tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera April 18, 2018 3:00am-3:33am +03
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sometimes they call it in the crossfire when rival gangs fight so parents and grandparents have started what they call a walking us to try to take them to gang violence i lost my son you looking leyland doing yes the go i also lost my but there are more than one hundred fifty volunteers working for several walking busses teachers say it is working class attendance has improved the volunteers also act as security guards. if you are in beijing looking out the pacific ocean you'd see american warships when mess was that somehow time is aiming to replace america and around the world all the chinese are not that stupid these guys want to dominate a huge chunk of the planet this sounds like a preparation for our first president george washington said if you want peace prepare for war the coming war on china part one on a josie. well
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. if the u.n. security team decides that the situation is sound and the fact finding mission didn't begin its work on wednesday. syria's u.n. envoy confirms chemical experts are expected to enter duma on what sticks. out of my office and this is i'll just see a live from doha also coming up. political solution to end this war is indeed available the new u.n. mediator on yemen offers hope of ending the three year old conflict which has claimed over ten thousand lives. japan and ourselves are locked in we are very unified on the subject of north korea the u.s. president six common ground with the japanese leader on dealing with north korea's
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nuclear challenge. stepping up the pressure massive protests continue in armenia to stop the former president's pledge to stay in power. and the former u.s. first lady who said she looked like everybody's grandmother has died barbara bush was ninety two. so his own boss added to the u.n. says chemical weapons inspectors will enter duma on wednesday if it's safe enough he says a u.n. security team is at the site and will make an independent decision on access phone o.p.c. w team the investigators will look into a suspected chemical attack on april the seventh but they won't assign blame they arrived in damascus on saturday and they've called for access as soon as possible so the state media have been reporting earlier that the weapons experts have
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entered the former rebel on klav. well you know. i mean today the u.n. security team and to do more around three pm in order to assess the security situation on the ground if the security team the u.n. security team decides that the situation is sound in duma then a fact finding mission will begin its work in duma on wednesday the decision for the arrival of the fact finding mission is the decision of the u.n. and the old p.c. w alone. has war from beirut. now the russian government and the syrian government have been criticized for what they called preventing the team from entering western nation said that the team was not given access now the team arrived in the syrian capital damascus on saturday both the russian and syrian government cited security concerns and that's why there has been a delay now the o.p.c. w.'s mission is to determine whether or not a chemical weapons attack actually happened its mandate does not
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a portion any blame the united states and other western countries like france for example believe that the proof or the evidence could have been tampered with because when this alleged chemical weapons attack happened the opposition was in control of they then surrendered russian military police entered duma and they carried out their own inspection and declared that they did not find any traces of chemical weapons that were used. it's still not clear when they're going to release the findings but we have to make clear that western nations are not waiting for the results because they already carried out retaliation they carried out attacks on saturday targeting syria's chemical weapons facilities so that the findings are not going to trigger another response but definitely if. indeed a chemical weapons attack actually happened it will be damning for the russian and syrian government the russian military says it's found
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a chemical weapons stockpile the belongs to rebels in a russian state media outlet put out this video which apparently shows chlorine components for producing mustard gas has repeatedly accused rebels of involvement in chemical attacks. syrian state media says a false alarm is said to cause the triggering of syrian air defense systems on monday night earlier it reported that missiles bound for two syrian military bases had been intercepted but the syrian state news agency now says there was quote no external aggression a new framework for negotiations to end the war in yemen will be presented to the un security council within the next two months that's the assurance of the new un special envoy on yemen martin griffiths he was appointed in february and he's also briefed the council for the first time about the humanitarian crisis in the country where eight million people face famine mike hanna reports the message from the
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special envoy that a resumption of political dialogue is essential and he maintains that all parties in the conflict that he's spoken to in the past four weeks agree you know them but the poultry two of a nation on one one in which a single violent event could consume attempts at conciliation our concern is simple that these the any of these developments would at a single stroke take peace off the table the us ambassador picked up on her recurrent theme that iran is waging a proxy war in the region for the opposition in december she displayed the fragments of missiles fired at saudi targets that she maintained were supplied by iran and this year escorted the entire security council to view what she described as evidence. and who it is didn't just figure out on their own how to build and
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fire ballistic missiles more than a thousand kilometers to hit the saudi capital iran is supporting them this council taking action to stop the flow of arms to the who these would be a step forward helping to resolve this war in his response a russian ambassador pointed out that civilians on both sides of the saudi yemen border were under threat when we should know this was the last go in fairly equally condemns indiscriminate strikes his victims are civilians we also categorically reject ballistic missile strikes against populated areas on saudi arabia soil all security council members though united on the need for dialogue and welcoming the special representatives pledged to deliver a framework within two months as one cause for optimism who three opposition boycotted talks with the previous special representative accusing him of bias but it appears willing to engage with the man who's just been appointed the un's
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humanitarian chief warned that the coming rains could herald a massive cholera outbreak and asked all parties inside and outside yemen to allow greater access will food and medical supplies the stark fact facing the council that while political resolution remains in limbo more than eight million people in here many are facing famine. mike hanna al-jazeera united nations donald trump says u.s. officials have been conducting direct high level talks with north korea to try to arrange a summit with north korean leader kim jong un trunked spoke during a meeting with japanese prime minister shinzo who is visiting the president at his monologue of resort in florida north korea's weapons program has dominated talks between the two leaders that have been fears in tokyo the transmitting with kim would sideline japan. japan and ourselves are locked in we are very unified on the subject of north korea we will probably be depending on
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various meetings and conversations we'll be having meetings with kim jong very soon it'll be taking place probably in early june or a little before that assuming things go well it's possible things won't go well or we won't have the meetings and we'll just continue to go along this very strong path that we've taken but we will see what happens. as a matter of fact the united states has the overwhelming military power in the world and by using this strength you have effectively applied an overwhelming amount of pressure against north korea and also as the u.s. and north korea have a summit meeting which will be held for the first time my hope is that there will be a tangible progress towards resolving the outstanding issues of concern this includes nuclear issues as well as the abduction issue which is a top priority for the japanese and white house correspondent kelly holcomb it's monitoring that meeting at toms monolog all resorts in florida. well japanese prime
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minister shinzo abbay has come to donald trump's florida mara lago resort for a two day summit the issues trade as well as security and certainly japan nervous about that upcoming planned summit the tween north korean leader kim jong un and the u.s. president donald trump that's planned for late may early june or perhaps not at all but still the scheduling going ahead and this is something that shinzo abbay has cautioned donald trump against on more than half a dozen ok chanson telephone calls and in person meetings still donald trump confirming to reporters here in florida that in fact direct talks high level talks already going on between the united states and north korea and that summit now being narrowed down to just five locations as well the issue of trade set to come up between these two leaders you'll remember that donald trump has put in place tariffs on foreign imports of steel and aluminum exempting all whole host of countries but not japan this is another thorny issue the two leaders will have to
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work out in their two day summit here in florida u.s. investigators will examine the engine of a sort of post airlines plane now after its exploded mid-flight smashing a window and killing a passenger seven three seven jet was traveling from new york to dallas with one hundred forty nine people on board it made an emergency landing in philadelphia a female passenger was partially sucked out of the broken window before all those pulled her back in officials have not confirmed if she's the person who died it's the first time a passenger's been killed in the u.s. airline accident since two thousand and nine. anti-government rallies have intensified in armenia after a vote to promote a former president to prime minister tens of thousands of people protested in the capital yet over and other cities accusing sarah circassian of a power grab it was president for a decade he stepped down this year because of a term limit really as new constitution strengthens the office of prime minister.
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to maintain his influence i believe that the best way to change the government i am just here to have my voice heard and to let the government others know that i am against the regime. down album are not my president has cheated people he said that he won't rule for a third time but he won't be the head of state but he cheated the people i want justice i want to live in a free armenia. to dizzy and is the editor in chief of eve un report it's an online magazine in armenia and she says the arrests of protesters has only served to increase the size of anti-government rallies the constitutional referendum to place in twenty fifteen a year before that there's a promise that he would not seek the chair of prime minister many in the country thought that this was a ruse for power grab and in fact only pull my when his second and final term as president ended his part of the republican party. nominated his candidacy
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and today and of the vote in parliament he was elected as prime minister fact at least giving him a thirty year to date the army and police issued a statement saying that about eighty people have been detained from what we know most of them were young people and students some have been released some are already joined the big rally today in republics where i think it just fuelled more anger and we had crowds that we haven't seen probably since two thousand and eight june the presidential election here. former u.s. first lady barbara bush has died at the age of ninety two the wife of former president george bush sr and mother of former president george bush jr has been hospitalized several times this year she was often ranked in polls as the most popular first lady in modern u.s. history alan fischer looks back at her life. however bush often dismissed her popularity saying it was simply because she looked like everybody's grandmother
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with her signature white here in peril necklace but she will be remembered as one of only two women in u.s. history to be married to a president so help me god and the mother to one officer present united states she was just sixteen years old when she met george h.w. bush at a christmas dance both born to privilege she would later drop out of college in mali the young navy pilot home from world war two they would settle down in texas so he could make his fortune in the oil business but their growing family would soon face tragedy the three year old daughter died after a fight with leukemia she said she clung to her children even more after that four boys and another girl would grow up watching their father's political career which would ultimately lead to the white house leaving her of the role of disciplinary in georgia so you know anything they do is all right. but someone has to be sure that . standards are captain he he leads by example
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by denying something. and i am the enforcing there's no question about it. there is no question of our loyalty either anyone who did criticize her children or even more so husband would quickly face her quick wit to an icy stare she didn't want a husband or her son george to run for the presidency admits she didn't think he would when she made news when speculation turned to another son jeb. the best qualified person to run for president but i help. all my enemies all his brothers. and their other family i refuse to accept that this great country isn't raising. other wonderful people thank you all for that warm welcome me triac of a political dynasty the first wife to speak at
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a political convention but beyond the campaign she wasn't known to give either a husband or son political advice in office she advocated for family literacy but mostly she prided herself on a family that she said was a true legacy i think and i hope if i have a legacy other than being the enforcer that it will be. along with george a great family a family that will be remembered along with the woman at the center of it still ahead an al-jazeera a show of solidarity for thousands of palestinians including children behind bars in israel plus. technology to take advantage. of the confession of a former cambridge analytical worker how it could have affected the brags of vote.
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from brisk. to the waters of southeast asia. hello there has been a stuttering start to spring rains in china and it looks like they're still stuttering it's dry picture in hong kong wednesday as it is in shanghai as it probably is inching to with nary more than a shower in the west i suspect there's no real development in rain comes thursday but look at the breeze not coming from the south we'll see something on friday or saturday i suspect so enjoy a couple days of fine sunshine that's for the spring warms and green to look out for to the south of that still an active and daily shower regime from the southern philippines through borneo back towards the far south the target and you'll notice that bangkok's underneath cloud so once more the showers are building daily in thailand in me and made out of vietnam your there is a nice green belt that was hyde's born here to the south of the far fewer showers
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and into the into these here they are not dissipate all together is not friction as they were but sumatra is a rather witness place we've seen want to big showers in northeast india recent the they're all the more frequent in the far south of india and sri lanka on the cloud still tipping around the top hindu kush inland of course temperatures are rising and they're rising across a different leaf forty three not to forty one in kolkata. the weather sponsored by qatar airways. a story fourteen hundred years in the make. a story of succession and the leadership. tells the story of this division.
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the caliph episode to. you're watching all jazeera a reminder of our top stories this hour syria's ambassador to the u.n. says chemical weapons inspectors will enter duma on wednesday if it's safe enough he says a u.n. security team is at the site and investigators will look into this month's suspected chemical attack but it won't assign blame. the u.n. is new special envoy for yemen is working on a plan for talks to end the three year civil war martin griffiths will outline his proposal to the security council within two months he says all sides are prepared
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to negotiate an end to the fighting. on the trump says u.s. officials have held high level talks with north korea to try to arrange a summit with kim jong un president spoke at his florida resort meeting japan's prime minister shinzo abi north korea's weapons program has dominated talks between the two leaders. palestinians have been marking prisoners day in a show of solidarity with thousands held in israeli jails war than six and a half thousand palestinians including three hundred fifty children and more than sixty women in israeli prisons more than four hundred are being held without charge or trial under so-called administrative detention according to rights groups one thousand eight hundred prisoners are in need of medical care seven hundred of them suffer from serious and chronic conditions since israel began its military occupation of the west bank and gaza in one thousand nine hundred sixty seven it's imprisoned more than eight hundred thousand palestinians rounded smith went to one
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of the protest sites where families of the hundreds of gaza residents in israeli jails have gathered. there are three hundred forty five palestinians from gaza are in israeli jails and this is how the marking air all of these issues you can see are somebody's somebody is relative who's been in israeli jail and relatives have not been able to go and see and i'm joined by ramsey a cashier who is one of the organizers of that was event ramsey how does this affect family psychological and when they count get to go and see their relatives yeah actually today. the national day for the person in brazil it's and is that i legions and it was approved in one thousand nine hundred seventy four by the set out of south. press and is this actually we commemorate this said they heard of that business and because they'll give you all send them a message that we all was stand with you we all was supposed to we all was we do
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what you have on we could what we can to get them to get you know you. get to have freedom back so a lot of to your families and your daughters and sons how does it affect the families when they come going to see those relatives in prison actually when we talk about this that i just as we talk about medical. and legal action we talk about ship prisoners. and how they don't abide to the fullest union though so this the boat. they make i want to present a somewhat on the spot to when we talk about the family as actually the family as we start we try to help them and it's right to get them released try to. shore reduce the psychological effect that motion in effect on their family if you are shunned by them and i'm just stunned by them ramsey thank you very much for john was this is one of
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a series of events here in gaza leading up to the knock what the palestinians call a catastrophe seventy five of us are of the founding of the state of israel. lisa nigeria have fired tear gas at hundreds of shia muslim protesters in a boost it's the second day of rallies in the capital demonstrators want the release of their religious leader. who's been jailed without charge since december twenty fifth in the head of the islamic movement of nigeria is believed to have three million followers. a former employee of cambridge analytic has been testifying about its role in the braggs it vote the company is under scrutiny for harvesting personal data from millions of facebook users but he kaiser has told a u.k. parliamentary committee that a key backer of the leave campaign used information for political purposes on slieve reports as well personally kaiser was asked to testify as a woman who had worked on the political campaigns of both barack obama and donald
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trump in the united states working for cambridge analytical on the trump campaign she made it clear her role was to target small groups of people harvest their personal information and attempt to change their political opinions a practice she did without compunction then but had now decided it was disgraceful illiad spent too many years using technology to take advantage of people's openness and get well and i won't stand by any longer to observe this privileged abuse of power intentionally or unintentionally i want to help shed light in the stark places and to help people be more responsible in their actions cambridge analytical then moved in on the leave dot edu campaign during the breaks at referendum the company she said told our own banks the millionaire backer of leave so that they could do for the bricks and camp what they had done for donald trump in the end she said believe campaign haven't taken their services but in
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a major allegation she claims that mr banks had taken their idea and harvested lists of his own commercial customers and targeted them for political messaging a practice is illegal in britain mr banks denies the claim when i did visit and the elgin insurance and leave you had quarters which was the same building with the same staff that when a senior scientist and myself spent time with their phone bank i was told by the people. using the phone bank of the individuals that they were calling out of the insurance database it will clearly be wrong for people's personal data maybe help insurance company to be used in a political campaign without their consent and so on the question is was consent sort of given and if not then that's quite that's potentially quite a serious data breach that i think should be investigated fully by the information commissioner like her former colleague christopher wiley she painted a picture of cambridge analytical as an organization which was
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a moral and which was happy to destabilize any political campaign on behalf of any wealthy backers it all adds to a body of evidence being gathered by the u.k. government which is increasingly worried about how the use of data is potentially undermining basic democratic principles lawrence lee al jazeera london slovakia's police chief has quit the latest resignation after the murder of an anti corruption journalist and his feel say the departure of the prime minister and interior minister has failed to ease public anger over the shooting of young could check and his fiance in february john holl reports. another big head rolls in slovakia this time the national chief of police. will step down at the end of may the latest gesture aimed at easing tensions following the february murder of a journalist investigating political corruption weekly protests in the capital bratislava have piled pressure on the governing coalition forcing the resignation
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of prime minister robert last month and on monday the interior minister. if i think that the firing of the police chief is not right it would create polarization of the public instead of soothing the situation on our country i think that under these circumstances i have no further right to be the interior minister that's why i have decided to put my resignation in the hands of the president. but this is already a country polarized on the weekend slovaks in their tens of thousands turned their anger on police chief for what they say is the failure of his force to investigate the journalists killing. and his fiance died in execution style shootings at their home at the time the twenty seven year old was looking into state corruption and alleged links between the government on the mafia in the theft of european aid phones one of the companies that was investigating is owned by a relative of the police chief despite the offer of a one and
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a quarter million dollar reward for information on those responsible no one has been prosecuted for the murders as long as that remains the case the protests will likely go on. the influx of venezuelan migrants entering brazil is causing a strain on its public services it's estimated as many as one thousand people cross the border each day to escape economic and social unrest at home many of them are children al-jazeera has no reports from busta in brazil. a school in brazil where the classrooms are increasingly filled with children from been a swale an elder from the family first comes a language in learning portuguese the school and bowl of beast of brazil in the far north of the country received more than one hundred kids from venice will live this year alone are forced to adapt and they appear happy but most are too young to
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fully comprehend the difficult reality of why they are here. at the nearby border crossing about one thousand venezuelan migrants a day line up to cross into brazil they're desperate clean a country they say lacks food and medicine most are like now year aguilar who brings their children when better not to go there but i'm here for a better future for my two kids i hope they can grow up here they can study a better future for them but it will be a difficult road ahead especially for the youngest. with little money many of the families end up living like homeless at a local park they're in need of the basics for survival at this encampment everybody is hungry someone finally brought some food so they're lining up including the children for many of whom this will be the only meal baby whole day.
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across town at a gymnasium turned into a rudimentary shelter kids who are not in school do whatever they can to keep busy monica cut into a former model in venezuela said she fled her country as a last resort by saying you know when i well i hope to start working. good job and have enough money to raise my children. nations official here estimates half of all the migrants in shelters are children in this kind of situation when you start having child to as many people living on just feet and so on. it's nice. to change. it's a growing migration crisis with an entire generation of venezuelan children whose future is across the border in a new land gabriel's on dough al-jazeera full of eastern resume. memos president has granted amnesty to more than eight thousand prisoners when men signed a pardon which includes the release of foreigners and political activity activists
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. this is al jazeera these are the top stories syria's ambassador to the u.n. says chemical weapons inspectors will enter duma on wednesday if it's safe enough he says a u.n. security team is at the sites that we make a decision on access for the investigators and they'll look into the suspected chemical attack on april the seventh but won't assign blame for the un's new special envoy for yemen is working on a plan for talks to end the three years civil war martin griffiths will outline his proposal to the security council within two months he says all sides are prepared to negotiate an end to the fighting donald trump says u.s. officials have held high level talks with north korea to try to arrange a summit with kim jong un the president spoke at his florida resort twelve meeting
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japan's prime minister shinzo avi north korea's weapons program has dominated talks between the two leaders. japan and ourselves are locked in we are very unified on the subject of north korea we will probably be depending on various meetings and conversations will be having meetings with kim john very soon it will be and will be taking place probably in early june or a little before that assuming things go well it's possible things won't go well or we won't have the meetings and we'll just continue to go along this very strong path that we've taken but we will see what happens former u.s. first lady barbara bush has died aged ninety two the wife and mother of two former presidents was in hospital several times this year barbara bush was often ranked in polls as the most popular first lady in modern history. and government rallies have
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intensified in armenia after a vote to allow the former president to become prime minister tens of thousands of people protested accusing him of a power grab he was president for a decade i mean his new construction situation strengthens the office of prime minister. police in nigeria have fired tear gas at hundreds of shia muslim protesters in a demonstrators want the release of their religious leader abel hymns exactly who's been jailed without charge since december twenty fifth and now an al-jazeera it's inside story by foot.
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