tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera January 14, 2018 12:00pm-12:34pm +03
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in two thousand and eight out just zero 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. an attack on a refugee camp in syria russian forces are being blamed top people seeking sanctuary from war remain in the line of fire.
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fully back to boyer watching al-jazeera live from doha also coming up. and push the wrong but a false alarm over an incoming missile strike on hawaii frightens residents and it's put down to human error the tunisian government offers new aid to poor families and then attempt to stop public protests. but. you know. why the legend of johnny cash lives on in some of america's toughest prisons. first so why is governor has apologized for an accidental message sent by the state's warning of an imminent missile strike the mistaken alert target panic among many hawaiians a scramble to find shelter the emergency management agency laser confirmed it was
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a false alarm and look 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 trying to get into bathrooms so there was a bunch of old girls who were 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 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 into this author place. that was it people were just running on the street they were all desperation. that was not fun 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 pedicle hain al-jazeera washington now the wild news sustained attacks by government forces aided by russian air strikes
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second to new ng on revelled how the areas in syria. activists say one hundred seventy nine people have been killed in the beseeched damascus suburb of eastern guta in the past two weeks and further north we need labor pushed by asaad forces and their allies is causing a new wave of displacement about one hundred twenty thousand people have fled their homes in recent weeks but rather than finding places of sanctuary many continue to face danger. low low low low low don't know what to do your. own nose if you don't feel afraid if you really think. you know law. oh but look at. these dramatic pictures were captured by an al-jazeera team who were filming in
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a makeshift camp when an attack happened the pictures show a myside falling near civilians who had fled the bombing of the neighborhood seen chorus in the nearby hama countryside al-jazeera correspondent for dell along with men women and children around him desperately trying to find the nearest cover let's speak to see them go see who our correspondent in on talking in southern turkey. the residents in this area where this happened blaming russian airstrikes there has been an intense bombing campaign these past few weeks why is that and why in this area of syria. yes although the opposition activists say is that they use their right to counterattack when they went when russia accused the opposition for attacking so it's kind of a hit and run game by the regime and the and russia and the opposition says they
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were expecting a violation from russia which is an ally which is garant or in a stand a peace process as you would remember rochelle turkey and iran agreed to establish the escalation zones in hama. and lattakia provinces last september and because our capital so there will be another meeting in sochi which is the final destination of this peace agreement at the end of january and another is also the syrian opposition claimed that russia and syrian regime are doing are taking carrying over these attacks to gain political leverage on the negotiation table to be able to push opposition in a corner and do what they would they would like they would like to impose where they were they like to opposition this is what they believe actually for now sim you've just returned from northern syria where there are thousands of people who
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again have been displaced by fighting in the province what's it like for them right now. fully according to the monitoring groups there are one hundred seventy thousand people who came to the turkish syrian border to the camps and those camps have been there for for many years after the syrian war started so i can tell that they were all over the full and now they have extra people but these people who recently arrived to that region were coming from is then hama and they were all over the displaced when the first bombing started so we can assure that most of them are displaced for the second maybe third time since the war started so some of them didn't even have the chance to take cash money with them that's why they are not able to purchase and a thing and they are tied to the aid organizations but unfortunately there are just
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a few aid organizations on the ground and the access to the inside syria is kind of difficult so there are immediate needs like first the medical needs there are some medical points there not like hospitals but they need more medical checkpoints and more medicine they need extra food because the n.g.o.s were not that much prepared for such a massive immigration for now but when we talk to the ngos they say that if russian bridge if syrian regime continues a strikes and intensifies it over the lip there can be a much more crowded immigration especially to the border in that they say when that happens there may be five hundred thousand more people coming to the border ok which is over capacity so immediate help is needed fully thank you very much for that scene in because you live for a say nantucket turkey staying with syria and several people are in hospital after
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a bombing by government forces on eastern go to aid workers on the scene say they are being treated for suffocation after a suspected chlorine gas attack. at least eighty three countries have been affected by a break at one of the world's largest dairy firms french food giants like to liz says twelve million boxes of powdered baby milk being recalled more than thirty children have been poisoned in france alone and a victims group says hundreds of lawsuits have been filed the french government has shut the fuck factory at the center of the outbreak. january fourteenth marks seven years since the wave of protests known as the arab spring began in tunisia demonstrations are continuing in the country this time over new austerity cuts in response to the widespread protests the government plans to increase aid for poor families. firstly providing a minimum amount for chin is in families secondly guaranteeing health care for all to museums with no exception and providing or helping to provide appropriate
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housing to all to museum families on the seventh anniversary of the revolution the government has adopted a number of procedures during the meeting we were just in going in this direction and providing a base for this national social protection. is in tunis for us joins us now live on what's the mood like in the country as it commemorates the seventh anniversary of the revolution. mixed feelings here there are some people coming to the bookkeeper square which was the focal point of the two thousand and eleven revolution but people say that they would like to commemorate those people who lost their lives trying to defend democracy and promote a transition to genuine democracy. and this starting to gather on the square here the same time you have people who say that they will continue to press ahead for
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their demands until the government scraps the austerity measures so you have two different prevailing sentiments here in. the seventh anniversary of the two thousand and eleven revolution delicates movement or both but also for the political elites and for the government which has been over the last few days to ease the tensions there has been gaining some momentum and the government has said that it's taking new measures to help the poor and you know hopefully end the protests but will that be enough for that essential. well it remains to be seen whether. the taylor way any time soon because the people still remain divided over the recent measures taken by the government when it comes to providing immediately hate to those so basically they say this is just to carry around the edges with his profound recall of the budget and of the
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economy so that. people can feel the need to hold their living standards as the biggest problem facing as we speak is poverty and unemployment seven years been since the revolution people say that they haven't seen any dramatic here from their living standards and the accuse the government. breaking of the promises being made to. be the same again they say this again and again. in chinese forest as tunisia commemorates a seventh anniversary of its revolution thank you. israeli security forces have used tear gas to break up a protest against the detention of a palestinian teenager activist. i'm supporters of sixteen year old i had to 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 viral ok says made her an icon of
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resistance among palestinians say i had could face jail time if she's convicted of the charges which include assault she's due back in court on monday imran khan was at the scene covering the protests before and after fighting broke out. protesters gathering outside of the house of i head to me and there's really two messages that i want to 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 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 night now we've been speaking to palestinians here this is what they've had to say extend their message today is really liked wing government but united behind i'm behind her passion behind her resistance we are all here in obviously all it from all over was going to include
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more people to this program i have is not alone to me family is not alone not be solid has not alone in the other hand we ask our friends all over the world to show a bitter sort of duty and to start clearly with concrete action to isolate israel and increase the cost of a completion. and adult 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. 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 he's ready army using as much as they can to push them back. iran has lifted restrictions on the messaging app telegram which were imposed during recent anti-government protests several
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social media services were blocked to prevent activists from using them to organize at least twenty two people died in a thousand were arrested before the demonstrations wound down earlier this month instagram was restored last week but facebook and twitter aust. still ahead on al-jazeera warnings about how the latest internet technology could mean the risk of your home being hot. and a traditional craft that thrives for generations but is now in disarray why geysers carpet industry is unraveling. hello there we've got a lot of rain over the southeast and parts of asia at the moment take a look at the satellite picture we can see this huge blob of cloud here that's all thanks to an area of low pressure that's just off the northwestern parts of borneo
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it has given us some heavy rain already yet more still to come here expect some very sharp showers on monday or monday we'll also see some more shop showers making their way across mindanao does look pretty wet for some of us here but as we head into tuesday those showers just push a little bit further north into the chaise and i think that's where we'll see some of the sharpest showers dandled australia and here it's finally got a bit cooler for some of us in fact over some of their highest mountains we've seen one or two flakes of snow that's all thanks to this weather system though and as you can see it's now away from us so it's fine and settled now in the southeast corner still cool nowhere near as cold there we're looking at twenty degrees is a maximum force and says sydney will be up at twenty three further west very formal clouds here and quite a few outbreaks of rain that's thanks to our old storm that hit that gave us an injection of moisture and it's still with us even as we head through the day on choose day so still more clouds and few more showers here perth could see one or two more showers as the temperatures here make it to twenty eight degrees every
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towards new zealand we've got some rain creeping its way towards the south island it's warm in the north. when diplomacy fields and fear sweeps in the borders are wide open wide open to drugs terrorists reproving the barriers are built to impose division will to sixty's instead of being an obstacle to dole used to became another obstacle to peace in a four part series al-jazeera revisits the reasons for divisions in different parts of the world and the impact they have on both sides walls of shame at this time on al jazeera.
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welcome back you're watching al-jazeera a reminder of our top stories sustained attacks by government forces aided by russian air strikes are continuing on rebel held areas in syria these are magic pictures were captured by an al-jazeera team one a makeshift camp was a time to show a myside falling directly nia civilians who have fled the bombing of their homes in nearby kama countryside. at least eighty three countries have been affected by a break at one of the world's largest dairy firms french dairy giants like to say as twelve million boxes of powdered baby milk are being recalled more than thirty children have been poisoned in france alone and hawaii's governor has apologized for an accidental message sent to residents warning them of an imminent missile strike triggered panic among many hawaiians who aspire to find shelter the emergency management agency later confirmed it was
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a false alarm. not to the democratic republic of congo where the military has launched an operation against an armed group suspected of killing fifteen u.n. peacekeepers in december to getting members of the. radek forces near the town of benny in north kivu province charlotte belize has the details. the beginning of an offensive by congolese troops on 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 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. so 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
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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 routed in the 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 r c is the
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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 ballasts. zero. women in yemen have gathered in the capital sanaa to demand the armed hoofy group release the body of former ousted president ali abdullah saleh local reports say that who fees attacked the protesters which led to six women being good and nine abducted and have done a sally was killed by hoofy rebels last month after he switched sides and botched their saudi led coalition opponents. now police in south africa fired rubber bullets at protesters who ran science several h. and m. clothing stores activists from the opposition economic freedom fighters bodies say they're angry over what they describe a racist advertising used by the swedish fashion group earlier this week h m m apologizing after using an image of a black child wearing
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a sweatshirt with the slogan coolest monkey in the jungle the company has been widely criticized and has since removed the image. now to gaza where weaver is of traditional handmade copied say they're struggling to keep their craft alive israel in egypt spoke kate of the gaza strip has badly affected business welcome where has the story. weaving into traditional competence is one of palestine's oldest professions. it takes skill patient and a steady hand. 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 . 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
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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 their beliefs down the generations like these not recording the order of college stripes in a design. that mahmoud says things are not how they used to be mainly because of israel and egypt 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. it's quiet customers he says it's like this most of the time these days. like this one so it's nearly a week to make and sells for just over one hundred dollars economies down in gaza
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because of the blockade so not many people can afford that. these are cheaper. carpets mostly from turkey become common mahmoud says dance with so hard his business. is a carpet he made that was among many ordered by an israeli designer then handmade hearing gaza he says that kind of trading corporation is impossible any more you 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 says. sales may be slow but mahmoud says the quality of the work continues to improve and will keep struggling to preserve this traditional craft malcolm webb al-jazeera in gaza israeli prime
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minister benjamin netanyahu is on a six day trip to india where he hopes to deepen ties in trade and defense that's now was welcomed by india's prime minister narendra modi a delhi airport it's estimated india buys more than a billion dollars worth of israeli arms every year in july modi was the first indian leader to visit israel but was criticized for not meeting with palestinian leaders during his three day trip. i mean like china where and there's a lot of talk of hacking whether it's phones computers or election cyber security experts are now worried the so-called internet of things could make our homes a vulnerable to hackers as rob reynolds reports on 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 neema manova g. 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 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 and their products become the more at risk they are for a digital attack it opens up the possibility for risks of security and
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a chance at these 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 could distribute those bucks to your customers in recent years we've seen how vulnerable even formidable institutions are to hackers like the credit reporting agency equifax the movie studio sony and the u.s. super. spiny bureau the national security agency big defender is marketing a box that will defend all your systems in online connections it's a complete solution it's a multi think of it like a sandwich at the acknowledges that basically employ our machine learning in ai to understand the behavior of connected devices and figure out when something nefarious is happening 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 in their families at risk robert oulds al-jazeera las vegas. actor mark wahlberg is donating one point five million dollars to the time's up campaign and legal defense fund for victims of sexual abuse and the figo reshooting scenes for the movie all the money in the world while his costar michelle williams made less than a thousand dollars scenes had to be reshot after kevin spacey was removed from the project to meet accusations of sexual misconduct. fans of the late singer johnny cash are remembering the concert he recorded exactly fifty years ago the forming before an audience of inmates inside one of america's toughest prisons they vent highlighted the harsh conditions they enjoyed and made cash
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a country music legend tamaqua man has a story. 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 golden rule in or around the. city and the sun said. i don't believe i'm still going to 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 cashes 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 there he looks at us like the low low but little things like
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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 what good do you think you do. do you think i'll be different when you're through. my heart and mind then you wore glasses. or your stalls or love blood a little. dance went on to perform at 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 prison rate in the world tom ackerman zero.
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zero again i'm fully back to go with the headlines on al-jazeera sustained attacks by government forces aided by russian air strikes are continuing on rebel held areas in syria these dramatic pictures were captured by an al-jazeera team one a makeshift camp was a time that pictures show a myside falling directly civilians who said the bombing of their neighborhoods in nearby on the countryside at least eighty three countries have been affected by a sound outbreak at one of the world's largest dairy firms french dairy giants like to listen twelve million boxes of pounded baby milk being recalled more than thirty children have been poisoned in france alone how wise governor has apologized for an accidental message sent to residents warning them of an imminent missile strike triggered panic among many a why and so scramble to find a shelter an emergency management agency laser confirmed it was a false alarm hawaii's governor has apologized for the accidental and adds. you
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know i know firsthand that what happened to be 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 january fourteenth marks seven years since the wave of protests known as the arab spring began in tunisia that inspiration's a continuing in the capital tunis this time over new austerity cuts in response to the recent widespread protests the government dancing crease aids for poor families and twenty eleven president zine el abidine ben ali officially resigned after
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twenty eight days of protests across the country put an end to his twenty three year will be up to date with headlines on al-jazeera coming up next here is the documentary waltz of shame stay with us. the benefit of saddam people so see the importance of the archives witness documentaries that open your eyes at this time on al-jazeera. in two thousand and two the israeli palestinian conflict was by the inflamed as a contentious supporter was cast in concrete. the following film first aired five years after construction began on what israel describes as a separation wall.
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