tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera April 23, 2018 2:00am-3:00am +03
2:00 am
my most memorable moments with al jazeera was when i was on air as hosni mubarak fell with the crowds in tahrir square toolkit. if something happens anywhere in the world al jazeera is in place we're able to cover news like no other news organizations. were able to do it properly. and that is all straight. he ruled for nearly half a century. a controversial political figure in the cold in the middle east and one who was never far from crisis at home or abroad. in a two part series. tells the story of canvassing of joy into the episode to. face. at this time on al jazeera.
2:01 am
this is al-jazeera. a launch has i'm sick of this is the news hour live from doha coming up in the next sixty minutes the french president heads to washington hoping to save the iran nuclear deal. after days of violent protests nicaragua's president says he'll drop a controversial plans to reform the country's pension system. but the moment of the bombings of voter registration centers killed sixty three people in afghanistan. and the u.s. and north korean leaders are preparing for an historic summit but most north koreans know nothing about to.
2:02 am
follow france's president arrives in the u.s. for talks with president donald trump with the fate of the iran nuclear deal hanging in the balance emanuel macross says abandoning the agreement could lead to a north korea style standoff the us president has threatened to walk away from the two thousand and fifteen deal he could do that as soon as next month when he asked to recertify for the u.s. congress. what do you have as a bit there option i don't see what is the what if scenario or your plan b. i don't have any plan b. for nuclear against iran so that's a question we will discuss but that's why i just want to see on nuclear let's preserve this framework because it's better than a sort of north korean type of situation so again i'm not satisfied with the situation with iran i want to fight against the listing. i want to
2:03 am
contain their influence in the region so my point is to see don't leave now as a g.c. purely as long as you have not a bit of option for nuclear and let's complete it with ballastic myside and the original containment. well donald trump and president mccrone do have a special kind of chemistry he gets on better with him than perhaps any other european leader but that may not be enough to stop america walking away from the iran deal donald trump has been against the deal for a very long time those critics will say it's reflexive because it's iran and also that he's never actually read the iran deal but he opposed it when he was candidate trump a soon as he walked into the white house he said that he would like to see it scrapped he has renewed it as he has to do under american law but the last time he did that he said he wasn't going to do another time and he put pressure on his european allies to come up with some sort of solution that would address his main concerns
2:04 am
which are iran's ballistic missile testing and also its growing influence in the middle east but they're really and have not been just clearing the field to let others talk they have been giving interviews to american t.v. as well in the last few hours the iranian foreign minister appeared on one of the main t.v. networks and he made the point that america has got an obligation to follow through on this deal that others have signed it and if they break the deal then they would consider the deal absolutely broke it and he suggested that if that was the case then iran could could renew its nuclear program at a much faster pace than we've seen in the past we have put a number of options for ourselves and those options are ready including options that would involve. resuming at a much greater speed or nuclear activities. and those are all. envisage within the dea and those options ready
2:05 am
to be implemented and we would make the necessary decision. when we see fit. you have to remember that donald trump also has john bolton has his new security advisor someone who suggested the should be regime change in iran and also he would like to see my pompey are confirmed as his new u.s. secretary of state has come cia director who spoke in a quite forcibly on the iran deal in the past but it won't just be negative voices that donald trump will be hearing in the coming days until america the german chancellor will also be in tone and on don't totally she'll be saying to donald trump that this is a deal that the u.s. should not be walking away from the let's me now to his saying was savvy and he was the spokesman for iran during the nuclear negotiations with the international community from two thousand and three to two thousand and five and he joins me now from princeton new jersey via skype thanks very much for being with us so if any
2:06 am
european leader is going to convince president trying to stick with this emmanuel macross seems to be the man best equipped to do that can he succeed though given what president trump has said about this deal in the past. i believe you are in a wrong when he really read the nuclear deal. president trump because there's no traffic and the united the car has a really undermine the implementation of the deal therefore encouraging president to drop this the is not enough the need to push him to encourage him to implemented the correctly precisely timely. or ridiculous has failed completely precise implementation of the now europeans are going to give more concession to president ram to bring more sanctions on the side and the regional
2:07 am
issues which will ahead of this if you're a true be completely we can. and would have a president trying to undermine the more i think there will be europeans are negotiating the president's wrong he's completely wrong because they need ferrous to guarantee the implementation of the nuclear the legitimacy would be prefectly pretty is there it is not the case yet though the us has fairly nardil going to give more concession to the us to bring more sanctions to bring more. problems for implementation of the g.c. the way alright so if there if there are areas where implementing this deal could be strengthened in a way that keeps the us on board what would they be. see i believe president
2:08 am
macron has not. yet to write a lesson from the nuclear the nuclear crisis between iran and iran and their war continued for twelve years when they decided specifically president obama decided to engage constructively to have peaceful negotiation to have mutual respect then they could settle or one of them was important and and critical issues between iran and the west practically after lucian one hundred seventy nine now president macaroni saying we should keep the deal and we should fight with iran in the region the lesson from disappearing there is if you were engaged constructively with iran you would be able also to have to resolve the regional crisis it would cooperate for peaceful management of the
2:09 am
regional crisis but if you are going to fight with iran in the region in detention the animosity between on under us would increases and definitely sooner or related we will witness that their own nuclear. and if if the president trying to decide to walk away from this the i know there's a lot of ifs in this conversation but that's the nature of what we're dealing with here or what what's that going to do then for north korea and the prospects of an agreement between north korea and the u.s. i mean from from from their point of view why why would they want to trust. the u.s. after something like this. i believe are really north korea and they have a lot of lessons from. the nuclear deal oh well just in so all in a meeting discussing north korea an iranian nuclear deal and i said in the meeting there are already if north koreans the money to order two years implementation of
2:10 am
the they would see how americans frequently has why elated that the there for are really there are a lot of lessons for north korea to know how to negotiate with the militants the base for negotiation with the u.s. should be try to leave based on distrust because the u.s. has practically proved now if the president is going to draw from the first a while. based on articulate thirty six of the nuclear deal iran or so would be authorized to drop them for oil against the drug war based on article thirty six it would happen. second if president wrong with drugs after two years of the u.s. failure for a fool complete precise implementation of the deal after two years if they've ijaw then how north korea can trust the us for
2:11 am
a deal which normally should be would be implemented for minimal a decade get to speak with your hussein was savvy and joining us from new jersey thank you you thank. now in nicaragua president daniel ortega says he will withdraw the proposed pension reforms that sparked a wave of violent protests that killed twenty six people dozens of shops in the capital managua were looted as the protests entered their fifth day he said been criticised for their heavy handed response to demonstrations including the use of live ammunition a journalist is among those killed in the clashes and held the hohner was shot dead while reporting live on facebook one of his colleagues blames a government sniper. john harmon has been following this story for us from mexico city so john this would appear to be a change in tone and from the from the nicaraguan president.
2:12 am
it certainly is it's a climbdown it's difficult call it anything different from that but also what's important and interesting isn't just what he said but who was around him when he said it yesterday president came out to give quite an uncompromising speech and he was flanked by his police chief and also by military personnel this time around he came out a couple of hours ago and he was flanked instead by business leaders and that may be a sign not just of the softening of approach but that the president and his government need to find some allies in this the business community which is powerful in the could arguably usually been on the same page as him but there's been a bit of a rupture since yesterday in which they began to side with the protesters and saying that they wouldn't dialogue with the government until they stop the heavy handed tactics so this might be an attempt to get them back on side yet to see if it will succeed the government's also been under pressure from the international community the state the public from the u.s.
2:13 am
came out and criticized their tactics today the pope's also expressed concern the european union and the u.n. also so president the president or take a nice to find some allies in this and are these. no tess all about the pension. pension reforms or is there more to it than that. well as she said this is what sparked the most but it's become a lot more to them especially by the students which is really the motor drive in these protests there's been political tensions in nicaragua for quite some time with a lot of people thinking the president will take has been undermining the democratic institutions to keep himself and his government in power and that's included family members which including his vice president who's also his wife so those sorts of tensions continue in the country in the students especially saying that they're going to carry on with this isn't going to be the end of it this concession from
2:14 am
the president what's going to be interesting is that tomorrow or monday afternoon they planned march by the private sector who we were talking about a little bit earlier could be interesting to see if they go ahead with that march right about how many people turn up and if that means a shifting in the turning of the tide and weakening of these protests with they continue to support this movement. john home and live for us there in mexico city thank you of votes are being counted in paraguayans presidential with preliminary presidential election with preliminary results putting matter your up to ben meters from the ruling colorado party ahead with forty eight percent his main rival with rayna legnani has forty two percent of the vote with around a fifth of ballots counted anita's pledged to support the pro-business policies of outgoing president horace you're carter's. in afghanistan a bombers have attacked voter registration centers killing sixty three people and
2:15 am
injuring more than one hundred others a number of centers have been targeted since they opened last week ahead of parliamentary and district elections later this year in the latest attacks fifty seven people were killed in kabul when a suicide bomber blew himself up at the entrance of a center there and north of the city in battle and privates and explosive place near another voting center killed six people from the same family on friday government hit a voter registration center in back this province killing a police officer a day earlier our men killed two police officers in jalalabad city as they guarded a voter registration center and on tuesday attackers kidnapped three employees and two policemen from a voting center in hor province catcha lopez whole diane reports on the latest attacks. police say a suicide bomber set off explosives at the doorway of a border registration center in kabul for afghans receive identification cards for the elections in october and i'm going to use them when i arrived at the scene we
2:16 am
helped many wounded people to carry them to the hospital all the victims were women and children who were here to get their identity cards and registration for election. the blast happened in an area of western kabul where many of the minority shia has zahra community live it's the latest in a series of attacks on voter registration centers a senior member of the afghan army had told afghans they would be safe and afghan forces would be there to maintain security at a voter registration sites there's a consistent push in to making sure that people are unable to use the boat if they attempt to register. they'll be attacked on the but i think the issue of democratic process is compounded you know. i mean competency of the afghan government itself being able to protect the the bow to reduce. the voting centers opened
2:17 am
just last week it's part of the long process to get afghans properly registered allegations of fraud have long plagued elections in afghanistan the registration process is designed to guard against that the independent election commission says it hopes as many as fifteen million people will register for the parliamentary and district council elections but the election commissioner at mit's turnout so far is already low this latest blast will do little to reassure afghans it's worth the risk. this with a yawn al-jazeera we've got plenty more ahead on this news hour political tensions in armenia as the opposition accuses the new prime minister of a power grab. report on efforts to revive the u.k.'s forgotten transport network and move goods around in a more environmentally friendly way. and to keep the k. winds the london marathon for a time joe will have all the details coming out late today.
2:18 am
so all is still ahead but first syria's government has continued to pummel a suburb of the capital damascus to force out eisel fighters they've agreed to leave the southern enclave but are yet to surrender they all the area they occupy which includes the yarmouk palestinian refugee camp is one of the last near the capital that hasn't fallen to pro-government forces fighters from one of the districts back in government control have arrived in aleppo in northern syria the rebels from left under one of several evacuation deals brokered by syria's ally russia many of them belong to the armed group jaish in islam reports. it's been a long journey for these syrians rebel fighters and their families were forced from their homes in eastern. and sent on buses to northern syria the rebels
2:19 am
had no choice they were taught to surrender or face seeds and bombardment. color mood in mountainous area near the capital damascus was once a rebel stronghold but government troops have recently managed to recapture most of the area following a military offensive. we have lost the war will remain strong we will return to our homes we have been oppressed for fifty years when we rose against the government we did it in a peaceful way what we wanted was political reforms. we agreed to the evacuation deal to protect civilians so we headed over control of our town to the government in exchange rebel fighters were forced to leave behind their heavy weapons armored vehicles and tanks. it's seven years since the syrian opposition was
2:20 am
gaining territory and advancing towards the capital. now the syrian army backed by a russia is on the offensive. tat tree under rebel control is shrinking and government troops have the upper hand if you weeks earlier the army rick captured the bubbles last stronghold on the outskirts of damascus thousands of fighters from seychelle islam survived and. and were evacuated along with their families to the north. jason islam was one of the most organized armed groups in syria it was tasked with securing the capital should the opposition defeat president bashar assad and his forces. a turkey's election body has allowed a newly formed i e party to stand in june snap elections the party was formed by the interior
2:21 am
minister to challenge the dominance of current president richard. it's founded on secular and nationalist principles and wants to improve relations with the european union they had been fears the party would be barred from running in the june poll because it did not have enough seats in parliament the fifteen m.p.'s from the main opposition party have switched to it to ensure it meets the threshold police in armenia have detained an opposition politician and two of his colleagues who've been leading anti-government protests nichol passion yan was arrested shortly after an unsuccessful meeting with the newly appointed prime minister sergei he's calling for the leader to step down accusing him of a power grab robin foresty a walker has more from yet a van. boy a risky opposition leaders police appear to be trying to mutual eyes dissent but instead the government protests a grodin so it's here rallying outside the police station where about opposition
2:22 am
leader because i said yeah i know the organizer is going to be killed i person the prime minister said. earlier on sunday the televised meeting lasted just two minutes do you use or lose from washington and a faction that got seven or eight percent of the parliamentary vote has no right to speak on behalf of the people. if you do not accept the legitimate requirements of the state the good buy. the main opposition demurred and it was the prime minister's resignation cuse him of a power grab. shortly after those talks please we did and soused because i'm sure you know. that i said she ruled our media as president for ten years and said he didn't want to be prime minister but last week parliament appointed him to the more powerful position and now he's in no mood to compromise
2:23 am
while he is adamant he won't quit his new role as prime minister is to study cnn's legacy as president poses challenges the media has struggled economically for twenty years this is for those really dependent on russia unemployment stands at twenty percent with a third of the population living below the poverty line industries or in the homes of the oligarch business elite including the prime minister and the media's borders with azerbaijan and turkey remain closed the thousands of protesters who gathered here in republic square little world earlier have to return in the boarding they will continue their acts of civil disobedience protests around the capital this movement is far from finished reading for steelworker al-jazeera arabic. and asked right by saudi led forces has hit
2:24 am
a wedding party in yemen killing seven people it happened in the western province of hijab more than a dozen others were injured the rebels say another attack earlier in the day killed six people the united nations has criticized the saudi led air campaign for killing large numbers of civilians a controversial french immigration law has passed its first hurdle a national assembly nearly two thirds of politicians voted for the bill which would impose tough new conditions on asylum requests david chaytor has more from paris. this was a vital piece of legislation for president of mine your macro but it's taken a very long time a marathon in the national assembly it's taken them all week to vote on this and some nine hundred ninety nine amendments were added to this bill but it did pass comfortably but it also created divisions within manual macro's own party there was one m.p. who defected from the party there were several abstentions now many people within
2:25 am
the liberal party the center party the mackerel formed i've called it a repressive piece of legislation but michael has been very clear about why it's being pushed through because in twenty seventeen france had one hundred thousand asylum seekers and that's a record for france and also record within the european union for that year so he wanted to try and separate out the economic migrants as he's called them and those who are genuinely seeking asylum trying to escape warfare or persecution in the own countries now what he's done is extend the amount of time the asylum seekers can spend in detention and also shorten the amount of time that they can launch their appeal now that is one of the most draconian measures we've seen and the party presence parties say the senshi they're trying to undermine the national front
2:26 am
position on that where immigration has been such or a vote winner for the nationalists on the extreme right so he's determined to separate out these two things to make sure the france still is a liberal country which accepts genuine asylum seekers but also rejects those who are just economic migrants now it'll take a long time yet for the legislation to actually be enacted it has to go to the senate and then has to come back to the national assembly there might even be more . or amendments so we won't see this on the statute books and until at least may or june but nevertheless. we're very pleased that at last this legislation has passed its first hurdle of the national assembly the u.k. has thousands of kilometers of inland waterways rivers and canals built to move goods in the nineteenth century but as roads get busy a business is an environmental groups have been trying to revive this forgotten
2:27 am
transport network reports from london. life on britain's waterways moves at an unhurried pace. rose parness pilots pleasure boats and reaches canal in london these ones big like to go back waters of attracting new life. before i worked on the waterways i was close to leaving london i think there's something about the community that lives around the water there's something about water in itself that's quite call me place so mad to think that you can do down here this is a small section of a three thousand kilometer network of canals and navigable rivers and the u.k. maybe can also built in the early nineteenth century joining britain's industrial revolution to move heavy goods such as iron and coal today only five percent are used to transport goods most a simply about farming. with british roads becoming increasingly congested
2:28 am
environmental groups are encouraging more companies to move from wheels to water today there are more boats on the waterways than there were at the height of the industrial revolution but they tend to be used for leisure purposes for living and for holidays the canals have become a focus for revival so whether used to be kind of a national disgrace they now the focus to some of the some of the kind of biggest urban regeneration projects across the country. shipping emits less carbon than other forms of transport according to government findings the most damaging way of hauling congo is by road for air quality and costly to maintain. so why don't more companies use in the waterways water transport is slow only eight kilometers an hour in a city canals. but there's an attractive economy of scale the fast growing ports like this some london's river thames are exploiting the rivers being deep into
2:29 am
allowed massive tankers closer to the capital. britain's waterways were once the arteries of the industrial revolution were the u.k. now poised to exit the new they could play another vital role in bringing the world's goods to the u.k. and the u.k.'s goods to the rest of the world. during the building of london's olympic park two million tons of building material arrived at construction sites by water helping to deliver one of the greenest games in history several british supermarkets are now also conducting shipping trials on the country's waterways many of these industrial relics could soon play a role in steering the economy of the future leave. london. prevented from getting treatment that could save. the protesters targeted by israeli sniper would be. my funeral anger enjoys his own
2:30 am
as the arsenal manager speaks for the first time since announcing his resignation details coming out with joe in sport. how is the weather in the u.s. now is nothing like winter for most part the most active system is this one here this curl of clad whose main function is to produce a lot of rain i think up to one hundred millimeters i think for the southern states in the ohio valley in the next twenty four hours or so this is it rolling through your notice the darker green segments that's where potentially could be nasty thunderstorms don't think it could be worse than that in the still a secular nation fairly obviously from north of that much much will it will happen to the teens to there is still a hint of snow or rather warm him to snow coming down through montana wyoming maybe a bit further south as well otherwise we're in the sunshine the twenty's san
2:31 am
francisco twenty five in zero eight the process continues on tuesday with the rain moving up the eastern seaboard probably sparkie a few thunderstorms again in florida but otherwise temperature is not surprising cooler under the rain we have seen some big thunderstorms recently in not just florida but cuba jamaica haiti and the bahamas but i've searched for figures i see nothing extraordinary just a bit of spring thundery activity they may be repeated during monday equally it is more likely to be an increase in the amount of rain falling in thunderstorms in panama. u.s. citizens obstructed from saving their families as the crisis in yemen worsens some have fled the horror of war only to be entangled in bureaucratic limbo with their lives and dreams of
2:32 am
2:33 am
allowed again you're watching educator a minder of on top stories this hour france's president emanuel mccraw has urged the u.s. to stand by the iran nuclear deal president donald trump has threatened to walk away from the agreement but not crawl says abandoning it could lead to a north korea style stand up. because i was president daniel ortega says he will withdraw a proposed pension reforms that sparked a wave of violent protests killing twenty six people dozens of shops in the capital managua were looted in a fifth day of demonstrations. at least fifty seven people have been killed in a suicide bombing. attack at a voter registration center in afghanistan's capital kabul several have been targeted says they opened last week ahead of upcoming elections. or donald trump is striking a cautious note the day after welcoming
2:34 am
a pledge by pyongyang to end nuclear and missile tests the leaders of north and south korea meet on friday and historic talks between kim jong un and trump could happen by june diplomatic editor james bays has been given rare access to the capital pyongyang to find out whether trump is on their minds at all. this is one way north koreans relax at the weekend. the last few days have been a diplomatic rollercoaster because people enjoy the fun fair in pyongyang they're unaware of much of what's happened ordinary people have not been told the cia director came his secretly that their leader is negotiating with the u.s. all that he's planning a face to face meeting with the country's sworn enemy donald trump so when you ask people here about trump they tell you what they've been told repeatedly in the past
2:35 am
by the state controlled media room for my money grow every korean gets furious when we hear what trump says he threatens to annihilate the entire korean nation is even a human he is a wolf. down by the river they were playing volleyball. this is where i met a young medical student. i don't have an. idea of american people but american government i hit american imperialism in syria i don't like. all the korean people. at the prison oh. no date or venue has yet been set for the meeting between supreme leader kim jong un and president trump one report says the u.s. leader would like to meet him alone with only interpreters diplomats here have told
2:36 am
me that would give kim who knows the nuclear issue intimately a big advantage kim jong un is half the age of donald trump but he's already run this country for more than six years and while the trumpet administration's policy on north korea has evolved during more the one year in office the north korean leader has built on the nuclear strategy he inherited from his father and grandfather james bays al jazeera young yeah. paid workers in gaza say palestinian protesters shot by israeli soldiers has suffered a devastating injuries at least thirty nine have been killed and hundreds wounded in four weeks of protests against israel's blockade the charity doctors without borders says it's treated more patients this month than all of twenty fourteen when israel launched its last war in gaza has been dismissed today is after injury
2:37 am
the fourth become young as seven ischemia that he called. a tal afar you may run out of luck last week he says he's been a regular protester at the border fence between gaza and israel before an israeli sniper shot him after njt the feet six hours after injury can be. an excellent result after six hours. it's very hard for you. to save his leg within that short time eighteen year old attala needed specialist treatment in the occupied west bank israel said no because he'd been protesting. in a neighboring ward use of all crowns a nineteen year old freelance photographer waited two weeks for permission to leave for surgery only an order from israel supremes court open the gates from gaza the health ministry says there have been seventeen amputation so far and most of those
2:38 am
could have been avoided if the victims have been allowed to travel to the occupied west bank but only three patients have been allowed to leave gaza for all of them including used to it was too late to avoid amputation now in ramallah use of other wounded leg will likely be saved. i was wearing a bullet proof vest with a press logo i was seven hundred fifty meters from the events taking pictures as i headed away i got shot i tried to stand using the tripod and then another bullet hit me doctors in the occupied west bank say they've been shocked by the severity of the gunshot wounds. nor it seems the snipers deliberately shot to paralyze most of the injuries or under the knees or is difficult to reconnect destroyed nerves. when we go back to seattle after his amputation he seems perhaps surprisingly on phased when my wounds i will go back to the border and become from where i ended. if he does he knows the risks israel says anyone closer than three
2:39 am
hundred meters to the fence is a security threat and risks being shot bernard smith al jazeera gaza elizabeth grosz is project coordinator for doctors without borders in gaza she says the large number of patients is pushing resources to the limit the injuries we see are very severe was a lot of damage to the bones fragmentation of the bones. soft tissues damaged which includes the master's nerves the arteries which are difficult to repair and will take a long time for the patients to recover from yeah definitely very what happens on the fifteenth of may because the health services are already stretched our clinical stretched to the limit our normal capacity is five hundred we are already at nearly one thousand cases altogether but our regular patients on top of that trauma cases more than two hundred fifty refugees and migrants have been rescued in two
2:40 am
operations off the coast of libya eleven bodies were also recovered by the libyan coast guard near the city of silver after more than eighty of those rescued were plucked from the water after their boat overturned they were trying to make the dangerous mediterranean crossing to italy nigeria's president mohammed who hardly is facing a backlash on social media after here peer to question the work ethic of young people in his country and many are angry he told a commonwealth gathering in london that young nigerians feel entitled to do nothing because they live in an oil rich nation. my buddy uncle and i got on the bus i mean i do with the look look in. one work my daily bread so i was right and i believe that my bed time and i didn't deny to let. you are lazy i mean not doing anything is because they have been being empowered is because you have been proved right what is required to empower doing you working and more about
2:41 am
every young person is this we are very very innovative people we come up with ideas we come up with being needs more being life and. we create a living with. every being rude out of not being almost answered in nigeria and nurses in zimbabwe have called off their strike and will return to work on monday they union said the strike could become politicized and is hoping negotiations will resume last week hundreds of nurses in harare demanded better pay and working conditions after fifteen thousand others on strike was sacked zimbabwe's government has been trying to contain labor unrest before elections in july of thousands of people from pakistan's past in community have been rallying in lahore demanding justice for what they see as decades of oppression protests began
2:42 am
in february after the police killing of an aspiring model who officers said had ties to the taliban an investigation found no evidence to back up the claim the group says thousands of passion to have disappeared over the years all been the target of unjustified police killings of the past june are pakistan second largest ethnic group making up fifteen percent of the population of two hundred seven million most live in the federally administered tribal areas near the border with afghanistan they say they have been the targets of military operations internal displacement ethnic stereotyping and forced disappearances. the mobilization of pakistan's past june protection movement has been led by young pash tunes its lead a month or past eighteen is twenty six years old come out hydro was at the rally in lahore. thousands of papers from bugger songs federally administered tribal area along where their supporters from human rights dog and i'd
2:43 am
a german government action for my hat to support the protect the citizens is basically if you want to write big stand to every pot every citizen in this country there are areas that have been on the shelf in the military control actually since the seventy's and directly controlled but they have been in the crossfire of into and into state violence this movement is an antiwar movement that is has risen against the injustices against a trust that is measured out to older people to the pushtuns heart and full steam in the so-called war against terror as you can see carrying two flags wired up black folk the black of course said the protests know these people are demanding a judicial commission to probe the extrajudicial killing of drivers in that video
2:44 am
karate or nice red arrows are demanding on thread about thousands of their people who have been arrested there one guy hanging over all one was a senior police officer for the extrajudicial killings in the city of karachi and they also say that they warned all day because it is their constitutional right the people that you can see after and our laws come by and the provincial capital of the one job which is also the country's most ballboy province our ever jeopardize that the government in its. ordered ready. and out of court. order to largely. they're now planning. a korean air chairman cho yang ho has apologized for the behavior of his daughters
2:45 am
and says they've left their positions at the company former senior vice president cho humen is still under police investigation for allegedly throwing water at someone in a business meeting earlier this month career's chairman said the company would turn over a new leaf with stronger management in the u.s. state of tennessee police are searching for a gunman who shot and killed four people at a restaurant police say four others were injured when the suspect travis ranking opened fire sunday in nashville ranking was arrested last year for being in a restricted area near the white house is gun ownership privileges vote by the f.b.i. and police say rankings guns were taken away at that time but his father returned the weapons to his son a witness to the shooting described the scene i pulled up they were pretty busy so i didn't go right inside a way to my car in my cook but he was outside having a cigarette break and he waved at me and i. got out of my car to go inside and as
2:46 am
soon as i got out this guy in a pickup truck pulled gets out of his vehicle and were nothing but a jacket and shot some guy right at the door and then he shot my buddy who was trying to run down the sidewalk and then i dropped to the ground around my car and then i could see from underneath my car he shot through the windows of the restaurant and then he went inside and started shooting police say a customer inside the restaurant wrestled the gun away from ryan king. so at the time that he was either reloading or the gun jammed or whatever had been is when i ran through the the swivel door i hit him with the swivel door. the get the guns kind of g m w was pushed down so we were scuffling and. amazed to get him with one hand in the lot grab it from there threw it over the counter of the
2:47 am
british government is threatening to crackdown on social media companies that are not doing enough to protect children using their sites health secretary jeremy hunt has written to platforms including facebook google and twitter and giving them until the end of the month to explain what steps they going to take all be hit with new regulations he wants them to cut under-age use prevent cyber bullying and encourage healthy screen time a sunday is world earth day an annual event that encourages millions of people to find ways to better protect the environment in chicago beekeepers are doing their bit to ensure the planet's most important pollinators don't die out we need bill whitney who tells us why he's drawing honey bees to the top of skyscrapers. i'm bill whitney i'm a beekeeper i take care of honeybees i'm skyscrapers in chicago the community in chicago the beekeeping you know it's the mall and so there are
2:48 am
a handful of us that everyone seems a little want to go we're talking about tall buildings here in illinois that that flat syndrome were flat and so we think that honeybees well they've got to go out and play but if you go into the western states like california and you just hike in yosemite mountains you go down in the valleys there's honeybees down there you go all the way that the top equivalent to a fifty story building and there's honey bees up there and they're traveling up and down that mountain as the flowers are marching up and down the mountain in this case we've got a green roof top and honey bees are very opportunistic if there is a blossom and there's nectar to be gotten it's going to that blossom the honey that the bees produce here in the city on top of these buildings is identical to the honey that is produced out in the suburbs twenty thirty miles away you can have garbage everywhere you can have cans of pop everywhere and even these aren't going
2:49 am
to go anywhere near them they don't care about they don't want they're going to go directly to the flowers and only visit flowers we have a spring we have a midsummer and we have a fall honey and their distinctive food they taste different this than in that way because of the vegetation. all rights that i had on as you see it at this year's finalists obvious sided in the f.a. cup joe will be here with the details. on counting the cost of a trade war a real war and rising debt find out why the i.m.f. and the world bank a warning of risks to the global economy what saudi arabia's ideal oil price and the castro is. it ends in cuba but an economic blockade remains counting the cost on al-jazeera. it's impossible to underestimate the size and scale of the economic
2:50 am
crisis it's not just about the billion trillion dollars of debt it's not just about the banks it's not just about the governments it's about real people. a story fourteen hundred years in the making. a story of succession and leadership. and josie a tells the story line of business and the government by. the count of. three at this time on a. al-jazeera . where every.
2:51 am
again todd was born now his job. thanks very much elliot kept ok has won the london marathon for a third time it was the tenth victory from eleven races for the kenyan running great and as lee's home and reports the event saw a couple of upsets as well. officially the warmest london marathon on record and with the temperature hovering around twenty three degrees queen elizabeth she still for seedings for some forty thousand runners marathon great and i have to chug a was favored for the men's race and the kenyans didn't disappoint at one stage he was on course for a new world record but slowed in the final stages to vanish in
2:52 am
a time of two hours four minutes and seventeen seconds inside the day for me to london and two in one who might have been made out of the same time it's a combination of two fitness i left my mother for i left ronnie running his life. most are always competing in his first race since quitting track running to focus on marathons the thirty five year old last time after an early mix up at a drink station but he still finished third in a british record time ethiopia's surekha tatted toller was a surprise second no loss to most has been hard work just slip chain on us why the opportunity of your so to come away with the personal person to come with third and to bit so many guys in the field you know we had one of the best schools in america open longer mirthful we ever heard today or made it look easy but it was incredible having. felt the impact of the haze in the women's race defending champion america
2:53 am
tiny was the favorite but the kenyan was overtaken by compatriot vivian sherry art who won a first london title a year after making her marathon debut at the age of thirty three. the day was special and i tried to come absolutely base good bye then. that week there was harm success in the men's wheelchair race with david we exclaiming victory for an eighth the cation while there was a breakthrough win for madison de rozan rio in the women's race the twenty four year old australian of sitting for time champion tatyana mcfadden for her first ever medal in london uli's home an al-jazeera chelsea will meet manchester united in the final of this year's f.a. cup antonia com tayside beat southampton to nil in this semi final at wembley eleven years your elvira marotta with the scorers it followed manchester united states two one victory over tottenham on saturday they'll battle for the trophy on
2:54 am
may the nineteenth it will pit marine year against his former team chelsea and their current manager contact. for we are talking about a two to two manager that we just don't care that you're talking about about a two two winners and when the your mind and your heart of. your blood. and dairies are there they will do we know. for sure for sure. we want to tell you want to try to or to win the straw. arsenal secured an impressive four one win over west ham in the english premier league it was their first much since manager also venner announced he'll leave at the end of the season after twenty two years in charge he says he's been touched by the things that have been said about him in recent days i had the feeling a little bit. to assist life at my funeral.
2:55 am
because. people speak about you hole you were you know so it was it would be. interesting on that front so i don't need to die any more i know what happened. manchester city celebrated with their home fans for the first time since being crowned premier league champions they thrashed swanzy five nil but then their supporters invaded the pitch to celebrate a flare was also set off it could result in the f.a. charging them for failing to control their fans but city's manager isn't going to criticise his team's fans for getting so excited to globalism motional game. i understand you have to be careful. when they feel a shared. so it's better to stay here with us to stay but i'm not going to tell them don't do that if they like to be you know close with the team they show how happy they are rafael nadal has been crowned the monte carlo masters
2:56 am
champion for a record extending eleventh time the spaniard made like work of his japanese opponent kay misha corrie on the final on sunday six three six two was the school to win season dalkeith his well number one ranking ahead of forge ahead thank you so special for me to have a stuffy with me again. feeling about not getting to the scribe especially coming back from injury as you know and start the clay court season again this way so especially coming. usa will defend their fed cup title against the czech republic after booking their place in the final is the annual global team competition in women's tennis sloane stephens gave the americans a two one lead over france in their semi final on sunday and madison keys the only comment here to send them through to the decider the tight finishing up to be to day. is the sixth time in eight years that the czech republic have made it to the
2:57 am
final of this toulon but a dominant before most tricky bits of a over germany's angele herber confirmed their play. the san antonio spurs have routed a clean sweep of their n.b.a. playoff series with the golden state warriors the warriors who were the defending champions well beaten one hundred three to ninety in game four earlier the milwaukee bucks beat the boston celtics one hundred four to one hundred and two to tie their best of seven series at two two now the reigning measure g.p. world champion has won his first race of the season in texas mark mark has started fourth on the grid after being penalized for blocking maverick when yellow is in qualifying but this funny a put in a solid performance on his honda to finish ahead of an yellows at the grand prix of the americas is mark has six straight victory in austin aka athens have been crowned champions of greek football for the first time in twenty four years it's been
2:58 am
a disrupted season in greece the super league was suspended in march after team president invaded the pitch with a gun but a full house of sixty thousand supporters were on hand and then pick stadium on sunday to watch a k. the never diac course to nail the result and sure they would take the crown and end seven years of domination by olympiacos and that's always fought for now more later . and that is it for this news hour and for me has him see care and but do stay with us we've got lots more news in two minutes and as always there's lots more on our website at visitor dot com get the latest on those stories were. they was for the.
2:59 am
3:00 am
spirit. against the odds. al-jazeera selects palestinians. u.s. citizens obstructed from saving their families as the crisis in yemen worsens some have fled the horror of war only to be entangled in bureaucratic limbo with their lives and dreams of a future put on call. phone lines explores the old two legal effects of trumps immigration policies. between war and the ban on adjusting.
126 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on