tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera January 14, 2018 8:00am-8:34am +03
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museums start forming a new life here and part of life is culture you are making very pointed remarks where on line the main u.s. response to drug use and the drug trade over the last fifty years has been criminalized or if you join us on sad to know evil person just wakes up over the morning and says i want to color the world in darkness and this is a dialogue that could be was leading to some of the confusion the lie was about people saying they don't actually know what's going on join the colobus conversation at this time on al-jazeera. he pushed the wrong but.
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a false alarm. 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 feeling you know 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 there was a material girl story 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 a correction was sent out thirty eight terrifying minutes how could this happen in
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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 hire anyone for this author place. that was it people are just running on this story they were all desperately so yeah there was nothing at all the guy had one job right 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 pedicle hain al-jazeera washington. at least eighty three countries have been affected by
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a salmonella outbreak it one of the world's largest dairy firms french dairy giant like tallow says twelve million boxes of powdered 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 the french government has closed the factory until further notice as various security forces have used tear gas to break up a protest against the detention of a palestinian teenager. the. supporters of sixteen year old the mimi had been marching in the occupied west bank demanding her release. she was detained last mom when a video of her slapping israeli soldiers went viral you know i say i have could face jail time if she's convicted of the charges which include assault she's due in court again on monday and on congress on the same covering the protests before and after fighting broke out. protesters gathering outside of the house of i had to mimi and there's really two messages that they want to impart the first is to the
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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 a head 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 extend their message today isn't really liked wing government but our studios are united behind i'm behind her passion behind her resistance we are all here in obvious knowledge from all of it was going to include more people to this program i have is not alone to me family is not alone not be solid is not alone in the other hand we ask our friends all over the world to show a bitter sort of duty and to start really we can create action to isolate israel and increase the cost of
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a completion on those leaders and the kids to eat 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. israel started 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. 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 old zainab and saadi was found dead in a garbage dump on tuesday d.n.a. evidence has linked her death to at least five other cases of child abuse and murder in the area eight people are being questioned including two the girls. protesters across pakistan accuse police of not doing enough in the case. now
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syrian government forces continue to retake territory from rebels in the southern aleppo province. in the past seventy two hours government troops have taken control of around forty villages the soldiers are advancing towards the rebel held good military airport and they bring it live problems one hundred twenty thousand people have fled from rebel held areas just in the past three weeks so i'm called reports from a refugee camp in the northern syrian village of kufa loosen. this is roughly a refugee camp in northwestern at left by the turkish syrian border there are five thousand refugees here who tame after december fifteenth when the syrian regime started its airstrike on civilians and it's there in hama also those people are from mr muhammad and they are mainly very poor families you see the kids they are walking around on barefoot they don't have shoes to wear and people need immediate
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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 immediate extra medicine they need immediate extra food to feed those people here and there are some other extra camps around this area close to the border people have fled their homes from it's there in hama off to the airstrikes started. so the democratic republic of congo now the military has launched an operation against a suspected of killing fifteen in tanzania and peacekeepers in december troops are targeting members of the allied democratic forces near the town of benny in north kivu province shallop ballasts reports. the beginning of an offensive by congolese troops on rebels hiding on the border the ugandan group known as the
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a.d.f. killed fifteen peacekeepers in an ambush on a un base in north kivu province in december it was the biggest single loss 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 armed 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 u.n. and congolese task force starting an offensive against idea fighters back in twenty fifteen. originally ugandan rebel group have been rooted in the d.l.c. has run the national park for twenty years they retreated here after
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a failed bid to turn uganda into an islamic state they also oppose the ugandan president yoweri mr finn 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.m. . 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 shallop ballasts al jazeera. the tennesseean government is hoping a boost in aid to poor families will help contain growing discontent of a new austerity measures that's pledged an extra seventy million dollars after protests wept across the country but as bad of reports the economic woes are far
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from over. we really starts his day ensuring his staff offer the best services to their clients z.b. 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. there for most of the people are afraid to go out we 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 harvesting olives and selling organic produce to tourists.
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has been a farmer for almost ten years he says he works hard but he does but lee needs a secure income and now i'm going to. have him. 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 every day excited about they were. revie hopes to see the political crisis come to
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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 a cholera epidemic left of laci than b.s. and a traditional cars that drive for generations and disobey one comp industry of unraveling .
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ally when to propose returning once again to turkey in the caucasus with snow showing in the forecast attention buckaroos 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 ritz's sixteen 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 docs time she brought the snow down to as a by john to northern iran on lance who 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 die hard and in riyadh not by this time the generally is quiet weather there's no obvious sign of a very strong breeze but i think we've got a few something of a northerly kuwait and the counter now it's dry she is listed north and central
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africa and in fact to get to the line that expect to be wet at this time of the year still there is rain just catching zombie intensity it's really wet in madagascar the northern boundary gaskell once again for the most part south of that it looks lovely. unbelievably it sounds like an agreement between a criminal it's like trading in stolen goods that have been taken by the place if anyone ever comes to ask the question minister throw their hands up in the air and say i don't know i was just nominated director we're doing an investigation into. ukraine could you pay bribes you've been corrupt or are corrupt i did just the presidency al-jazeera investigation the only dogs this time.
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good to have you with us on al-jazeera these are our top stories why is governor has apologized for an accidental alert warning of an imminent ballistic missile attack a triggered panic among locals who scramble to find shelter the emergency management agency they confirmed it was a false alarm and that it's investigating the case at least three countries have been affected by a salmonella outbreak as one of the world's largest dairy farms french terry giant lack talent says twelve million voxels of powdered baby milk are being recalled and the military in the democratic republic of congo has launched an operation against an armed group that blames for the killing of fifteen tanzanian peacekeepers last
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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 rid the country of corruption and restore nelson mandela's mission civil rights 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 east london and the eastern cape. you need to. see they were present two different versions of the african national congress its past and future one is facing hundreds of corruption charges and was booed by the crowd i think. the other is riding high after winning the amcs top job loud cheers greeted him several of them up or so used to supposed major public appearance as the n.c.s.
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new president to inspire while making them a valid references to his predecessor the movement has become deeply divided. factionalism. through corruption and competition for resources. if the boos made president jacob zuma uncomfortable he didn't show it they were not listening to the people wasn't really in the world of what actually developed and what he. did say to their president it's well it's was a lot of fuss over the years. 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 giving compensation and free education for poor students to realize the hopes and aspirations of
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millions of people. have a celebration have. a welcoming so will run up on him to take his place to build unity and then. there is a. but after the party speculation is rife that they 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 lusaka this week they were closed to prevent further spread of a cholera outbreak a city lockdown prompted riots with protesters calling it a draconian emergency measure at least seventy people have died of cholera since september mariana honda has more. street
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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 but these matters we are talking about matters of life and death and the very
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responsible government must make sure that people's lives are protected i thought 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 marketplaces like this one in lusaka just last week st sellers here had
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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. now dozens of female hopi supporters have demonstrated in an armed protest and you haven't capital saana the leaders called on women to hold a rally as a show of defiance against they sell the that coalition the protesters say they are committed to finding a solution to the crisis but also willing to fight for their course. iran says it will retaliate after u.s. president donald trump announced fourteen new sanctions against iranian individuals and entities that are not connected to the iran nuclear deal which tom extended on friday saying it would be the last time he did so it. has more from tehran if
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there is one thing that iran's foreign minister has in common with the american president is that they both like to use twitter within an hour of the announcement by donald trump that the u.s. would stay in the nuclear deal with foreign minister zarif said trump's policy towards iran is desperate he said recent attempts to dismantle the nuclear deal were part of ongoing violations of the agreement on saturday the foreign minister also addressed trump's alleged racist comments towards developing countries saying he was not a reliable person with whom to do business with us is one of my family's maybe. as we know the united states has been very open and very difficult as far as lifting the sanctions is being concerned they must not forget many other countries have lifted the sanctions and life has become much easier in iran and it was before the dail tough talk from to her own inspired in no small part by support for the nuclear deal from germany france britain russia and china all the other countries
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who helped negotiate. as we know united states has been very all court and very difficult as far as lifting sanctions have been concerned but you mustn't forget that many other countries they have lifted the sanctions and life has become . much easier. before iran's government is motivated to keep the deal alive but with every repeating dog line the nuclear debate between the united states and iran becomes more personal and not just at the level of government. hundreds of people in the polish capital warsaw have protested against proposals to tighten abortion those demonstrators gathered outside parliament on saturday the ruling your own justice party wants to ban abortions in cases where there's already reversible damage to the fetus. u.n.
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secretary general antonio tears is in colombia after peace talks between the government and rebels broke down as was welcomed by president juan manuel santos at palace talks with the e l n were suspended on wednesday in response to a spate of recent attacks the latest involve the kidnapping of a forty one year old petroleum engineer police are investigating the stabbing death of a mexican journalist the body of seventy seven year old. was found in the border state of. rights groups say there's a crisis for press freedom in mexico at least six journalists were killed for their reporting there last year. now fans of the late senator johnny cash are remembering the concert he recorded exactly fifty years ago before an audience of and mate and find one of america's toughest presence at highlights of the hoss conditions and cash a country music legend tom ackerman reports
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a little i'm johnny cash 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 doesn't rule it around being. silly in the sun so. i don't believe i'm stuck in school. time you know. in one nine hundred sixty 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 psyche 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
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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 be different when you're through. my heart in my name you wore glasses. or your stalls or 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 we went soft traditional handmade carpets and they are struggling to keep their heart alive as well as
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blockade of the territory has affected the business now can webb has the story from gaza. weaving sheep's wool into traditional carpets he's one of palestine's all these professions it takes skill patient and a steady hand. so what's been doing it since he was ten now he says he's too old to be strained relatives to work on his looms hearing. it's been a family business for longer than he knows even his family name so after means will . already. i am seventy two years old and i've done this work my whole life before me my father before him my grandfather it's been in our family for four hundred years or more maybe ever since the prophet muhammad we've done the same work. it's possible archaeologists have found the remains of wooden looms in this region that are thousands of years old the techniques have passed
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their beliefs down the generations like these not recording the order of colored stripes in a design. that mahmoud says things are not how they used to be mainly because of israel in egypt's blockade of gaza electricity used to prepare the wool is off most of the time importing wool and exporting carpets have become difficult and expensive. just next door shop it's quiet no customers he says it's like this most of the time these days. this one takes nearly a week to make and sells for just over one hundred dollars economies down in gaza because of the blockade so not many people can afford that. these are cheaper factory made carpets mostly from turkey become common mahmoud says dance also hurt his business he showed us a carpet he made that was among many ordered by an israeli designer then handmade
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hearing. he says that kind of trading corporation is impossible any more we have to wait days for a customer to come to his shop and asked to speak to we asked why pay more for a traditional handmade carpet. heritage is very important for us and for the new generation if we can't see our heritage it be a big problem we should protect it. sales may be slow but mahmoud says the quality of the work continues to improve and he'll keep struggling to preserve this traditional craft malcolm webb al-jazeera in gaza. you know again i'm a little problem in doha with the headlines on al-jazeera why is governor has apologized for the accidental message said touched by the u.s.
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state warning of an imminent missile strike the emergency management agency later confirmed that it was a false alarm and that it's investigating the case. you know i know firsthand that what happened to the 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 will not be able to make an error that triggers another false alarm at least eighty three countries have been affected by a salmonella outbreak at one of the world's largest dairy firms french dairy giant flecked says twelve million boxes of powdered baby milk being recalled more than thirty children have been poisoned and france alone in
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a victims group says hundreds of rockets suits 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 the maybe 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 which include a song. again on monday. a serial killer may be behind the rape and murder of a young girl that led to massive protests in pakistan that's according to the home minister off province seven year old he was found dead in a garbage dump on tuesday eight people are being questioned including to say nobs relatives the military in the democratic republic of congo has launched an operation against an armed group it blames for the killing of fifteen tanzanian un peacekeepers last month troops are targeting members of the allied democratic
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forces near the town of beni in north kivu province. those are the headlines on al-jazeera do stay with us people in power is coming up next thank you very much for watching. as thousands of broken just seek refuge in bangladesh a new armed group is taking shape fighting the government in me and. because they refuse to give us the basic rights as citizens for the first time a member of the ira can just salvation army talks to al-jazeera at this time. and truly have long protested the loss of from lands at the hands of colonial era settlers territory that's nerve domenici but he.
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