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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  April 20, 2018 9:00pm-10:01pm +03

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ingles from a different perspective. this is the only evidence that russia was responsible for this separate the spin from the facts that's why i don't got. the misinformation from the journalism the issues here go far beyond one data mining company and one election with the listening post on al-jazeera coming. up. whether someone is doing this very. thing it's how you're close enough that it is a certain way of doing it consciously. story in the eye out. this
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is zero. hello there i'm julie went on and this is the news hour live from london coming up . four palestinians one of them a child killed by israeli fire as that i was in sawing the ongoing protest along the gaza border. u.s. democratic party sues the trump campaign in russia and wiki leaks for conspiring to disrupt the twenty sixteen presidential election across the united states students walk out of class on the nineteenth anniversary of the columbine shooting. the basque separatist group eta apologizes for the pain it calls during more than forty years of conflict. with the sportswear it's the end of an era for arsenal as are something announced as he'll step down off the nearly twenty two years as manager at the end of the season.
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is very warm welcome to this hour of news funerals have been held for palestinians killed by israeli gunfire on friday during ongoing protests along the gaza israel border four people including a child have been killed and at least four hundred seventy others have been injured palestinians are rallying along the border for the fourth successive friday and marking prisoners say support the thousands of detainees in israeli jails over forty palestinians have now been killed by israeli soldiers since the protests began last. obama smith has been speaking to protest as on the israel gaza border. they've become a feature of the weekly palestinian confrontations with israel's military this friday the wind was with the protesters as clouds of smoke from. burning tires
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drifted over israeli positions. but it's not enough to stop israel snipers and volleys of tear gas. others who you might think would be put off after previous experiences have instead come back for more muscle to show that i don't care about the injury even if i lose my legs it will not stop me coming back what happened here won't people up and reminded them about how calls we've come here to get our right of return a lot of people states to stop this march but. us. in this with giving something under the they don't that they're both i what i am. i'm here to show my enthusiasm and to inspire the young guys to continue their struggle. that the good you have it was he does every week hamas is leading gaza yassin was visited the protests a prime target for israeli snipers he'd have been easily spotted by the drones
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above but was protected by the crowds below. this friday the calibers moved three hundred meters closer to israel their mission is that when these protests climax on may the fifteenth these towns will be the border between gaza and israel but after four weeks now of demonstrations there's been nothing in the way of concessions from the israelis that would improve the daily life of palestinians living in what i will say were no burnitz with al-jazeera stars israel's defense minister says hamas are wasting their time trying to gain the upper hand in the conflict and. remove. your boy we have all the support from the army from the chief of staff and everybody that something the other side must understand there is a determined and trained army behind which are determined people support the army and he had to their residents of communities adjacent to gaza who had. determined
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and ready to give all their bridge to the army this combination can't be beaten and it is a waste of their time a waste of their if it i expect gaza residents to take their destiny into their own hands and not be led by hamas who are misleading them. hollywood actress nothing portman's feel that a ceremony in israel where she was due to receive a prize the jewish nobel portman who was born in jerusalem and hold still israeli and u.s. citizenship says she's not comfortable a to supporting in any public events in israel and she is distressed by recent events the price she was due to get was launched to recognize jewish achievement and contributions to humanity the u.n. special envoy for syria says chemical weapons inspectors in the syrian town of duma should do their job as quickly as possible without any interference stuff and a mystery made the comments after holding talks with russian foreign minister sergey lavrov in moscow as he tries to renew diplomatic efforts in the seven year
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crisis it we need a political discoloration not only a military difficult lesion and i hope that will be possible for the discussions now regarding the political process i am very pleased to hear what you heard then i heard from minutes the level of and from minister show you that in spite of what happened last week and it is still a very recent there either strong commitment from the russian federation to do push for the political process poorly shalen says more now from moscow. well both men so your lover of and stuff and de mistura acknowledged things had got pretty rough in recent weeks and that the tension had to come down significantly. under mr are the things that got dangerous difficult and
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tense last week there were serious concerns around the world that in the aftermath of the allegations of yet another chemical attack in syria there was the possibility the very real possibility of a significant military entanglement between the united states and russia in syria now lavrov. de mistura i think quite grateful that didn't happen de mistura was pointing to the success of the de confliction lines being used between the militaries of those two countries saying that those works and he hopes they continue to work but you get the sense from de mistura and i think he put it fairly bluntly there that he wants the page to be turned are on the duma incident the chemical incident so that they can start talking about peace in syria properly once again but i have to say that it's quite hard to see if the circumstances are
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right for that to happen now there's been a long time since geneva last made any significant progress and we now have a situation where there are of course yet again credible accounts of chemical weapons being used in syria we have the geopolitical tension being pretty high at the moment between the united states and russia and we also have a situation in syria where russia the united states turkey and iran are all vying for territorial spheres of influence there so getting all of these different factions around the table working towards a long. settlement for syria looks as hard now as it has ever be him. syrian rebels have reportedly agreed to withdraw from the last remaining area under side of government control near the capital damascus the surrender of the enclave which includes the palestinian refugee camp will bring the entire area around the
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capital back under syrian government control the army is continuing to bombard the area pending a full surrender deal and that means president bashar al assad strongest position is in his strongest position since early in the seven year war. rebels have also abandoned the pockets of land northeast of damascus under an evacuation deal it's believed all members of a group known as the army of islam now left the area of doomy air in nearby coulomb and rebels have also greed to lay down arms and it's expected they'll begin leaving within days it's in a harder reports now from beirut in neighboring lebanon. the syrian government and its allies regaining control of more territory from the opposition the town of demand is no back under state control after the rebels lay down their arms and agreed to be evacuated to the north of the country to other rebel controlled territories in the north of the country the remaining rebel factions in the eastern caliban enclave have also agreed to surrender without
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a fight there was the threat of military action and this is what the government has been doing it was using the strength of military action to bring about a surrender in this eastern caliban enclave being really strategic for the government because it lies along the main highway between task this and baghdad the government is using this tactic as well with the with the rebels in the countryside of homes in the northern countryside of homs telling them you can face what the rebels of eastern water faced if you don't agree to lay down your arms there is a cease fire in place and negotiations are set to continue on sunday but i still but talks with i still have collapsed eisel of course controlling a pocket of territory in southern and southern to masochists i still refusing to evacuate and leave to the east of the country to the desert and so the army and its allies have begun a battle to recapture that territory so the syrian government pushing ahead with
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the with its military option really the way it wants to solve this crisis by crushing the rebellion in recapturing territory from the rebels instead of engaging in any political process coming up this news hour from london more violence in south africa's northwest province as president obama prose of visits to calm tensions over poor local services while succession commonwealth they disagree that the group's leadership should pass from the queen to prince charles ruff aisle nidal is on the wall of the monkey got a masters tennis details coming up in sport with some. issues not zero. u.s. democratic party is suing the donald trump campaign in russia over alleged collusion in the twenty sixteen presidential election they accused russia of contacting trump's advisors to inform them of a cyber attack at least negative information about his democratic rival hillary
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clinton the lawsuit also involves wiki leaks and its founder julian assange they say gave the trauma team and found smallish they were publishing the information well particular haim is following events in washington d.c. so patty tell us more about the suit. well first you know this is somewhat unusual but not unprecedented i think we should point out that the democrats sued the republicans after the watergate break in and the day that richard nixon left office in disgrace they did receive a monetary award but we don't see this every day basically a civil lawsuit pointing the finger at russia its intelligence services some russian citizens wiki leaks julian assange its founder and also members within the campaign and family important to point out that the president is not personally named in this his campaign is the reason for that is it's pretty hard to sue a sitting president but they have basically pointed the finger at everyone close to him including his son junior his son in law jared kirschner former campaign manager
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paul man a forward former campaign aide. and rick gates and they're going after an advisor roger stone saying that they coordinated with russia to basically hack all of those d.n.c. e-mails there's some new information in this it says it alleges that in late twenty fifteen that there were european intelligence services warning u.s. government officials that they were seeing some unusual communication between russian operatives and members of the trunk campaign. the first time that not only were e-mails compromised but the phone system was hacked into and it talks when this hack started and it goes all the way back to twenty fifteen so some new details in this lawsuit but they're asking for millions of dollars saying that it basically made campaign donors wary of giving money because all of their information was out there that people couldn't work because they were receiving death threats because all of the staffers information was made public just basically saying that this was incredibly damaging to the d.n.c.
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and they want to be paid for it and patty why now i mean i'm thinking timing wise the investigation is still on go away so what are the chances that the democrats could actually succeed here. well that is the risk in the it will be seen as in any way interfering with the mole or investigation but i think i should point out a lot of the stuff a lot of this information is coming from guilty pleas from members of within the trump circle they've already pled guilty in relation to the mole or probe so there is that danger for the democratic national committee in taking this suit but here is what they will tell you is that there is growing concern in washington that donald trump is looking to either fire muller's boss or muller himself or put someone in who could actually squat basically any of the findings congress has been able to agree to pass a bill protecting them so what this could potentially do if the lawsuit is allowed to proceed is get people in court on the record you know the president keeps saying
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no collusion no obstruction no collusion well this would be a different venue to try and establish what the democrats say is obvious collusion in this whole matter it also does send the message that the people who are in the term forbit who are already facing intense legal pressure and because of the moeller probe well they're going to have to add some more attorneys and it just further encourages them to go ahead and cooperate particle him there live from washington d.c. thanks patsy since across the united states have been marking the one nine hundred anniversary of the columbine school massacre on a national day of action against gun violence in schools this was the scene outside the white house in washington d.c. where hundreds of students gathered in silent protest twelve people in a teacher were killed in the one nine hundred ninety nine columbine shootings the anti-gun movement in the u.s. has gained new momentum since the park and school shooting in february in which seventeen people were killed and again like a has more now from parkland florida. well things were fairly low key here at the
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marjory stoneman douglas high school the school has about three thousand students less than one hundred walked out of their classrooms this morning that's because many more want to stay inside and carry out what they call a day of service that means registering people to vote calling their senators to apply political pressure but of course these students have not been alone today there's been more than two thousand demonstrations from maine all the way to hawaii we've seen people leaving their schools in droves in states across the country this is the generation that's really been affected by gun violence particularly in schools one study i read this morning said that two hundred thousand children have been affected since the columbine massacre of nineteen years ago but little has changed legally these students really want to apply pressure to the politicians that's why they're registering people to vote in the midterm elections ultimately this generation will grow up fairly fast and they are bound to vote on this one issue because their demands are pretty clear they want to see a ban on assault rifles increased background checks and ultimately this generation
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these students that have been so badly affected by gun violence don't want to see anyone else lose their lives the basque separatist group eta has apologized for the suffering caused to victims and their relatives during its forty year campaign of violence with an eight hundred people were killed in bombings and shootings carried out by the group during its battle for an independent state northern spain and southwest france charlie angela reports. after decades of violent an apology for this car bomb attacks shootings and assassinations in the name of independence i better an acronym that stands for basque homeland and freedom started as a student movement opposed to general franco's military dictatorship that went on to become one of europe's most violent and enduring armed groups from one thousand nine hundred eighty eight to two thousand and ten it killed more than eight hundred twenty people nearly half of them civilians. or for that. we are
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aware that during this long period of struggle we have created a lot of pain including many damages for which there is no solution we want to show respect for the dead those injured and the victims that were caused by the actions of eta we truly apologize spain's government welcome the statement saying eta had been defeated by the weapons of democracy. this shows others political economic social and international just these last words not for as for all the democrats if. with the help of the state security forces judges and the international community are at or fell out of favor with the basque people decades ago and for some victims the apology was not enough. because it doesn't fulfil my expectations i think it's a statement where they've tried to justify their acts and overall there's a selective forgiveness which i can't understand at all because we are all victims we have all suffered the pain caused by. the group's journey to dissolution has
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been long. in march two thousand and six after announce its first permanent ceasefire and in response the socialist government started peace talks but nine months later at a bombed a car park at the droid's international airport killing two people then in twenty ten the group announced it would not carry out further attacks a year later it declared a permanent ceasefire. and twelve months ago with the help of mediators it led french authorities to a cache of weapons explosives and munition now completely disarmed this apology is the last step before its full dissolution expected in may the healing process will take many years charlie angela al-jazeera. perform on this we're joined by skype from madrid by happy to say the who's a spokesperson for the basque victims of terrorism association star thank you very much for joining us on the program so the government welcomed the apology how do you feel well i think liz apologies part of the propaganda state
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strategy they ever is going through and has been going through in the last couple of years they one t.v. stain is the they don't want to be seen as a terrorist organization and they want. the entire process to make. it make up operation make the reparation so you know it's not like the most. urgent after since when is the marker see. past three and liberators what is it that they want from from the spanish government in your view well i think the key point. is momentous they like all the scenarios that are in. jails in spain. they want to. keep these months of the organizations or the government as an excuse
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to bring them back to the best country and. leaving them so they can so they can be free in a couple of years. what's it like for those who lost family to listen to this apology is that hollow for them to. no it is not it they don't even consider it a proper apology because they. say said at the beginning they are doing this is part of the new stick to be a stand is the nice guy. they are not doing if the specs and that you have. you feel very sorry for something. that you have a serious answer to i just want to know what is public opinion more broadly on the air paula to people agreeing with you are is there are a kind of why you spread difference of opinion yeah and no the spawn of satan is
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divided of course because this is the it's a it's it's been a very long it ten or a history and everyone is looking tired of of what they've been doing and they've been snaking and persecuting the people on day by being very. many many dissents types leave their country so they sustain a very strong and deeply concerning issue in spiny space in history so if you want a close one it is a good one and. for a big part of spanish public opinion piece they surveyed igneous but they picked tennis and by standing with the victims they say it's not enough and it's very humiliating they are doing days we descend words on the same frame meaning that they've used in the last thirty years just talking about days it is mostly war and conflict between two parts and we have a team and a strategy and the rest of spank is to remember that if. i was killed people all
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around the country. if. you get people just like and persecuted because of their i.d.'s. laid out in spanish and stated so like. by the spaniards a little painting went to well political defeat of this project and what they living how they balmaceda their joining me live on skype i thank you thank you very much so that for this president has visited northwest province to quell violent protests over poor local services so around the poles or who cut short a trip to the u.k. because of the unrest we're short locals say i was there to listen when than twenty people have been arrested since the demonstrations began in and around the city of my king on wednesday play survive rubber bullets to disperse crowds who in turn
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have set cars alight and set up roadblocks from catherine soy is in marketing the capital of northwest province around the poles us held an urgent meeting with leaders of his a.n.c. party. so we're right outside the heritage house where the president has been meeting with the provincial leadership of the governing party and see he wants this issue resolved as quickly as possible so right here we have most of the people who are businessmen who says that their buildings their shops were destroyed and looted during the protests we also have people who have grievances the project started on wednesday and with you know people say that they are very frustrated they're angry by the state of service delivery they want good housing jobs and they're also angry about corruption that his has been leveled against the top leadership and particularly against the premier who has been accused with
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a some in his administration of having this corrupt dealings with the infamous gupta brothers in a particularly a case involving medical supplies so the people want him to step down and that's why the president is here in this meeting i think he's going to be trying to be pushing for a consensus by the result lot of pressure for the premier to resign and many of these people are saying that he needs to resign that he has not done his job as he should. that the heir to the british throne prince charles will succeed queen elizabeth as the next head of the commonwealth the announcement came after talks between leaders of the fifty three member states at windsor castle john hall reports from london. the heads of government were visibly impressed as they strolled through windsor castle it was part of a show of pomp and royal splendor that only the u.k. can learn on experience is the prime minister to resign mary will hope they
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remember and she seeks closer ties with commonwealth countries after brics it. no other organization has our geographical and cultural diversity while giving all made. an equal role an equal voice and an equal standing and this week we have come together to reach a series of shared commitments that will help to build a more secure sustainable more prosperous and fairer a future for all and it was a significant victory for the u.k. to get the endorsement of commonwealth leaders for prince charles to eventually succeed queen elizabeth his mother as head of the alliance founded by her father george the sick almost seventy years ago that week was marred by outrage over britain's failure to recognise the citizens' rights of caribbean migrant workers the so-called windrush generation that came to the united kingdom at the government's invitation sixty years ago but they were also commitments to
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cybersecurity to free trade fighting climate change and malaria and there was support for former members in bob was renewed efforts at democracy it's representative was told that a free and fair election this year might win it re entry to the club elizabeth has been head of the commonwealth for sixty six years and since she's largely given up foreign travel it seems likely that this is the last heads of government meeting that she will attend and with that in the air it was perhaps inevitable that they'd be questions about the future and purpose of what members prefer to call the family of nations critics have suggested that this alliance in search of meaning money stand more on its own merits with a move away from the monarchy prince charles will bring consistency some might say stability but he's unlikely to bring change jonah whole al-jazeera london there's lots more still to come this hour the scars of ethnic conflict why many refugees from the democratic republic of congo politicians plan the violence that destroyed
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lives. it's the end of the road for. as nepal gets tough on traffic in the new orleans pelicans. find my m.b.a. pay off and i will have the details. welcome back across the levant and western parts of asia we've got quite a weather systems at the moment there's been some snow clearing away across the eastern areas well a cloud around the caspian sea region and we're also seeing this area of low pressure pushing across turkey and that's going to continue to move further east during the course of sunday pushing down into parts of iran and iraq and the bank could see some showers the eastern side of the matter train not looking too bad of
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a stage the flows coming from the north to keep the woman the moment twenty degrees the high in beirut here in the arabian prince has all its final moments bill is thirty nine degrees in mecca on saturday temperatures here in doha just on the rise to back up to thirty six degrees but time to get through to sunday and similar around the rest of the gulf states so i said across into southern portions of africa where here we've got to find conditions across much the region little bit of cloud around the eastern cape otherwise you've got to get quite a long way north into well up towards tanzania and kenya before you start to see sniffin charis much of zambia dr fine same goes the bulk of angola coming south it's looking fine across namibia plenty of sunshine here fine day right across botswana and then as we head into south africa should be fine in cape town with a maximum temperature of twenty degrees.
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three big stories generate thousands of headlines copper each with different angles from different perspectives. this is the only evidence that russia was responsible for the separate the spin from the facts that's why i don't got the states or the misinformation from the journalism the issues here go far beyond one data mining company and one election with the listening post on al-jazeera discover a wealth of award winning programming from around the globe challenge your perception but i was hearing sounded so far fetched that i thought there was lives but lo and behold it was groundbreaking documentary. fearless journalism a life then reality. see the world from a different perspective on al-jazeera.
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oh mind of the top stories. for palestinian protesters have been killed by israeli gunfire one of them a child during ongoing protests along the israel border. special envoy to syria says chemical weapons inspectors in the syrian town of should do their job as quickly as possible and without any interference and the us democratic party campaign russia and wiki leaks over alleged collusion in the twenty sixteen presidential election. survivors of ethnic violence in the democratic republic of congo of told their villages were subject to mass killings wait and arson the u.n.
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says more than one hundred thousand people fled northeast and to report this year travel to the area and spoke to some. rochelle good to see will never know her two older sisters militia killed them with machetes before cutting her. family in this camp for displaced people in the democratic republic of congo they fled their village when the militia were attacked who ran into more fighters down the road also cut off her sister's arm her father told us how his wife was killed about among the new ways to learn i was running behind my wife and children they grabbed me and started cussing me with machetes my wife started causing her to she was pregnant and so they cut the baby from her stomach many of the people in the camps tell similar stories of attacks by men from the lendu ethnic group we went to some of the villages day fled these are the remains of one
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family's home they fled when the attackers came some of their possessions were left behind. set the house on fire and they did the same in the house next door as well another family lived here and they ran a business they were repairing motorcycles and selling spare parts also completely destroyed. and it's a similar story of destruction as you go down the street. many of the homes on this side belong people from the hammer ethnic group they weren't there any targets just across the road homes and businesses belonging to ethnic lenders were destroyed as well. as being conflict between the two ethnic groups in the past in the one nine hundred ninety s. in two thousand uganda and rwanda the congolese government took control of eastern congo in a turi hammer and lendu militias were their proxies tens of thousands of civilians were killed but now low kind of safari told us there is no conflict between the two groups he's a lendu who says he he does have
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a neighbors here in his house when the militia are attacked like many he thinks politicians planned the violent to further postpone congo's over to elections what they were waiting for elections so we can have new leadership this is our will but the killing started without reason this was already prepared for linda and him are to start killing each other i consider this a deliberately planned conflict. the government denies this since the attacks began it sent soldiers to take control of the villages. it's difficult to identify the enemy right now army intelligence working to identify who killed and burned houses and who was behind the massacres we've arrested some alicia who are already facing justice. the army says the area is now secure and people should return some have many more have not because they still don't feel safe because they have nothing left to return to malcolm webb al-jazeera it tory province in the democratic
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republic of congo. indonesian fishermen have rescued a boat load of a hinge of muslim refugees thousands of kilometers from their homeland the group of about one hundred was brought to shore in the chip province it's not clear how long they'd been at sea but they were reportedly weak and moen nourished about seven hundred thousand ranger fled me and most rakhine state mainly by land since the military crackdown started all this heavy rain has flooded refugee camps in bangladesh where hundreds of thousands of ranger are sheltering daphne cook from save the children says work is continuing to ensure the refugees are kept dry and safe. so we've just started what is the crazy monsoon period here in cups is bizarre so that means we've had a downpour of rain because today i've been here for five months this was the first down four of rain i've seen since december and it immediately quoi just minor
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flooding in the cans and mighty passageways to start so so we're seeing a new phase of of misery just end on the captain of this bizarre day today this is going to have an enormous impact from things like access so walking around the camps basically people walk on what is hard date clay what i saw yesterday was that when the rain fell on the clay it became much so even just getting from a to b. a is now going to become difficult we've been reinforcing hillsides so that they're now covered in sandbags and most importantly we've been looking after the needs of children so children as i'm sure you would imagine are the most vulnerable in these situations save the children if you're working around the clock to help prepare local communities would be strengthening hillsides with sandbags and with is to make sure that people can still access critical services when the rain stopped
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we've been providing children with the supports they need to make sure they can keep back sixteen education and vital places to be safe and we've been distributing things like show tickets to make sure people can strengthen their homes against what we expect to be trench will rain over the next six months there's been a twist in the trial of two mean larger in this been covering the range of crisis with the policeman telling the court they were lured into a trap while loney and sure of the reuters news agency are accused of violating a state secrets law by acquiring official documents they face up to fourteen years in jail but the policeman who was appearing as prosecution witness. one of his senior officers had ordered colleagues to hand over the documents to entrap the journalists so noronen you know we're very surprised the truth has been revealed in this way we thought from the beginning this case was a set up but we didn't expect the police would testify like we have this testimony will be a very strong support for the defendant's case you know you know. the prosecution
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witness testified today and he testified the truth i want to say that the truths are coming out as he testified about how the police brigadier general trapped us it is coming out that no one can do unfair things to us no one should suppress us and the media i believe that the truth and justice will be coming out soon north and south korean officials can call each other directly thanks to a newly installed hot line south korea's presidential blue house in north korea's state of affairs commission test at the hotline for four minutes some preparation for expected talks between south korean leader in north korea's kim jong un next week. the balls government is banning all public vehicles that are more than twenty years old and a drive to combat air pollution some say the move is unfair on people who rely on their vehicles to make a living so being extra strong ports from the capital. that is traffic can be
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a nightmare and often the pollution levels exceed that of larger cities like new delhi and b.g. you know demolished pollution in accidents in the past government started enforcing an old decision to ban public vehicles that are more than twenty years old last year public vehicles alone response before more than seven thousand major and minor accidents at the top of the valley. twenty year old vehicles were banned from the city two years ago but the ban has now been imposed across the country according to the department of transportation as many as sixty thousand vehicles will be taken off the roads because of this decision. just a few hours outside gottman do in bank village there are a few buses transferring locals drivers here are happy that the ban has just come into effect but i know why it's dangerous to run all the verses on these roads bricks and a student can fail and there can be accidents but vehicles old havana twenty years three hundred thirty years are you still operating i don't hear but the decision
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has upset some transport entrepreneurs' who are often accused of acting like cartels just last month the comment ended their monopoly on bus routes and allowed new buses now don't trip in your say this twenty year ban will impact the group he is the most. we have for years operating in the hills they cost one hundred to one hundred fifty thousand dollars now we can't replace those vehicles and people will be deprived of the services if vehicles are damaged even within five to ten years they should be removed from operation capping the life of big girls to twenty years is unscientific. the pallies pay high rates of taxes duport new vehicles up to two hundred eighty eight percent government officials say it takes no longer than twelve years to recover they invested and on public transport and extra eight years its profit transport entrepreneur say they already run at a loss it was subsidies to buy you vehicles now they're threatening to go on an
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extended strike but government officials say they're not going to back down. on the government. of the government so far has any regulatory and managerial role in the public transportation sector we need to operate our own public transportation system while the metropolitan cities in developed countries we are lobbying and hope to demonstrate all over the country some corporate isn't going to tell us and the ban of all vehicles might not have much impact on pollution but if both sides don't compromise and vehicles are not replaced on rule roads the poorest people in the country may have less access to public transport. also sirrah that won't do for decades the philippine island of mindanao i was been plagued by violence as ethnic groups fight for more autonomy from the government now micio has all the girls back to the islands roots to explain its diversity and promote a message of peace for men the larger meal alan dorgan what ports.
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it is playtime the teacher says and his students are grateful it is not often the case for children of the middle but tribe north. for generations the tribes been fighting for its incestuous land the monopolists belong to the people the largest ethnic group in the country with more than fifteen million people belonging to more than one hundred tribes. the new meds are considered one of the poorest minorities in the world and most of them are in mindanao the philippine government claims more than seventy percent of the communist rebel group that you people's army or you might and last year president would be good at their death threatened to bomb lumet schools saying they were responsible for spreading subversive ideas tribal leaders have asked for schools to be declared peace sanctuaries there are no rebels here the safe place for children
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should never be a battle zone. it is so painful for us we witness the fighting we hear the gunshots from our classrooms but perhaps instead of this criminy thing us they should instead help us provide quality education so that at least this children can grow up to live a life of the unity the region of mindanao has long been held back by conflicts with armed groups from different tribes battling the government for greater autonomy. such that this museum aims to promote unity and harmony it is the first in mindanao that they'll see the history from the perspective of the limits that everyone here can trace their origins from the new muds the matter who they fight for now everyone was a new one and that is what we want. always remember from one source. what we want to say is more going to be overcome this museum aims to be
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a repository of our region's history and its protected war that has divided tribes here for generations curators say they hope that this will start day when you bath to kinship. i am among these children read about forests stars and fallen angels in areas where children have grown up with violence books are a luxury. teachers encourage the children to aspire for more but that's a challenge when the peaceful life is one they've never really known. simon. zero iraq and north. philippines. the german capital berlin is slowly getting back to normal after the discovery of a world war two bombs falling to mass evacuation around ten thousand people were ordered to leave an eight hundred meter reader this area in the city center including the main railway station on disposal exports to fuse the five hundred
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kilogram british bomb which was dropped more than seventy years ago germany uncovers around two thousand tons of unexploded munitions we hear. still ahead.
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thank you very much julie well one of the most well known figures and international football has and i'll still be quitting as the end of the english season. will exit at london club arsenal after almost twenty two years in touch is all men has more. is the longest serving manager in english premier league history but after more than two decades in charge a statement on arsenal's website confirmed the news after careful consideration and following discussions with the club i feel it is the right time for me to step down right awesome vanka i am grateful for having had the privilege to serve the club the so many memorable years when vango arrived at arsenal from japanese football in one thousand nine hundred sixty fans were asking aston who but he leaves as one of the most influential manages in football history also changed the game he set
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a totally new standard a new ambition and ambition not just to win but to win. while achieving perfection to make art out of football vanga won the english premier league on three occasions most famously in two thousand and four when his team went through the season unbeaten they were dumped the invincibles he lifted the f.a. cup on seven occasions but the frenchman was also viewed as a revolutionary for his early use of sports science and nutrition. basically moved the goalposts for everybody else was still doing the same thing still prepare and in the same way he came in with different ideas while he was still an influencer though in football he made. has a fantastic career outstanding personality despite success in england also failed to win the champions league during his tenure was that we were going to have fans
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began to lose faith in recent seasons and attempt to humiliation by by munich last year was marked by protests he'd often ponded his own future on the street i would love to be here forever because that would mean i would be mortar but. i'm not naive enough to believe that views were mixed outside of arsenal's harm ground on friday i was quite disappointed when they're leaving because it was such a great manager holds a legacy in the club itself like aussie aussie when so. is sort of relief as well because he hasn't had the best of great seasons ultimately bangas managerial rain will be remembered fondly after twenty two years he's time at arsenal has just one month left to run elease homan al-jazeera. of list of achievements is certainly impressive his three premier league titles came
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in mind thousand and ninety eight to two thousand and two and two thousand and four the latter after his team went through the season on beat and it was a first time in more than a century that had been done in english football the f.a. cup ahead of the event goes away on a record seven zero cases the first in one thousand nine hundred ninety eight his last was secured in two thousand and seventeen and gas current longest serving manager has taken charge of a record eight hundred twenty three games in the e.p.l. racking up four hundred seventy three victories well earlier we spoke to gold dot com as arsenal correspondent chris with lee and asked him about the legacy event we leave at the club. well still legendary already said he has an untouchable legacy and i think that's difficult to argue with once so many things for all snow he's revolutionized english football now all the managers who come in we've seen the
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likes of pep guardiola antonio com say they have revolutionized english football with the new methods then you tactics and methodology and i think it also can go on to win and that would be the legacy for austin bengal that would be the first european trophy. you know ten major trophies in twenty years eight hundred premier league games at these guys and also the legend there's no mistake about that but like all good things they do come to an end behind the scenes we know that the chief executive i mean his eat us has been planning for this departure for a long time and he's brought in a new head of recruitment a new contract negotiates a and you had a football relations all of these new arrivals of basically signaling the end of austin deng is running all snow the modernizing the club are going forwards the only thing left really to change was the manager. and i think you'll see in the next few weeks that the tributes are going to be pouring in for us and. i think his
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legacy is going to be tarnished i think what he's done for the club thing this football will never be repeated. alex ferguson is kind of on the pall of awesome that your terms of what he's achieved and trophies and silverware and everything like that but also and then go obviously a legend of the english game that awsome. tennis now world number one rafael nadal has edged closer to a record with extend an eleventh title at the monte carlo masters the spaniard thrashed wald number seven to reach the semifinals dropping just two games to the austrian this is just in the da second tournament of two thousand and eighteen also he injured his head january's st. i think. from boston march this afternoon. difficult to imagine much going by what they did this afternoon on. skipping court of when i was running the court taking the ball
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early with the bark and so in general terms i i think it went great so very happy to be in the semifinals again sorry for dominic you're going to get a good friend. but i'm going to make a lot of time he's one of the real candidates to win everything that he's going. on except for on the dollar as well number five going to god demeter off the ball carrying belgium's david to go find straight sets to advance to the last four in monte carlo for the first. former wall number for cain issue cory also advanced to the semifinals on friday after winning three said battle with world number three man in chile she corey is continuing his comeback from a wrist injury eventually prevailing and just short of three hours to reach his biggest semifinal since two thousand and sixteen. vision. defending n.b.a. champions the golden state warriors are one win away from closing out the first
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round playoff series after beating san antonio in game three you know all. scored a career playoff best thirty points to help the new orleans both there's a beating force and trailblazers hundred nine thousand two hundred to take. three nothing lead in this series your years haven't moved past the first frances two thousand and eight one more victory will take them there. and says this other game saw the philadelphia seventy six ers take a two one series lead against the miami heat with a hundred twenty eight two hundred eight victory three games coming up on friday the cleveland cavaliers will face the indiana pacers series tied at one all the toronto raptors can go three nothing up if they beat the washington wizards and the boston celtics have a two nothing lead heading into game three against the milwaukee bucks.
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and that's a spot for me i hand you back to julie in london someone thank you now fifty years ago the space race was at its height with the united states and the former soviet union competing to land the first man on the moon into the heart of this cold war rivalry game a groundbreaking space film two thousand and one a space odyssey which for dazzled and confused audiences across the globe now a new exhibit in washington d.c. is honoring stanley could break his masterpiece more than jordan went along to take a look. and adventure that ultimately leads to confront is own destiny it's perhaps the grandest science fiction film of all time two thousand and one a space odyssey stanley kubrick's attempt to examine humankind's journey through other aleutian and technology it's impossible to pick a single iconic moment so we started the films and here's the bird. where
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dave. and his life question mark this encounter with intelligence was a transformative moment not just for him but for the human species. collins is a curator at the smithsonian national air and space museum in washington d.c. where visitors marvel at the vessels used to soar above the earth and now can spend a few minutes inside the hotel suite where the fictional two thousand and one astronaut died or perhaps was reborn. but for those fans it potentially is a kind of stimulate to kind of relive that experience of the film in a different way and for those who haven't seen the film but perhaps as a catalyst to encourage them to go and take a look at the movie an artist and fan of the movie created this replica of the set and museum officials welcome to the chance to bring it to washington not just to
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mark the fiftieth anniversary of the film's release but to provoke conversation there is such a close correlation between cultural products like film and television these worlds become entangled right now but it is sort of their kind of lives those world separately but the exhibition doesn't tackle is one of the film's most important characters how the computer with a mind of its own and a threat to dave and fellow astronaut frank the film suggested relying on technology could be too dangerous for humanity a plane recently raised by elon musk the high tech billionaire and inventor could be just something like that i would have spent you know or something it's like includes well the best way to get over spam is to get out of humans. doing this perhaps two thousand and one had the right answer humanity must be able to
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turn off the power switch on machines even though there's no such thing as immortality for humans or is there. roslyn jordan al-jazeera washington. well you can find that much more about the stories we are following head to our web site the address is. al jazeera dot com you can see a front page at story there that's plenty of video on demand and opinion pieces from our contributors across the globe that's it for me jim let's all hope be with you in just a sec but much more. rewind
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returns with a new series of care bring your people back to life i'm sorry i'm brian new updates on the best of al-jazeera documentaries there has been a number of reforms put in price since the program was filmed rewind begins with mohammed at the time when i was in libya i was the global for. like and the other student i was very fortunate to be awarded a scholarship rewind on al-jazeera. you stand the differences. and the similarities of cultures across the world. al jazeera getting to the heart of the matter if. the supreme leader calls you
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today and says let's have homes would you accept facing new realities what do you think reunification would look like there are two people think the peace corps unification is the only option for prosperity of south korea hear their story on talk to al-jazeera. the scene for us where they are on line what is american sign in yemen that peace is always possible but it never happens not because the situation is complicated but because no one cares or if you join us on sat there are people that are choosing between buying medication and eating this is a dialogue i want to get in one more comment because this is someone who's an activist and has posted a story join the global conversation at this time on al-jazeera.

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