tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera April 8, 2018 5:00am-6:00am +03
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is never far from crisis at home or abroad. in a two part series of war and tells the story of convincing of joint in. episode one so violent on zero. zero. with every. doing this for the benefit of saddam people so bad to see the importance of. witness documentaries that open your eyes at this time on al-jazeera.
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this is al-jazeera. and this is the news i live from doha coming up in the next sixty minutes syrian medics said least seventy people have been killed this is spect of chemical attack in duma and east we go to. the year long fight to stay out of jail comes to an end for former brazilian president lula da silva here i have that the prison and could a table moments ago plus. everything about this film about this tragedy is unprecedented and it's overwhelming the community mourns the loss of at least fifteen members of a canadian amateur hockey team killed in a bus accident. trading opium for some farmers in afghanistan harvesting instead of grain poppies.
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syrian merrick said least seventy people have been killed in a suspected chemical attack in the rebel stronghold of duma and eastern good this video shows victims appeared to show symptoms consistent with a gas attack the syrian government is calling it a fabrication miniatures intensified its bombardment of duma in recent days after talks with rebels collapsed u.s. state department said in a statement that russia ultimately bears responsibility for the brutal targeting of countless syrians with chemical weapons russia's protection of the assad regime and failing to stop the use of chemical weapons in syria calls into question its commitment to resolving the overall crisis and how it's a reporter warning you may find some images in her report disturbing. believe it or not these children are the lucky ones basic and crude emergency care
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for victims of a suspected chemical attack but they survived they didn't these the latest victims and used to go to as regime forces a closer to defeating opponents and the rebel held pocket medical sources on the ground say victims appeared to show symptoms consistent with exposure to sarin gas . syrian state media has dismissed talk of the regime using a poison gas as fast sickle. local hospital staff say many of the victims of saturday's attacks were treated for suffocation only a few number of physicians and medical staff are lived. to treat the are in the book menu of families right now are they shield in basements and use indorse you know chemical weapons like chlorine or some of those by the fact that this gas goes down to the basement and those people who are now or taking shoes from barrel bombs are getting docks acute those chemical weapons and that's
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where the casualties are high and that's who is the high number of people. the syrian government forces stepped up their offensive on the rebel held duma after a ten day truce collapsed. the russian brokered cease fire fell through of a disagreement over evacuating rebels hundreds of fighters and their families were convoyed out of jumah but josh al islam one of the main rebel groups refused to go delaying president assad's overall conquest this is the most important the biggest city in the area and by capturing it actually they would be just finishing off all the presence of the opposition and despite i mean very important strategic area surrounding the mosque is not only that they would be also evacuating the area from the most formidable position force which is jason islam or the army of islam. with the latest standoff between assets government and the last rebel held town
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scenes like this looks set to continue. how does their sense tracy thirteen hundreds have been killed in several chemical weapons attacks in syria one year ago more than eighty people died when the nerve agent sarin was dropped on the opposition held town of han shot her in the province the u.s. carried out i miss. strike against a syrian air bias base in response to that attack human rights watch registered multiple chemical attacks in opposition controlled parts of aleppo during the final battle for the city in twenty sixteen several civilians including four children were killed and more than two hundred people injured the most devastating chemical attack was in twenty thirty nine go to it killed more than a thousand people there tak prompted major world powers to collaborate in order to dismantle syria's chemical weapons stockpiles bruce fein is a former us associate deputy attorney general writes regularly about syria joins us
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live from washington d.c. very good to have you with us and i believe you are writing about this latest attack can you tell us what your findings are. well i think there are. a menu of possible retaliatory measures that could be taken by the west the united states europe could list i believe russia as a state sponsor of terrorism based not only on the complicity if you with the cole belligerency with syria in using chemical weapons in syria but also now we have a second incident in great britain where it seems quite clear that russia used chemical warfare to kill or at least attempt to kill two or three of its expatriates and that would pose very very strict economic sanctions against russia stricter than those that have been posed after ukraine.
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it's a very grim prospect but it may well be that the only way you could deter additional uses of chemical weapons because a one strike fair didn't do anything when it was attempted about a year ago by mr trump. is to threaten to arm mr assad's opponents with chemical weapons use a. nuclear weapons excuse me jumping in here but not as grim as the pictures we seeing of many women and children who have been affected by this chemical attack supposedly i mean it's shocking that this continues to be allowed to happen. well it is true and it's unfortunate serious not the only way a place where you know shocking atrocities occur we see them in burma even when it's presided by someone who was a nobel prize winner and it's a very tragic element of warfare. i am saying that in world war one
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when poison gas was initially used by the germans the allied retaliated in there wasn't any use of poison gas even by a did it all feel or in world war two on the battle front you know you use the gas in the extermination chambers to kill jews and may well be that is the kind of deterrence you need and then there's also the possibility of beginning to gather evidence to present to the international criminal court for crimes against humanity and war crimes committed not only by syria but by russia even if they couldn't be immediately sent for trial because of the current situation at least it's a deterrent because it soon even be a special tribunal it seems that there is a feeling that the perpetrators can get away with whatever they want which they have been able to up until now. well that's true but you could say
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that many of those who were in serbia thought they could get away with everything they ended up with a war crimes prosecution and a special tribunal for yugoslavia so simply they may have that and it's may be very tragic that oftentimes justice is delayed for protracted periods but ultimately at least in the balkan situation it did take root and did result in several of the major figures being convicted or tried for genocide or other work crimes and at least it creates a deterrent effect. and least it leads to some people might be hesitant but there aren't any good options in this kind of situation and syria is totally convulsed there's no knowing that you know what there's no good guys really there it's simply non-state now in you just have violence and the rule of the gun is what
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dictates what happens on the ground and until that is one say all the other things it's just clearing up isn't it i'm just wondering where this does leave the u.s. i mean you've thrown out a few options there but what sort of action do you think the u.s. will take nah. well previously when president trumpy he conducted a missile strike it was a one time affair in it's unclear whether simple one one off is going to have a need to turn affect it didn't on the first time but i believe that by specifically from the state department associating this attack with russia that the likelihood is to escalate and try to push russia to clamp down on president assad in syria by escalating the same sions against russian president trump knows he has enormous support in the united states congress for that reason because of the clear effort by russia to interfere with our two thousand and sixteen presidential
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elections and i say that's why the strongest ep that could be stay can quickly would be to list russia as a state sponsor of terrorism with all the collateral sanctions that would accompany that it's even that is fine thank you very much. the former president of brazil learned a silva has just begun a twelve year prison sentence after being convicted convicted for corruption and this was him entering a jail in the city of within the last hour his supporters protested while others celebrated saying the guilty should pay for their crimes daniel schorr i'm the reports. did not go without a fight he defied a friday deadline to hand him self into police then on saturday he addressed his supporters outside the metal workers' union headquarters near. the crime that i committed is
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a crime they don't want me to repeat my crime was to put black people in poor people in university able them to buy their own home if that is the crime i committed i would like to say that i will continue to be a criminal. he's the victim he says of the campaign to block him standing on the tape as presidential elections elections many believe he would win. since dilma rousseff impeachment we have seen a coup d'etat starting in two thousand and thirteen they have been trying to get rid of not only delma but lula and the left wing parties i suppose in sao paolo delayed his exit all of this came to see him off at the airport saying farewell to the man they praised for lifting millions of brazilians out of poverty with a change brazil had a huge influence across latin america the reaction to the full of this once great political leader has so far been muted the house because he's become just another victim of the corruption scandals sweeping brazil. lewdness heartland the crowds he
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was small all those elsewhere in brazil came out to celebrate his imprisonment. will eat your whole body all the politicians who stole who took money from brazil from security from health care how many people died whiten in-laws. at hospitals that's all dirty money if they guilty they should go to prison i know there is just one of the many business people and politicians from across the political spectrum to be caught in the web of corruption investigations sweeping brazil that he is by far the biggest to some a martyr to others just a common criminal gangs why there are two zero. at the paris a latin america policy and political analysts he says could gain even more of a following after going to jail. i think that what we're seeing is he's become a symbol a rallying cry around which people are rallying and you're getting it you know i
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see that two things won the elections in brazil him being the front runner and all of a sudden he's not able to participate that really undermines the legitimacy of these elections second of all he has the potential of becoming a nelson mandela like figure around which his party and all brazilians can rally around in international forces can rally around and eventually become a symbolic and gain a symbolic victory if not outright electoral victory in these elections coming coming up he's always maintained that these are false accusations the their cause a geisha is against him and there's a sense that under lula things were actually better things improved for the average ordinary person in brazil and so there's that aspect of it people's lives actually improved then there is he's always maintained and been seen as someone who is
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a very has high degree of integrity as a fighter is someone who fights for social justice and at the same time other very you know right wing politicians who are also implicated directly in in kinds of scandals and graft and corruption are being treated very differently. two people have died and several others have been injured after a man drove a car into a crowd in the german city of munster police say the suspect then killed himself security officials say the incident is not terror related dominic kane reports. emergency workers deal with the aftermath of the incident a vehicle driven at speed into a crowded urban area it happened without warning. there was a loud bang and screaming and then the police arrived and everyone was sent outside as well i thought i didn't see much as there were lots of police everywhere a lot of people were running away screaming. the perpetrator took his own life
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after steering his vehicle into the crowds the authorities working on the basis he did not have what they call a terrorist motive to knock the guy according to the current state of the investigation and it is still early the perpetrator plowed into a crowd of people was a german citizen and not as it was everywhere alleged a refugee something similar the details are being thoroughly examined officers believe the perpetrator had been psychologically disturbed for some time late on saturday evening armed officers were searching his home trying to find any evidence which might shed some light on his motives this incident has shocked mr chancellor angela merkel released the statement making clear how the incident has shaken the country and promising all assistance to the police investigation germany has been on a state of raised alert for several years saturday's incident means it's unlikely that level will drop anytime soon for several years germany has been on
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a raised level of alert against the threat of violent attacks this incident means that level is very unlikely to drop anytime soon dominic came out is there a minister. there have been multiple attacks in germany within the past two years in december twenty sixth in a truck was driven into a crowd at the christmas market in the capital bit early and killing twelve people and injuring more than fifty the attacker was a teen is he an asylum seeker linked to eisele in july twenty sixth in a german iranian gunman shot dead at least nine people in munich sixteen a german iranian gunman shot dead at least nine people in munich the eighteen year old was obsessed with mass killings and inspired by the norwegian unders brave who killed seventy seven people in the same week a teenage afghan refugee hacked passengers on a train in what was a boat with an axe and a knife injuring five people eisel claimed responsibility now the incident in germany had. and on the same day as an attack in sweden
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a year they've been seventies to remember the five people killed when an man drove a truck into a crowded street and stuck on so many parents. one thing among all the memories that i can recall from this day is this faced with this terrible unnecessary and fanatic hate it was a many who chose to show such sympathy for each other who cared to strangers who offered to pick up the neighbors' kids at day care who said we want to know each other but i'm here for you let us never forget this when the history is written about outside because when our society was weak then our community was at its strongest that is what survives that is what matters far ahead on the news on clearing cancer as a mere kicks off a charm offensive in the us ahead of talks with donald trump on the gulf crisis plus. i'm hayward in leicestershire where foam of the facing uncertain times because of breakfast. and then sports will tell us who's the man to beat at the
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masters as golf's first major of the year heads into the final round. doctors are struggling to treat thousands of palestinians injured by israeli forces during fight as protests along the gaza israel border hospitals in gaza have declared a state of emergency due to severe shortage of supplies what a bill how many reports. there isn't an easy atmosphere in the ward the patients are in pain but this is silent worry of those around them that is most right oh my not is the hoody cannot contain his despair he has three sides all three maimed during the protest yet is the last one to be injured and his condition is the most worrying he has already lost his left leg in an accident a few years ago now his right one is at risk.
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he lost his leg because of the two governments we have one would agree to transfer him the other would refuse anyone who cares about us please help me get my son out of gaza he needs treatment to please help me save this leg. medleys in the next bed in agonizing pain his mother is angry at all parties. living in gaza is like living in a sealed box she says they only care about themselves. a man was among the first to arrive at the hospital on friday it was early in the day many more would follow the sheer number of injured putting stress among already fragile system dr ayman sahab and he says it's now bursting at the seams. we declared a state of emergency and once his who carrying three or four patients had this time with three hundred cases in one day has fifteen times more than the capacity of the
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emergency unit and we've used all our stock. most injuries are in the lower part of the body external fixators for limbs antibiotics anesthesia and other necessities have run out or are in short supply getting anything into gaza requires a lengthy and complicated process under normal circumstances the health system suffers from shortages about half of the drugs needed and a third of the equipment are lacking but the situation gets even further complicated by political developments this seventeen year old mohammed a sports lover was told that nothing more could be done here in gaza there are treating his leg is torn and he's losing a lot of blood he needs to be transferred to the occupied west back the hospital there is waiting the people work is done by the israelis won't allow him to make did journey no one has been able to get out since the protests began. listens for
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my tears roll down his cheek and hope is all but gone. there's no solution each time they make us dream of reconciliation failed my generation has lost the one after me that's why we go to the. events to express the misery we live in. it's that sense of hopelessness that continues to draw do you think the words do border fence many might come back on a stretcher some will never fully recover without that hamid al jazeera gaza thousands of mourners have attended funerals in gaza for the ten palestinians killed by israeli forces during those protests at least thirty people have died since demonstrations began last week thousands of protesters are camping along the israel gaza border to demand the right of return for palestinian refugees among those buried was palestinian journalist yasser more taja the thirty year old was
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shot in the stomach while covering the protests on friday fourteen other journalists been injured since the demonstrations began nine days ago. reports from the occupied west bank. despite the blue protective vest he was wearing and despite the fact that the word press was in place and on the front of that best palestinian journalist yassin was shot by israeli forces while covering the mass protest in gaza on friday yes it died early on saturday. night at his funeral in gaza hamas leader ismail haniya a tribute. i salute all the journalists and priests who lost their lives in the same way those who have gone through the road of suffering in order to portray the reality for an oppressed people a frustrated people under siege and gaza and all across palestine but it's the image of dignity for a proud people a brave people
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a straightforward people brave able to turn the table and the hardest of times for palestinian journalists gathered in the occupied west bank to commemorate yes it. according to the palestinian journalist syndicate seven other journalists were also injured in protests on friday the syndicate described them as deliberate crimes committed by the israeli army and called on the united nations to do more to protect journalists in ramallah there was shock and anger. the journalist they want to send a message saying that even the generals in gaza or in with the bank are the same. for the first avoid as opposed to his second as a journalist and their duty is to cover up what had been yes it was thirty years old well known and well liked yes it was a gentle soul this is how everybody describes him he was a gifted journalist a gifted photojournalist and documentary filmmaker in leaves behind
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a wife and a two year old child. and she he has united everybody in sorrow and in mourning because he was so so gentle and so gifted and so dedicated journalists stood in solidarity with their dead and wounded colleagues this is not going to make us feel helpless or helpless it will i think as it did before make us more determined and now won't the syndicate has more tools at its hand to defend the rights of journalists to expose israeli actions and to attempt to hold it accountable in international forums so that's a new window of hope if you will that we didn't have before words of encouragement at a time when strength and fortitude may be needed more than ever before. ramallah in the occupied west bank. and people in the u.k.
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have been taking action in solidarity with palestinians killed in gaza hundreds of demonstrators in london have been demanding the government condemns israel's actions and they called for an end to the siege of gaza labor party leader jimmy coleman says the killing and wounding of palestinian protesters is an outrage. catches a man has begun his tour of the u.s. ahead of white house talks with donald trump on cheers day the u.s. president is said to want to ease tensions between the gulf countries after nationally supporting a blockade against qatar miss first stop was in miami and from the. reports. of a crucial visit for qatar. ten months into the blockade that was imposed by saudi arabia the united arab emirates and egypt the gulf diplomatic crisis is likely to be at the center of talks between shaped i mean been. and us president
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donald trump i think all the parties have to come to the table not sitting at a conditions. if the country gauging the productive. serious discussion. ready and willing to sit and discuss. the issue of our sovereignty is an issue that in the be addressed the cutter's charm offensive in the u.s. is in full swing at the feet a curious crowd gathers at the landmark bayfront park in miami what an exhibit promoting the gulf nation is underway while trying to leverage the rocher will move on to other u.s. cities in the coming weeks my belief as ambassador was that relationships matter not just between governments but between people who feel very honored i mean they can choose any more of the world that they chose miami and we see that narrative playing out over and over again and we see so many different countries throughout the world choosing miami to do business choosing miami to come and visit try to
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create more economic opportunities. jasim is minutes of economy he leads a delegation of businessmen seeking to expand trade with the us for us the blockade the state from economy point of view. we'll find we can live with all of those companies as the gulf diplomatic crisis drags on the qatari government continues to diversify its trade partners qatar's investors in the u.s. for example as to mated at one hundred forty six billion dollars including ninety two billion dollars in plane purchases for national carrier the u.s. has a long standing relationship with the gulf rivals it's been trying to broker a deal of has been no breakthrough so far raising fears of further instability in the region. miami still ahead on al-jazeera. i just don't
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understand why the law abiding citizens will be punished holiday resort that's been called a cesspool now its residents have new currency. and movement for change we meet the woman in libya seeking a more equal society and as for manchester city's anguished premier league title celebrations are put on hold for i will have that story coming. by the skyline only in the. world coast of the italian riviera. and i there is mostly dry across many parts of china at the moment though in the feeding up from the south of the temperatures are rising as well shanghai twenty two degrees i think will be the maximum on sunday but as we head into monday we get a bit higher to around twenty six there is a little bit of cloud in the fall for the parts of china but that's retreating its
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way even further south as we head into monday so for high nana think we'll see a fair few showers here and they could be just the odd shower perhaps in the northern parts of vietnam but i think most of us will see gray weather rather than wet weather a bit further towards the south and here's where the wet weather is plenty of it over the southern parts of borneo through java and also across the marcher recently the showers in the northern parts of thailand being pretty violent as well but here the easing so the next few days it does look drier and brighter you might just catch the odd shower but they will be the exception rather than the rule this time elsewhere just stay with us gusts of showers at times towards the west and forth across india there's been lots of cloud lots of rain here recently as there have been over post nepal as well all of this is trying to break up but i think the nepal will cling on to their showers a little bit longer they'll also be a couple of showers perhaps in the eastern parts of india sri lanka though that's where we're going to see more in the way of what weather that will stick around even as we head into monday. the weather sponsored by qatar and greece.
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white supremacy is on the rise in the u.s. and its adversaries too are beating their drums. faultlines investigates the anti fascists using force against intolerance. this is and to fact on al-jazeera. non-violence does attempt to appeal to the more conscience of the movies now the jury's still out. of the nation as one. with bureaus spanning six continents across the globe. to. al-jazeera has correspondents live in green the stories they tell. us about it. here are
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fluent in world news. and again you're watching al-jazeera mind of our top stories the u.s. state department says it is deeply concerned after reports of at least seventy people been killed by a suspected chemical attack in the syrian opposition stronghold of eastern go to rescue workers posted videos of victims in duma which appeared to show symptoms consistent with a gas attack syrian government sources are denying responsibility. form a brazilian president lula da silva has arrived in prison to begin his twelve year sentence for corruption last year lou. it was found guilty of taking bribes from an
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engineering firm in return for helping it get state contracts and two people are being killed and dozens injured after a van was driven into a crowd in the german city of munster the driver of the vehicle died at the scene of the shooting himself officials say the incident is not terror related canada's sporting community is in mourning after sept fifteenth junior ice hockey players from the same team were killed in a bus crash the humboldt broncos were travelling in the town of tisdale. province when a truck crashed into them i can reports a scene of devastation and three kilometers of highway sealed off by police the hockey team was on its way to a must win playoff game in the northeastern town of nepal when when the crash occurred there were twenty nine people aboard the bus including the driver rescue efforts were hindered by the remote location and helicopters were flown in to ferry the injured to hospital everything about this film about this tragedy is
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unprecedented and it's overwhelming. including the trench. of support our organization has received pocky is the game that links all communities in the far flung reaches of canada's north and all were touched you know throughout canada we see teens going out into the into the canadian winters on buses all the time and you know it's all a thought in parents'. minds about what could happen and unfortunately. mourners gathered in the hockey teams home town of humboldt that has a population of less than six thousand and the sadness made even more acute by the fact that everyone in this town knew everyone who died or was injured on the stay mike hanna al-jazeera farmers in the u.k. are worried about how they will make money once britain leaves the european union
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next year they rely on tens of thousands of workers from abroad and billions of dollars from the e.u. to keep up production in may what has more from leicestershire. after months of early starts and late finishes on the farm getting the right price at market is. profit margins are tight so every dollar counts. steeped in tradition melton mowbray has one of britain's oldest livestock markets what matters here is what the future may hold after brics say it's the concern is where we're going to take a big hit in terms of income. exported to the continent . and i can see that that's going to continue will carry on as normal if we got anything any good. for more than forty years the way britain a spawn taz been shaped by brussels when it leaves the european union it's
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inevitable that the way farmers operate will have to change. brix it means an end to the four billion dollars british farmers receive in a few subsidies membership of its common agricultural policy and leaving the single market which allows the free movement of people and parties. in lincolnshire there's a break in the weather allowing wratislaw probable kariya to plant strawberries every year eighty thousand seasonal workers are needed in the u.k. to harvest pruett plows and vegetables seventy five percent come from romania and bulgaria the rest are largely from other parts of the e.u. for our business and many businesses like ours if we can't have access to a labor force. that is generally from from eastern european we will stop growing so fruit. we wouldn't have the stuff to carry out the picking and packing
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the u.k. government says it's determined to get the best deal for the food and farming industries subsidies will be replaced by a different payment system the promise leaders say that after years of red tape bricks it could provide an opportunity we need to have a policy which the government is committed to do which reduces sustainable. profitable farming. high productivity fantastic animal welfare great environmental benefits if that's possible to do that and that's what we want to see happen back at the market. around the next blocks many here are hoping changes to the political landscape will yield good results and they would al-jazeera the last to share the livelihoods of thousands of workers on the philippines holiday island of baraka could be in jeopardy after was closed for six months present ordering of the ted says tourists have turned the popular destination into
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a cesspool that source of the view of many locals have long complained of being squeezed out by the tourism industry and in the reports from the. people are the original inhabitants of broccoli island. she grew up in a peaceful setting with no worries they tilled their own land sea food was abundant and they were free to roam beyond lent they call the home but not anymore they feel they're being squeezed out around two hundred of them live in this tiny village provided by the government a few years ago. some of us work in hotel construction others go fishing there are not many of us get to do it life is hard here because there are different people who live their. life in the village is in stark contrast to the rest of the island settlers have moved in the city and the at these are now marginalized. is now one
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of the most popular tourist destinations in the world more than two million visitors a year but fewer than fifty at surrey able to work in the hotels and bars construction in the island has grown exponentially over the last twenty years revenues from businesses here make up around twenty percent of the total tourism industry in the country but the president of the good that artist says the situation is no longer sustainable and has ordered the closure of the island for six months. the government says around half the businesses on brac i violated environmental rules to thirty believes the island is already uninhabitable. you're going to do work. but many people in broccoli say that's an overreaction and cruel specially to the more than thirty five thousand filipinos dependent on the
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island for their livelihoods i'm glad that the president is paying attention. but i just don't understand why the law abiding citizens will be punished as well. the government's been accused of not being clear about its plans for border. state officials say there will be an emergency fund to help businesses and workers during the six months the island's closed. the artists hope there is a plan for them to they see the story of development is a continuing story of injustice that those who have always lived on the island and have their religion to call their own now stand to lose even more. dog an. island central philippines. libya has long been one of the world's
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strictest male dominated societies years of conflict and an increase in lawlessness has only marginalized woman even more but female activism is on the rise in some areas. of the war had reports from misrata. their voices are not often hooded but a community leader is determined to change that she wants women to play a bigger rule in improving society. at this fair she and other female campaigners have taken the initiative to fundraise for those most in need the sick and the poor . the income of the spare is dedicated to cancer patients in the city other than that we've also created job opportunities by opening a weaving workshop for poorly it's whom we've also trained. but it is not easy women find themselves at the back of every queue and it comes to seeking help
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even when it is not for themselves women here say they're the first female activists to do this type of work helping others in the city of misrata and they're planning to continue but in a maze dominated society they say they face a lot of challenges. if a radio announcer says in libyan society social restrictions on women are a major handicap and whenever a woman progresses she gets picked on not just by the men but other women too she tries to address those issues through her radio show or didn't couldn't. there are several obstacles derailing women's activism i faced a lot of difficulties at first our society did not accept the idea of a female presenter media used to be politicized during the former regime and asked people activists in order for us to express ourselves we need a lot of strength and resilience. this presentation to cancer patients is proof
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altima and her friends are making some progress it is want to step out of time but they remain hopeful gender equality is not just a distant dream. misrata one person's died in a fire at the building that bears the u.s. president's name the blaze began on the fiftieth floor of trump tower in new york on. trump has tweeted that the fire's been put out the building was the campaign center for the president's election campaign in twenty sixteen lawyers for bill cosby have called for one of the jurors to be removed from the u.s. comedian's retrial for sexual assault the juror legibly said he thinks cosby is guilty and the case should be over defense lawyers say demonstrates the man may be biased cosby's retrial which begins on monday involves a woman who says he drugged and assaulted her in two thousand and four is first
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trial ended in a hung jury in india bollywood actors some of her honors arrive back home in mumbai she was granted bail to previous conviction for killing a rare antelope species twenty years ago it was made by jubilant supporters as he left jail in the city of job pool early on saturday he was sentenced to five years in prison for killing the protected animal while shooting a film and will remain free pending the outcome of the appeal for other bollywood stars also true cues in the case were acquitted. the alerts been raised on a smoking volcano in chile emergency teams have been sent to the buyer by region ahead of a possible eruption the volcano in the andes is one of the biggest and most active in the country will be keeping has been used as a way of helping afghanistan's economy and to counter the opium trade was also gives women the chance to earn money in a country where many rarely work outside their homes and one female student is now
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running her own successful honey business and reports. the business of bees is humming for a nineteen year old student frozen. in a northern afghan village where few women work frozen as bees gather nectar from the flowers near her home frozen collects their honey and sells it making her a rare local female entrepreneur a lot easier to endanger at first there were lots of issues because the village i live in is traditional and women are not allowed to work outside the one i started beekeeping i realize it's easy when i told the people about beekeeping and they accepted it and allowed me to do the job. three years ago frozen got a loan and bought two beehives in her first season she sold enough money to pay back home and still make a profit now twelve of the blue boxes surround her family home last year she made fourteen hundred fifty dollars that's more than double the average annual household
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income in afghanistan as it gave the kapoor going to be keeping arrived in our village frozen showed huge interest and i was happy i supported her because it has been my dream to have a daughter who could find a job like this and make a future for herself the hives are part of a long term project across afghanistan partly sponsored by aid agencies farmers who might have grown opium poppies are encouraged to keep bees and collect honey instead. roseanne's honey is sold in this shop in the nearby city of mazar e sharif and demand is said to be growing. here we want the government to stop importing poor quality foreign honey and instead improve our own afghan honey. human rights watch says nearly three million afghan girls still don't go to school and only thirty seven percent of teenage girls can read and write but frozen says she's determined to create a more golden future for herself by studying economics and building her honey
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business slowly rob matheson al-jazeera. still ahead on al-jazeera a welcome sight on the sorry ever skyline why the return of the cable car means so much to people there and sports a best in the tell trenches pole position for the way grand prix far will be care of the details. this is really an attack on its roof itself is a lot of misunderstanding of what free speech is supposed to be about the context it hugely important setting the stage for a serious debate up front at this time on al-jazeera. we understand the differences and the similarities of cultures across the world. so no matter where you call home al-jazeera will bring you the news and current of things that matter to you. al-jazeera. we're heading to the place some deep in the
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true renewables on it's taking us today is on this boat just to get from the search current dangerous mccaughey techno look at what is being done to protect one of the region's most iconic creatures are disappearing because this was a viable option to save some of these population pretty good young techno on al-jazeera and. thousands have been celebrating orthodox easter the church of the holy several in jerusalem at the side of the holy fire ceremony expects here in the old city just behind just the gate is the church of the holy sepulcher the place where christians
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really christ died and rose again. dad and today that church is packed with thousands of orthodox christians waiting for a miracle waiting for what they say is the holy fire. and when the greek and armenian patriarchs entered christ's tomb they waited for what they believed was a light and a higher straw sent by god or the docs kristine's believe. that a flame essentially a light and a flame emerges right out of the stone of christ's tonight getting to the event itself is not without difficulty and not without controversy most of the orthodox christians in gaza haven't been given permission to come here. and palestinian orthodox christians in the west bank have to apply for israeli permission to be given access to the quota that will allow them to come to the church that even
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those people here have been stopped by and surround the israeli police say to my fear of crowd control you know the docks or parties say they're taking it too far and denying people a right for access but now as you can see the flame must come all these flames have been really carry the flame that came from within the church of the holy sepulcher and from here this flame will be carried across to eastern orthodox churches all over the world there after waiting a tele be there for even to take this flame to sow fear to yet a van to moscow that it soon athens and all the centers of the orthodox faith and these people genuinely believe that they've seen a miracle taking place shouted his father with the support. thank you patrick reed is the man to beat heading into the final round of the masters call spurs major of
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the year the american leads by three shots or more e-mail holroyd reach shot a five under par of round of sixty seven on saturday to move to fourteen under for the tournaments malco roy carded a seven under third round his joint best ever add a guest star if the northern irishman wins the green jacket on sunday who have won all four major tournaments and golf and in his first masters appearance since two thousand and fifteen tiger woods finished on even par for the day he remains for over for the tournaments heading into sunday's final round i've had some success so far in this comeback and. i'm getting there. i wish this week would have been a bit better hopefully tomorrow i can shoot something give me some get me to even par even even in the red i think that will be a good goal tomorrow and hopefully get it done. manchester city will have to wait at least another week to lift the english premier league trophy after losing to
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local rivals man united on saturday's city were two goals up at half time but paul pogba scored twice for united in the space of two minutes to get them back in the game chris smalling then completed the turnaround if they had held on to their lead city would have won the title with a record six games to spare the loss follows a three nil defeat to liverpool in the champions league which will now try to overturn in their next outing on tuesday of course it was you have that moment in the morning as the last two games every time their ideas krugel so the shoot for changing targets two goals so when this happened it's so complicated to win the games they were good to not to school so quick to listen to united saw know when to try you are brave enough and you know to stand up again and focus and . mentally the game was over. was all game. so i'm really pleased for the. for the players in this three points are very important because you know
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we need six to finish top floor and. when you go to see a few more with us and we have a little good chance to finish second. earlier on saturday liverpool were held to a goal a straw at everton in the merseyside derby the reds were missing most salo who picked up an injury in that midweek win over man city we controlled the game we played a game we want to keep the remote to too bloody a while the day. will never make sense so it was quite that if you go there i think you have a good game there won't be challenges stuff like that so we have been in the first of that draw means liverpool stay a third in the table but they're under pressure from tottenham who want to stow spurs now level on points but they are going klopp side and with a game in hand and both are a long way clear of fifth place chelsea who play on sunday at the top man city
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still have a thirteen point lead over united and will secure the title if they win at tottenham next saturday and germany bar in munich have sealed a record extending six abundance league a title in a row they did it by be defeating augsburg four one away with five more rounds to spare amos rodriguez and iron robin were among the goal scorers the win gives them an unassailable twenty point lead ahead of shock and byron can still win more silver way of the season they're still in the champions league and german cup competitions barcelona have extended their unbeaten streak in the spanish league to thirty eight matches equaling the all time record it softer a hat trick from lean on messi saw them be league anus three one at home on saturday bar sir now seven games away from becoming the only team to go a whole thirty eight games this season without losing a match. city rivals athletico madrid on sunday and they'll be hoping for more
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heroics like this from chris john and rinaldo after his stunning overhead kick goal in the champions league the portuguese star repeated the feat in a training session. formula one world championship leader sebastian vettel has clinched pole position for sunday's bahrain grand prix the german edged out his ferrari teammate can be right in and he will line up alongside him in the front row where say it is valtteri bottas qualified third reigning world champion lewis hamilton qualified fourth but will start from ninth after being slapped with a five places penalty due to an unscheduled gearbox change. australia's jack miller claimed his first ever moto g.p. pole position ahead of the argentina grand prix that to carty rider braved the slick conditions to beat out danny prodrome zarko spain's mark mark as he was the clear favorite to take a fifth straight argentina poll from six to six. and camera has been hosting the
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first ever african festival of martial arts more than forty countries are being represented at the event with thirty different martial arts disciplines on show including congress organizers hope it will inspire more young people in cameroon to take up the sport and that's all you're sport for now more later that was for the cable cars back in the. skyline for the first time since it was destroyed during the bosnian war as poor to jersey and tells us it's taken twelve million dollars to repair. the serial cable car climbs high above the boston capitol up the slopes of mount trouble which the venue for the bobsleigh events in the one nine hundred eighty four winter olympics it was probably with families for walks and picnics but when serb forces beseeched the city in one thousand nine hundred ninety two month trowbridge became a place of horror artillery touch were launched from which snipers took up
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positions to pick off victims and for years after the war few people dared to venture there for fear of triggering learn mines at three. opening there were emotional memories boy. that is a symbol of sorrow and of our generation for those who remember i remember in which we grew up in the same never when we were rather mysterious and even used to open a float and try to get out of the lowest levels because it was some seven meters high our entire generation was mysterious we love it that is the symbol of sarajevo . dino remembers the construction of the original cable car almost sixty years ago as a seven year old he even helped the workers later he was one of the first passengers . yes. or when i was a kid the queue used to go all the way down the street people used to wait for two
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hours to get a scene. the old cable car used to transport up to three hundred thousand people a year the new one may take even more. but we expect more than five hundred thousand passengers a year and i'm aware that this is an ambitious saying but i'm convinced we can make it for those who make the trip there will always be a reminder of the war the mountain station will be named after the first victim of the sable siege bieber was killed on march second one thousand nine hundred ninety two guarding the old cable car paul chowder john al jazeera. that's it for me peter dubey is up next. a story fourteen hundred years in the making. a story of succession and leadership.
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tells the story the foundation and the emergence of an empire. the caliph episode one on a jersey that. the latest news as it breaks this was a great election about it was going to win but it was about by how much with detailed coverage of the syrian civil war most of them said to speak what is new or different is that each the some people will live until to morrow so many innocent people will die from around the world the bats and balls are several years old the really good players that end up trading cricket academy and maybe one day play for the national team. in a country with a high youth unemployment one of the nice asian helps turn school children into entrepreneurs will go on tell us what i mean by a wide fundraiser empowering them to reclaim their futures weak ation them out of
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a very historic question that is how to make the best case and build new prosperous communities some of them invest the money into the business of school for life uganda part of the rebel education seems at this time on al-jazeera. stories of life. and spiration. a series of short documentaries from around the world. that celebrate the human spirit. against the arts. out jazeera selects hunted.
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