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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  April 28, 2018 4:00pm-5:01pm +03

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that's why on god's power with the listening post on al-jazeera. al-jazeera. where ever you are. he was the world's most wanted man the last meeting i had with then was off to new. bin laden was very nervous about nature had not met a western reporter before in part one of an exclusive two part documentary all jazeera speaks to those who met osama bin ladin he never showed me how to achieve towards me of the west are you. on all dizzy.
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this is al jazeera. and on welcome to the al-jazeera news hour live from my headquarters in doha with me and a soprano coming out of the next sixty minutes huge crowds gather and yemen's capital for the funeral of a hole to lead to saudi air strikes killed more rebel come on does. russia's foreign minister says the u.s. is trying to divide syria as moscow holds told with iran and turkey to find a political solution. more than nine hundred people were wounded by israeli forces during the late shift to gaza protest piling pressure on hospitals already at breaking point. to move into their own base how a new generation of somalis are defying threats and also in a way they fear and. border.
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a saudi led coalition air strike has reportedly killed the leaders and dozens of fighters and gammons capital sana'a meanwhile large crowds have gathered to pay tribute to the who the second in command. was killed by an airstrike last week was saudi arabia and its our allies have been fighting against the rebels since two thousand and fifteen when they intervened to support the exiled government but toyah gate and the reports. he supposes descend on the center of center they're protesting against the death of the most senior official to be killed by the saudi led coalition in yemen's three year war salah the mad died in an airstrike on the coastal hood data province last week. you'll get revenge for the death of the president of the republic. and i have message for the saudi aggressors you bring
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invaders here from all over the world we will kill them and we will burn them to move you the leaders and dozens of fighters were killed in another saudi led coalition air strike on saturday saudi state television says the strike targeted a high level meeting at the interior ministry in santa after three years of fighting and no end to the war in sight analysts say the saudi led coalition is trying something new actually leads to our did you actually develop the. coalition . air strike that you have in. your leadership's about and if you look you know what to be. for your kids will be . the memorial. but it's a risky strategy here the fighters say their mood determined than ever to continue their fight for control of yemen. you know this protest was made for our president
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. and we tell him that we will keep going on your path and we will not drift away his death strengthened us and provided us with resistance god willing we will not drift away. it's a conflict that has already killed thousands of people and caused what the united nations says is the world's worst humanitarian crisis now there are signs of an escalation from both sides victoria gates and be out as they are. now saudi arabia says it's intercepted four people solve hard from yemen targeted the city of james out of the kingdom says one person was killed by shrapnel the rebels though say they fired a total of eight of us took rockets aimed at economic targets well let's get more on this now we're joined by. right here on set she's a visiting fellow at the brookings doha center and author of transitional justice and the prosecution of political leaders in the arab region very good to have you
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with us on the al-jazeera as always so let's start with the killing of the mob and the impact what impact will that have on not just the hutu movement but all efforts to find a political solution given that he was known as someone who was able to reach out to others certainly the killing of a some odd was a blow to the who thing is however they've suffered much more severe blows in the past most recently for example when former yemeni president ali abdullah saleh switched sides from siding with the fees and siding with the saudis shortly before his death but the whole thing is have been able to first of all retaliates and to bounce back and prior to you know the yemeni uprising in two thousand and eleven the whole six wars with with saleh and so they've always sort of managed to bounce back so i don't think that the killing of osama will be detrimental to that with the movement. it's also a blow to the u.n. led peace process if we can even call it that you know as you stated some old was
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the senior political leader of the with the movement and so in a way that could claim well you've killed you know one of our leading political figures and therefore it's another nail in the coffin of the peace process and so it's and it was i believe that someone was meant to meet with the u.n. special envoy more effort so it's certainly a blow to the peace process as well and what do you make of this is this tactic by the saudis that was saying recently to take out a top two three leaders is that in response to the fact that the who the. still in control of some now they are still fighting back they are bouncing back well certainly i mean after more than three years of this war i think that you know the saudis are stepping up their game. targeting higher and higher level officials and the whole thing is as well are also there also it's a stepping up their game firing more and more ballistic missiles into saudi territory i think the message is clear that they still believe both parties still believe that they're the only solution is a military solution but how damaging is this going to be for saudi arabia when
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they're trying to they have missiles being fired into south the territory at a time when they're trying to attract foreign investment in the country and missiles hitting the areas that they want to develop economically well i think that you know so long is key international actors such as the u.s. and the u.k. continue to benefit financially from this war and of course here i'm talking about the billions and billions of dollars worth of arms sales to saudi arabia i don't think that you know it will be as damaging to to to saudi arabia as it would be otherwise of course the ultimate price is paid by yemenis and the u.n. needs to you know change its approach to it can't continue to separate the humanitarian crisis in yemen the worst one since world war two according to the u.n. from the political crisis it must you know push more to lift the blockade to allow the proper delivery of humanitarian aid to the yemenis but yeah i mean so long as
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these characters are in support of the saudi led coalition i just don't see anything changing anytime soon from the howard thank you as always for you to have we appreciate it thank you. let's move on to other news now and russia's foreign minister has accused the u.s. of trying to divide syria into parts so again speaking with his turkish and iranian counterparts following talks on the syrian conflict in moscow they are the top states in the so-called a start up process aimed at ending the violence but the u.s. led strikes on syria earlier this month to expose further differences between the three powers. while we have building options to pay some of the other colleagues are trying to destroy the results of our joint constructive efforts not even following the international law like in the recent operation by the u.s. u.k. and france against syria now involves foreign minister condemn the use of chemical weapons and express support for international inspections.
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we hope that impartial international investigation on site will be carried out as soon as possible and will bear fruit and we hope the overall trajectory of the global community too dear to the chemical weapons prohibition convention act in the same vein. let's go to our russia correspondent who's joining us live from the capital moscow so was this meeting about laying the groundwork then for the next round of a standard talks between the three countries. yeah absolutely it was that meeting is coming up in a couple of weeks may fourteenth and may the fifteenth it will be the ninth time that the three powers have come together here in pakistan or in kazakhstan now all three of these countries iran russia and turkey say that the start of process has made real progress in lessening the level of violence in syria and working towards an ultimate political settlement critics of the standard process
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though say that actually what is doing is hollowing out the geneva process and basically allowing space for the military campaign. being undertaken at the moment by the russians with its iranian allies and the syrian government forces to push home their advantage against the rebels on the ground in syria we have heard in the comments from these different foreign ministers inklings i think of the of the differences between them and those inklings those differences have been thrown into relief i think by the recent airstrikes from the united states the u.k. and france. turkey has not criticized those the only criticism it's made of the u.s. is that the u.s. is still supporting kurdish groups in northern syria and turkey wants that to stop russia believes that the airstrikes against the facilities in syria recently were
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basically an attempt by the united states to throw the whole political settlement off track in lavrov says that that won't happen that these secret three countries are going to work together to make sure that they can push things forward and get the political dialogue back on track in geneva at some point very much speaking. with one voice about the political track but the turkish far. minister. did say that a star was the only relevant process but what the syrian opposition take part for you i mean how relevant can any process be without the participation often of the opposition regardless of how we can do five meant it is. yeah well i mean did the syrian opposition that has taken priority in previous stana meetings there is often a kind of will they turn up turn up kind of situation which only gets
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resolved very late into the actual meeting process itself or from you know i've been so far start on myself and you know we've been waiting for a day or so for the opposition to actually turn up after the meetings as opposed to it started it may well be that that happens again because the opposition a very on the easy about asked on a very uneasy about the process which was another. russian pushed negotiations platform they say the opposition do that both of these things a starter and sochi are essentially distractions from the main events geneva and it's only when people can sit down in geneva and talk under the auspices of the united nations can the actual civil war in syria be drawn to a close and of course it's the the opposition that has said that preconditions for that are that. needs to be moving away from power
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early on in the negotiations process early on in the transition process and yet we heard from the russian foreign minister sergey lavrov and this news conference saying that they have to solve the political crisis without preconditions like regime change very i think that we will leave it there for now to take you very much that's how russia cars on the drawing challenges live in moscow. now at least seventeen people have reportedly been killed in syria as largest palestinian refugee camp just over the past twenty four hours the syrian government is trying to retake several neighborhoods in southern damascus including the outlook refugee camp from isis fighters activists on the ground estimate about sixty percent of the camp is being destroyed just over a week into the offensive. well that displacement of more powerless. refugees in syria follows the u.s. decision to cut funding to the united nations agency assigned to help them the u.n. has launched an emergency appeal to cover the shortfall and is warning that it will
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not be able to provide cash assistance for much longer say no halt of reports from weber's. he was born a refugee thirty years later she became a refugee again a palestinian from syria. with her family to escape the war in neighboring syria it's been hard she needs a kidney operation her sons need medical care as well but the little money she earns as a cleaner is used for food and rent or receives cash assistance from the united nations relief and works agency but the organization is warning that it is running out of money and. i am sick but i have to work i clean garbage on the streets and people's homes my husband finds occasional jobs under what gives us around two hundred forty dollars a month but it can't pay the four thousand five hundred dollars i need for my kidney operation under what can only give me one thousand five hundred dollars. their arrival of more than thirty thousand palestinians from syria in recent years
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has added strain to the u.n. agency it already provides services like health care education to almost two hundred thousand palestinians living here the u.s. decision to cut back funding has made the agency's financial situation worse it's appealing for more money to be able to continue helping refugees in syria and those in neighboring countries. there are almost half a million palestinians in syria at least one hundred twenty thousand of the population have since fled to jordan lebanon turkey europe and elsewhere nearly sixty percent have been internally displaced by the war. before the war seventy percent of palestinians were dependent on assistance they were able to work and had access to government services unlike their brethren and. five percent of those still living in syria are entirely dependent on the services it provides.
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he had a good life back home now he is among those the u.n. calls the extreme. the cash assistance he receives has been halved. or well used to give us. the case situation has worsened i. think about it. is many things children and. they're not just deprived his eldest son fourteen year old is forced to work he earns seven dollars a day warning that without additional funds it will stop the cash assistance to refugees this will only put more pressure on who at such a young age is the breadwinner of the family. and the. protests. that came up to the fence. going on for more than
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a month to return for. the national. test but says it's protecting its border. medical resources have hit rock bottom for health authorities must provide more medical supplies for us to continue to treat patients. i was not fully or properly treated because of the lack of medicine and medical facilities in another hospital then i got transferred to this rehabilitation hospital and i run into the same problems. well after friday's protest as ryan struck six hamas targets and gaza stephanie decca records. this is the first time the israeli military has responded with a military force against hamas targets and what it calls a response to the protests at the fence a statement from the army issued on friday night said that this was in response to
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a mass infiltration attempt at the border fence one of those strikes here in gaza port at two small boats overnight now what we've been seeing here is thousands of people who have lost their fear certainly this friday the most dramatic yet when you saw a surge of thousands of people heading towards that fence israeli forces opened fire but what people have been telling us is that they have lost their fear we can keep saying that but the situation here has become that desperate everyone you speak to here will tell you it is the worst that it has been since hamas took over the gaza strip there are no jobs the economy is dire people cannot afford to feed their families there's four hours of electricity a day if that medical supplies are in short supply the water is contaminated the water you see here has rule of sewage going into it the list is goes on and on i think this is why we're seeing so many people who don't care whether they're going to be facing life fire at the border fence certainly that's what we saw happen on
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friday when. it happened all of a sudden a surge towards the border fence running in a different direction from where the protests have been focused all day these really soldiers had to reposition themselves the army issued a statement saying there was an attempt to infiltrate the border that they acted within the rules of engagement to throughout it. the soldiers opened fire. it went on for quite some time yet. ambulances raced to pick up the wounded. the guys suddenly ran in this direction to the fence they threw stones at the soldiers then the israelis opened heavy fire there are many injuries there really is a feeling here that people have lost their fear but israel has said it will shoot the ball they get right up to the border and the people here will tell you they have absolutely nothing left to lose. earlier in the day
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a small victory for these young boys israeli forces had warned the protesters over a speakerphone in arabic to move back from the fence. when they didn't. to deal with the tear gas homemade gas masks and now being sold it could demo on how to use them these young men part of a generation who grew up under the blockade there are no jobs no opportunities they are stuck here as we get power from a peaceful protest they get their power from them but it's a cause that potations will confront their rifles with our best chests we have rights and we need our freedom. these three seem to discuss tactics maybe hoping for a brief moment of pride against one of the best equipped armies in the world. and this.
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was. for the youth you are the first. to what they want is change to be given their rights and their freedom. despite the dangers of getting not put to the front no one is stopping. this friday has been described by many here as the most dramatic yet because the protesters came right up to israel spends israel's intelligence agency and the army have warned the israeli government that gaza could explode if the current restrictions continue they may be right people here say they've lost their fear that life in gaza has become unbearable that they have nothing left to lose stephanie decker or jazeera east gaza. we're plenty more ahead on the news hour including a bug tried diplomacy a message of reassurance on a long running border dispute it will have analysis on the indian prime minister's trip to china southeast asian thing is that there is to unite against protectionism
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as a trade dispute grows between the u.s. . and sports tensions run high in the n.b.a. as teams fight for survival in the playoffs joel will have all the results. armenian protests laden has called on supporters to resume their demonstrations against the government on sunday. where thousands rallied on friday in the second city you are very calling for passion young to be made prime minister is trying to widen his campaign to other parts of the country as he pushes for the republican party to give up power of parliament what's on tuesday to choose a new prime minister more than a week after mass protests prompted veteran leader. to step down. now millions of koreans have been reacting to friday's historic meeting of their two leaders of the two leaders of their divided opinion while south koreans were
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able to watch the summit between their president. kevin jong on live on television the message across the border was more tightly controlled but attention is now switching to a proposed meeting between kim and the u.s. president our diplomatic editor james bays reports from seoul. across south korea people watching the historic summit closely some were overwhelmed by the images the first time they'd seen a north korean leader step foot in the country the declaration that was signed was a declaration of intent nothing is actually changed yet but it could mean a very different political future for the next generation of koreans. well south korea had wall to wall coverage of the events in north korea on state controlled media a more edited version was presented people here of not yet been told of the possibility
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of the next meeting being between their leader and president trump experts say one of the people closest to kim is likely to be involved in changing the official narrative. well for north korea the all of the media are controlled by the propaganda and agitation department which kim your junk comes on and younger sister who we saw you know company him she also came here to the olympic games she works in that department which indicates a very very high priority for the north korean regime joining the summit president moon j. in and supreme leader kim jong un met alone face to face for over thirty minutes trump is also said to favor a meeting one on one with no eggs a former senior official who worked on north korea both at the white house and later at the u.n. has this advice for the u.s. president a stablish in a good personal relationship that would then lay the groundwork for real detailed
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talks among experts i think is the best way to go and this can be a very highly successful meeting if done the right way. after the very high profile summit the next stage of the diplomatic process will take place well away from the spotlight the lines of communication between pyongyang seoul and washington or remain open as they discuss the substance and venue or possible trump kim summit jamesburg out zero seoul. southeast asian leaders have been warned that a growing trade dispute between the u.s. and china is putting their economic growth at risk it came at the end of a regional summit where economic and security issues sidelined concerns about human rights florence louis reports from singapore. trade and security top the agenda when heads of state from the ten countries met on friday and saturday in his opening address singapore prime minister lee hsien loong warned
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that the spats between china and the us could affect the blow the political mood in many countries has shifted against retreat and in particular the recent trip tensions between the united states and china are worrying concerns are certain countries will have to react to these major external trends u.s. president donald trump has threatened to impose tariffs on chinese imports with china promising retaliation if he does for many countries the u.s. and china other two biggest trading partners on the issue of security members discussed the threat of violent extremism and cyber attacks the ten countries are also negotiating an extradition treaty as well as a code of conduct with china to ease tensions in the disputed south china sea. but there is an area where our member states have been criticized for not doing enough
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human rights activists have said the bloc fails to promote and protect human rights and fundamental freedoms. the bloc largely stood by in silence when cambodia shuttered its independent media organizations and dissolved the main opposition party there was very little censure philippines so-called war on drugs in which thousands have died in extrajudicial killings and their ongoing crisis in myanmar fighting has intensified in kitchin state in the north displacing thousands in rakhine state seven hundred thousand revenge have fled across the border into bangladesh since august to escape persecution by the military needs to pressure myanmar to be accountable for what's happened and to investigate or allow investigators like us human rights watch and others to go into these areas ascertain exactly who was responsible for the atrocities committed against the rohingya and then hold them accountable again we're seeing nothing from us here but
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for a group that prefers to keep a policy of noninterference in the member states domestic affairs that might be a tall order florence three al-jazeera singapore. now china and india so they'll improve military contacts to avoid any future border disputes india's prime minister narendra modi is in china for talks with president xi jinping a military standoff on a stretch of the border last year lasted for months and he also raised the issue of chinese building projects in pakistan administered kashmir which india considers to be under illegal occupation or more he has been facing pressure at home to tackle the border dispute issue with china the leader of the opposition congress party raul gandhi took to twitter to remind morty of the under assault issues. graeme on the web is a research fellow at the s. rajaratnam support of international studies at nanyang technological head of a city and he says that while the us government will stand off between india and
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china of a man this economic relations offer plenty of opportunities for a better time between the two powers. was in sandakan pretty thirteen twenty fourteen we saw the worst kind of last year of two and a half months almost broke out into open conflict and there clearly will be this prospect of yet another standoff. at the borders without reasons we talked about and other issues as well i mean china hasn't been able to directly address the issue of india's decision and rationale for joining the reported actual security arrangement with the u.s. and japan and that was part of disconcerting on india's up with china in november last year india joining the order which signal. you know india's intend to join you know a major powers in computing chart and that was really and all of which are nodes are sort of these things still need to be talked about but one of the seat increases about either but actually ship is that the economic story is likely
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different last year in you know china saw or write it down trading relationship by about eighty percent if you five a bit in dollars and saw that is a healthy sorry. it is time for the weather with everton now and news of a late taste of winter and give up and yeah that's right lizzy were cold just over a week ago so the temperature in london for example reaching twenty nine celsius but in the into that we can we can see temperatures struggling to get around four or five degrees yes something of a change and still take a look at the satellite picture you can see the cloud in the rain that's spilling in from the atlantic is going to introduce somewhat cooler weather for a good part of western europe it's not just the u.k. still tucked in behind these weather systems here there is some warmth in store see temperatures getting up quite nicely into central parts of twenty four in vienna twenty five for book rest back over towards the west well even paris sixteen celsius is a little disappointing ten degrees in london on saturday and falling we'll see
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temperatures struggling to get to around seven celsius so you go on through sunday so something of a shock to the system here i'm sure there's that wet weather in the wet weather extends down across a good part of france into the north of spain even madrid struggling to get to fourteen degrees really heavy rain there into southern areas of france and as we go through the next twenty four hours or so moves further north you see a little dusting of snow there across the peyronie's out also into the outs we'll see some wet suit windy weather then piling its way in across that western side of europe as we go on through monday temperatures in central areas still fairly quite nice day twenty five in vienna twenty five in bucharest even moscow at around twenty three degrees but it does look very disappointing for the northwest a lot of cloud and rain london struggling to get to sixty three celsius with the possibility of some sleet. thank you very much ed still ahead on the mystery of on of to cover could this be the world's largest mass graves of children. and in sport
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an injury scare for the japanese baseball star that's been set in the major league for life. 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 with on. faultlines explores the old to the real effects of trump's immigration policies. between the war on the ban on. the.
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al-jazeera. where ever you want. to have it with the al-jazeera news hour these are our top stories large crowds have gathered in gannon's capital sanaa to pay tribute to the fourteen leader. he was killed in a solid air strike last week we saw the media say another air strike on friday killed two more wealthy it is. russia's foreign minister says the u.s. is trying to divide soviet and to pots has been holding talks on servia but this
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turkish and iranian counterparts in moscow the three countries are the guarantor states in the so-called assad a process aimed at ending the violence and gaza's hospitals are running out of supplies after form. more palestinians were killed and almost a mine hundred injured and protests at the border. united nations security council delegation visiting. the. seven hundred fled military crackdown last year charles stratford reports from long . ahead of the visit. five year old daughter to this field clinic in the refugee camp in. laura's face is swollen and she's in pain. have lived in the camp for a year and fleeing violence in
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a tree against the regime reclined state. but since august last year around seven hundred thousand fled the latest military crackdown on the un human rights chief calls it textbook ethnic cleansing. the military surrounded our house and started shooting from all sides we were terrified so we ran for our lives my daughter was shot but we had to keep running and leave her behind because the shooting was so heavy. the u.n. and aid agencies say around a billion dollars is needed for the hinge are living in what is becoming the largest refugee camp in the world i.o.m. alone is already treating eighty thousand people a month you know they say they are only going to increase as once in approaches we have to have preventive medicine we have to deal with daily real dangers of water borne disease and funding has to be in place now to help protect people on their way through will see you know protection of preventable loss of life and that's
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a very frightening prospect the mainly muslim or hindu had their citizenship taken away by what was then the permeates government thirty five years ago rights groups say the rangers have suffered decades of violence and persecution they say the me and ma military and mainly buddhist mobs killed thousands of men women and children committed gang rape and destroyed hundreds of range of villages in recent months but the myanmar government denies the claim it says it was responding to what it calls terrorist attacks by refuge a rebel group the un security council delegation is due to visit the refugee camps in bangladesh before heading to me for what is expected to be a tightly controlled two day trip. the inability of the united nations security council to take strong action against myanmar is largely because of china's veto power china has big business interests inside myanmar and especially in rakhine
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state myanmar so far has banned any independent investigation into alleged atrocities and it seems highly unlikely that this visit by a united nations security council delegation here will lead directly to me being called to account but pressure is growing on me. the u.s. state department is leading an investigation into claims of extrajudicial killings rape and also by the myanmar military. a repatriation plan by bangladesh and beyond more allowing refugees to voluntarily return has so far failed to get off the ground shim still says he will never return to me and more or less the government guarantees his family's citizenship security and the same rights as other citizens of the country he and his family from. stratford al-jazeera to prolong the refugee camp. now the former president of malawi joyce banda has returned home after
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spending four years in self-imposed exile she lost her bed for reelection in two thousand and fourteen after revelations that the biggest corruption scandal in the country's history happened while she was in office when she later fled malawi and it accusations of abuse of money and money laundering abuse of office rather and money laundering was malawi first female president of the second woman to lead an african country the cash gate scandal in two thousand and thirteen for thirty eight million dollars stolen from state coffers in the space of just six months scandal hurt a lobbyist international reputation found on his poor one hundred fifty million dollars in aid there was still an active arrest warrant for bond a fact that led her to postpone a planned return to malawi last year well let's get more on this now we're joined by a researcher at al-jazeera center for studies very good to have you with us as always why do you think joyce banda is coming back now i think it's most liked we're most
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likely to see the d.p.p. which is the more democratic progress the progressive party in the people's party measuring. is good elections coming up and i think we are most likely to see her joining the forces of the d.p.p. because people's party which is the party doesn't lead before she will do next is in tatters but a joint kind of party between the d.p.p. and the previous party might just. do it for president peter metallica pfizer's you might be coming back for the sake of her party and she might be coming back to take part in next year's elections but would she be allowed to given that even though the anti corruption bureau have said that they have no solid evidence against her police have actually said that they're not going to say anything until she's back in the country about whether they're dropping charges here i think for her to to go away was mostly cooling period and interestingly is that while she was in exile she
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did not actually preach politics but she embraced a more strongly the women and girls issues and that's what she became known for so she merely to an extent to rebrand his solve and take itself out of the vacation the case that she was involved in or accused to have been involved she changed the focus and edward had the former liberian president ellen johnson sirleaf saying that she's delighted that her dear friend the fall of president of malawi is returning home tomorrow confident that the rule of law will prevail that has some pretty high profile international support but as bob does still have support nationally how do people feel about her what people in the split in regarding her. but i think what's more important was when she left my love we had party which was another split from the d.p.p. actually almost collapsed so it's going to be very difficult for her to revive
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itself as a political figure secondly it's going to be very difficult for to revive the political party that she left. i mean she left the solution before she went into exile she's holding a rally tomorrow i believe so we'll be watching that to see what does come out of it then he said thank you very much for your time to be suffocated thank you. now the skeletons of rule the one hundred children have been found in a mass grave and perverse which dates back about five hundred is a sort of a sacrifice to what was then the empire during major floods had a hawkster. this child skeleton is part of what archaeologists ahead in the biggest site of child sacrificing discovered so far the victims appear to have been part of a ritual sacrifice that took place nearly five hundred fifty years ago the remains of more than one hundred forty children were found alongside two hundred young lamas all of them. all the sacrifices that we have found with children aged between
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six and nine years of age and that from ten to twelve or fifteen years of age all have been found with their sternum cut with the aim of possibly opening the rib cage and extracting the heart that was the way that the cim a society that developed between the tenth and fifteenth centuries about euro sacrifice these children this mass grave has been on the excavation since two thousand and eleven investigations are carried out by an international team led by national geographic's peruvian explorers. the sacrifice must have been a societal response by the chief moved to counteract the negative effects of nature of climate that affected its political economic and maybe its ideology system the chim a civilization was known to worship the moon scientists say they were now focused on investigating the victims' lives. now the former president of guatemala. has died in one nine hundred ninety six peace accord which end of the country's thirty six year civil war is in the mail the capital guatemala city and. he died of
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heart attack while playing golf at the age of seventy two. the suspect in america's golden state kelo case has made his first appearance in court in california former policeman joseph james d'angelo is charged with a series of murders and rapes across the state during the one nine hundred seventy s. and eighty's investigators managed to track him down by comparing his d.n.a. to a commercial genealogy database that consumers use to explore their ancestry. now many of the world's leading aircraft makers are in germany for the berlin air show with a focus this year on drug and technology as dominic cain reports the development of helping spark a revolution in sustainable flight. april in berlin means two things potentially to richel downpours and. this is the innovation and leadership in aerospace event for short with
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a huge range of planes helicopters and other airborne elements taking their turns to wire with the crowds. one of the main themes of this year's event is drones and other unmanned aircraft and while many of the items here have more military applications the civilian use of this technology is clearly on show and this is where airbus sees a real opportunity demonstrating what they call the city airbus helicopter currently undergoing final test before a first flight later this year as yet it's a drone but one day its creators see it as an alternative to ground based taxis with the option to have a human driver to ferry the paying passengers and it will not be a v.i.p. option because we want to democratize this kind of transportation so it will be comparable to our normal taxi and maybe even a bit cheaper and. in a certain point in future the burden asho is about far more than just unmanned
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drone fact knology out here on the tarmac the runway a bit of a product for many of the world's leading aviation manufacturers and indeed from the military on many of the airport visible here that it's way their product at europe's leading asho amid the different and graph to be seen on many from the german military which this year is presenting its hardware in combination with elements from its french counterparts germany and france they are the engine of europe so we are being part of that engine we focus here and berlin with all the industry has been present and that's what you see over here and that's what we have very part of and very proud to be it. organizers say it's all about showcasing the latest innovations and. design and technology but for many people it's also a chance to get a close school imps of jets they'd never be able to see otherwise dominant al-jazeera at the berlin. we have the sports news still ahead of us on our nascar
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practice turned out to be a terrifying experience but the strike that it will have the details. he has no passport yet he's politically active in two countries i was the only one who got elected on the power of peaceful transition when because the short term expired you know part of the world some people think you are stupid or crazy if you do that mikhail saakashvili former president of georgia and ex governor of the odessa region in ukraine talks 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
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but because no one cares or if you join us on sat there are people that there 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 just posted a story join the global conversation at this time on al-jazeera. years of conflict between somalia's government and al-shabaab have left a generation of young people eleven behind closed doors for the just conservatism has also held many young men and women back from going out to get a lot of the reports from the capital changes in the air. it
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was the cuties type of the venue of a music concert in mogadishu no one is allowed to forget there's a war going on. yet events like this are seen as a sign of change in a city where young people mostly confined to their homes in a state of boredom. tonight somalia british singer kim is to think them to hostile us. i was expecting this and some surprise. but i was really welcomed into the show so seriously. not everyone is happy with my presence though this is not the function look at issue what it's looking we will see there were threats of let's talk a little bit i think to look for the coming months in the for you also from the women of the city to look for the for them and fulfill the triple look to. the
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moms of the men feel forced to music and the free mixing of men and women for quality of the one that she came all the way from london to spread mischief these concepts should not be allowed to happen if they continue with the senate we have no option but to fight them. hundreds of young men and women attended the performance despite the disapproval of conservatives be sure that it was the people of mogadishu have been through a lot of pain and agony we are here to give them happiness the ease of each i. the close down state of insecurity means it's most of that in my music lovers in mogadishu can hold such an event so they make the most of it on the rail questions when they come. mohammed at all just morticia some of. its toughest but what now his job is the thank you liverpool have been held to a goalless draw against star in the english premier league mohamed salah head of
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broken the premier league. goalscoring record in the fifth minute but chipped white danny ings then had a goal disallowed for offside just before half time the reds had a late shout for handball which was turned down the draw no good for either side liverpool remain in third while stoke are still three points behind swanzy in the drop zone chelsea need to win if they are to keep their hopes of qualifying for next season's champions league a life they'll take on the city in the late game in the other fixtures a loss for west brom against newcastle will see them relegated those games kick off in the next few minutes. diego maradona is looking for a new managerial job after being sacked the fifty seven year old former won't cup winner have been in charge of united arab emirates club for jade up since last may and his team went on beaten all season but on friday a one one draw with holder meant that they missed out on an automatic promotion from the second division they could still go through in a playoff in two weeks' time the former argentina international has had plenty of
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disappointments in his past but marat on a struggle to help his inconsolable play is all about results. not a bad night all round for football legends in the gulf former barcelona star shafi who now place a country side out sad was sent off in the final of the qatar cup he was protesting a penalty given to opponents alga hailed thanks to the videos to referee all false system to hell went on to win two one to secure a league and cup double it's only the third time in chinese create he's been sent off and hopefully one of the last to see takes over is coachable sad season. lebron james has reached the n.b.a. finals for the past seven years but that extraordinary extraordinary run could be about to end his cleveland cavaliers were thrashed one hundred twenty one to eighty seven by the indiana pacers on friday it was the pacers largest playoff win in franchise history and has allowed them to push their series to
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a decisive game seven if they win it would be the first time in le bron's career that he's missed out on the second round. the utah jazz advance to the western conference semifinals by clinched the series with the oklahoma city thunder in game six off a ninety six to ninety one victory donovan mitchell scored thirty eight points while also less per season came to an end despite a forty six point zero for the thunder it was a fuming needed stations with just fans at hall time to get off the game. confront fans fans can for me hear you talk about a lot of disrespectful things are said to the players here and what these fans are man is truly disrespectful talk about your family's uki its minister's disrespect to the game and i think it's something that needs to be brought out some time just going out and planning and then fans it would how they want to say the toronto raptors have joined utah in the second round of the playoffs they closed all this
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series with the washington wizards because c. of a one thousand two to ninety two fake tree while defending champions the golden state warriors start the second round against the new orleans pelican. they would have had jets have appeared in the second round of hockey stanley cup playoffs for the first time in franchise history they were facing the nashville predators who continues strange playoff tradition it usually involves allowing fans to smash up a car painted in their opponent's colors this time a small plane was the target but it didn't help the predators on the ice the jets win the game all want to take an early lead in the best of seven series. japanese baseball sensation show how autonomy has provided a scare for fans of the los angeles angels a tony suffered a minor ankle sprain during friday's contest the new york yankees which the angels lost for three twenty three olds known for being both an exceptional batter and
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pitcher a rare feat in baseball. as have beaten i knew you'd seen and tame in super rugby for the first time since they joined the competition two years ago the argentine team inducted better to the driving rain in oakland running in three tries to beat the blues twenty to thirteen the historic win lifts the whereas to second in the south american conference while the blues remain lost in a new zealand conference with seven losses from nine games. rafael nadal can make it to four hundred crew wins on clay in spain shortly he'll be in semifinal action at the boss lone open the spaniard will take on it that would go final in the final four after booking is placed with a straight sets win over martina close on on friday is his forty second consecutive set one place. where qualifying is underway right now for the formula as a place on the drivers will be hoping to avoid anything like what happened at the nascar
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practice session at talladega superspeedway a tire blew out on jamie maurice sheppard on the tracks back stretch and he was hit by another car before flipping at least seven times and stopping on the inside was incredibly mari was able to climb out of the cars for being transported to the medical center he was ok and later said he just kept his eyes closed. well of friday i told you about the alligators disrupting play at the classic in new orleans while they were making their presence felt during the second round two brian palmer put his ball in the water and instantly regretted it they showed no fair as he played postes his ankle in the same like it was all in vain as palmer and his partner while the three jones spaeth missed the cards michael came in andrew putnam holder one certainly at the whole flight states. all right that is always for you for now elizabeth thank you very much joe now finally it has been
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that in the days of going to the movies and watching on a flat screen it quickly being replaced by what's called immersive experience as it started with virtual and old men to reality and now they try back a film festival as for the first time showcasing affairs officer tim a goal is to fully experience three sixteen gave a whole new york. taking virtual reality a step further this is the trifecta cinema three sixty twenty seat virtual reality theatre. all the film start at a designated time just like a regular movie but that is where the similarities to a regular theater going experience in the films are viewed in three hundred sixty degree. sam's. in the woods what is seen and heard is all through a headset with noise canceling earphones. what makes
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a spiritual reality so much different is we're all in the same room here together all watching the same films through these goggles and we just swivel in our chair and see this three hundred sixty degree view of the movie three sixty used to be considered a novelty gimmick but it's quickly expanding this is the first year the cherry pick of film festival has curated it as a stand alone experience. it's cool what the what the storytellers are doing to really use this tool of three sixty it's traditionally live action although there's a lot of great animation in three sixty as well i think the people that say that it's a gimmick they think of it that it's going to be in three d. or something like that it is not its own media so i think once you have an opportunity to experience it and experience the best of it then you understand that this is a new tool in a new grammar that's being developed for entertainment it's all part of trying back those virtual arcade and second year it's where people can experience what's called
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immersive storytelling through virtual and augmented reality. they're twenty six interactive exhibits of rooms scale virtual reality filmmaking. everything with us was trying to evolve to meet the needs of how the medium is changing right everybody is watching t.v. not just movies or using virtual reality all this stuff is happening and if you're a festival that showcasing the nature of an art form you want to be on the cutting edge increasingly to film viewing experience being reflected all around us three hundred and sixty degrees gabriels on don't just see the new york and that was for the odyssey and news hour but i'm back in just a couple of minutes for the not a full news all the time. australia's multibillion dollar international student industry is booming but it
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has a dark start when used examines widespread revelations of sexual assault on foreign university students on al-jazeera al-jazeera is a very important force of information for many people around the world when all the cameras are gone i'm still here go into areas that nobody else is going to talk to people that nobody else is talking to and bringing that story to the forefront. on counting the cost why iran's nuclear theo and other powerful factors are at play in a new game of boil it could mean steeper prices at the pump. and into korean summit but what would a saw in relations mean for their economies. counting the cost. when the news breaks. on the mail man city and the story builds to be forced to leave the group just. when people need to be heard women and girls are being bought and
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given away in refugee camps al-jazeera has teams on the ground to bring you the winning documentaries and live news on al-jazeera i got to commend you all i'm hearing is good journalism on air and online. the fact. the smallest place on the planet could soon be lost forever with an international team of scientists is determined not to let that happen without intervention to give the big i would say here to a vast now it's a race against time to try and save a species take a chrysler that's in the meshes you can stave off extinction techno.

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