alarm and that it's investigating the case. you know i know firsthand that what happened today was totally unacceptable and many in our community was deeply affected by this and i'm sorry we are working to evaluate everything in the sequence of today's activities to make sure that we are prepared and the procedures are change so that a single person or not be able to make an error that triggers another false alarms at least eighty three countries have been affected by
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a salmonella outbreak at one of the world's largest dairy farms french dairy giant electrolysis twelve million boxes of part of baby milk are being recalled more than thirty children have been poisoned in france alone and a victim's group says hundreds of lawsuits have been filed. israeli security forces have used tear gas to break up a protest against the detention of a palestinian teenager supporters of sixteen year old that mimi had been marching in the occupied west bank demanding her release she was detained last month when a video of her slapping israeli soldiers went wild lawyers say are could face jail time if she's convicted of the charges a serial killer may be behind the rape and murder of a young girl that's led to massive protests in pakistan that's according to the home minister of punjab province seven year olds they are one sorry was found dead in a garbage dump on tuesday eight people are being questioned. the military in the democratic republic of congo has launched an operation against an armed group it blames for
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the killing of fifteen tanzanian peacekeepers last month troops are targeting members of the allied democratic forces in the town of beni in north kivu province those are the headlines on al-jazeera so thirty is up next. news has never been more available but the message is a simplistic and misinformation is rife the listening post provides a critical counterpoint challenging mainstream media narrative at this time on al-jazeera.
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