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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  April 29, 2018 12:00am-1:00am +03

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now it's a race against time to try and save a species i think chrysler has an emergency plan to davao extinction. of all my friends and coworkers who were detained i am the only one who survived they were all waiting for news of the men for them was only one word on when. you saw a boy killed in his father's i. saw a man filming. i have only once in my life seen men who are scared to death a bit to civil wars darkest secret bosnia to come on al-jazeera.
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this is al-jazeera. hello i'm suited us and this is the news hour live from london coming up russia's foreign minister accuses the u.s. of trying to divide syria as he holds talks in moscow with turkish and iranian counterparts as armenians unite behind their protest leader of the ruling party says it will not put forward a candidate for prime minister the new u.s. secretary of state arise in saudi arabia with the iran nuclear deal set to dominate the agenda i'm looking at film from a different perspective how virtual reality is letting audiences immerse themselves in the story. i'm tatiana and with the thought including a wild number one rough and a doll claims his four hundred play call correll when i'll have all the details
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later in the paragraph. russia's foreign minister has accused the us of trying to divide syria into parts so a lever off made the comments in moscow while meeting his turkish and the reigning counterparts to discuss the war in syria iranian foreign minister mohammad java very condemn the use of chemical weapons in the wall that whilst also stressing the need for impartial investigators at the site of the alleged attacks saturday's talks are being held ahead of the next round of the stoner process aimed attending the violence. while we are building options for peace some of their 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 which allan's has the latest from moscow. this meeting was
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a way for russia turkey and iran co-sponsors of the standard talks to set the scene for the next round of those negotiations which are in a couple of week's time a the fourteenth and fifteenth the three countries here although they have been pushing these negotiations into their ninth rounds now do have disagreements they have disagreements over the future of president bashar al assad's turkey has always thought that he shouldn't be part of syria's future and turkey also disagrees with russia on iran over the recent u.s. u.k. and french airstrikes which were response to what those three countries said was a chemical weapons attack in duma now turkey supports though that view and thinks that the russian perspective that this has set back the political process in syria
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is not necessarily true but the turks do have criticisms of the united states saying that they should give up their ongoing support for the kurds when we do get to the next round of start of talks in a couple of weeks we're likely to see. a similar situation to previous times which is that the opposition are reluctance to come now the route the opposition has always felt the. talks were essentially a sideshow a distraction from what should be taking place which is the resumption of negotiations in geneva the official u.n. sponsored talks and the opposition has long felt that what a star is essentially doing is just hollowing out geneva stripping it of all the main political platforms political points and essentially giving cover for russia and the syrian government forces on the ground to continue
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pushing home their military advantage. well joining us from washington d.c. is low and school peace a senior fellow at the center for american progress on a former assistant u.s. secretary of defense and thanks very much for coming on to al-jazeera as a talk about this second lover of sense to be saying. making the comments that the u.s. is looking to divide syria based on what's exactly based on the missile strike or based on how he now perceives the u.s. wants to behave in syria well i think both certainly the missile strikes was worked with the british on the french the other thing is secretary madison testifying this week before the congress pointed out that the united states was going to stay in syria and basically they're there to make sure isis doesn't come back and also to protect the syrian democratic forces who are mainly kurds who fought forth with us and then of course after. the french president came to
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washington the french put troops in there and i think what the position of the united states with loud robbers afraid of that we're going to maintain a zone in. that in that part of syria to protect the kurds and also to allow refugees going away from horrible things like what happened to do want to have some sort of place to go the lines of very clear i suppose with those that back assad and russia turkey and iran being on one side of the equation but it either side what do you think the longer term expectation is with places like italy where you have so many people there who have stood against assad for the whole conflict or indeed so many who have fled into live from places like the suburbs of damascus what happens in the long run will that have to be some sort of partition.
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well there has to be a political solution and a couple of weeks ago it looked like the united states wouldn't be part of it president trump said we'd be leaving in a matter of months now that isis was defeated and what other countries you know helped rebuild syria but i think you're going to see the united states stay and particularly that last chemical attack was also a turning point given you know what president trump said about the fact that president obama didn't didn't respond so you're going to have to go back to the geneva talks and get countries like the united states and the opposition there if you ever want to bring a ceasefire edgin even talks and of course the astonished talks coming up just next month what hope is that there is any kind of movement from the very entrenched positions that we said we've seen for so long now and talk to talk nothing really seems to be shifting do you see any light anywhere. no well i mean
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it's got to be geneva because as your correspondent pointed out the opposition people are not enough sana and basically you got to have them as part of the solution and obviously the syrian democratic forces that we're backing have to be part of it and then of course turkey disagrees with russia and iran turkey also disagrees with the united states but the role of the kurds so all of these things have got to be worked out before you can have an end to the to the fighting very good to get your thoughts lawrence close speaking to us there from washington d.c. thank you palestinian refugees in syria already facing financial uncertainty following a u.s. decision to cut funding to the u.n. agency assigned to help them the u.n. has learned to launch an emergency appeal to cover the show for its warning it won't be able to provide cash assistance for much longer than they know how the reports from beirut. heidi was born
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a refugee thirty years later she became a refugee again a palestinian from syria to lebanon 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 jumana receives cash assistance from the united nations relief and works agency under water but the organization is warning that it is running out of money and the money about. i am sick but i have to work 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. the arrival of more than thirty thousand. years has added strain to the u.n. agency. services like health care education to almost two hundred thousand
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palestinians living here the u.s. decision to cut back funding has made the agency's financial situation it's appealing to be able to continue helping. 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. nearly sixty percent have been internally displaced by the war. before the war seven. percent of those still living in syria are entirely dependent on the services it provides. he had a good life back home now he. has
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been halved. used to give us. the case. think about. many things children and. they're not. forced to work he earns seven dollars a day. without additional. cash assistance to refugees. who at such a young age is the breadwinner of the family. still to come on al-jazeera this news hour the u.s. president is once again notable for his absence from this year's white house correspondents dinner ask elating violence between mammals military and rebel fighters in cochin state thousands have now fled the area and in sports a flattened battery at least a mayhem in the latest on the left. i
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mean years governing party says it will not be pushing forward a candidate in next year's vote in parliament for a new prime minister after attracting tens of thousands of armenians on to the streets and forcing the resignation of the prime minister the opposition is demanding that their leader nicole passion young be elected robin foster warco reports on a day of political drama from a normal armenian city of santa or. ovoid has all the euphoria of a victory parade one that stretches a kilometer is. while the capitol takes some rest the opposition movement is traveling to the regions to show the republican party that the whole country is now behind one bad week.
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on tuesday there will be a crucial vote in parliament to decide on a new prime minister and the crowds know who they want for the job they call passion. that. began this movement with a two week walk across all media in april he called medians to join him and reject the country's unpopular leader said. the former journalist but. critic and served jail time for his activism. that while his faction is only a minority and pollard's the simple message has attracted thousands frustrated by the political elite and to inspired by his revolutionary life which. i did not want our only has been following. the protests in recent days it was based on is somehow different you could feel the excitement i can see the ads
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you see beijing the house the expectations on the face you know these people you want the best things are being a little nance i don't know he's here we just didn't want to give each other he gives the power to us to the people not just to one person or to people but to everyone that's why we love him so so it is changing all this. mean then dignitary. heard the news and. saw yet style car update system is changing. this was the moment mr. announce to the crowds that the republican party looked to be fielding a candidate of cheese steak was the bell how it does seem to be with the people of robin first you will come out zero balance in. a soundalike coalition air strike has reportedly killed two leaders and dozens of
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fighters and sandal large crowds filled the streets of the yemeni capital on saturday two on a high ranking rebel commander. who was killed by a strike last week victoria gate and the reports. he supposes descend on the center of santa there 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 hay day to provence last week. the more you'll get revenge for the death of the president of the republic. and i have message for the saudi aggressors you bring invaders here from all over the world we will kill them and we will burn them to 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 these interior ministry in santa after three years of
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fighting and no end to the war in sight analysts say the saudi led coalition is trying something new the saudis are stepping up their game. targeting higher higher level officials and the hope is as well are also are there also to 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 it's a risky strategy has the fighters say they're more determined than ever to continue their fight for control of yemen. this protest was made for our president. 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's already killed thousands of people and caused what the united
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nations says is the world's worst humanitarian crisis now there are signs of an escalation from both sides saudi arabia says it intercepted full hitty missiles fired from yemen targeting the city of g.'s than victoria gate and b. al-jazeera. newly appointed u.s. secretary of state might pump aoe is in saudi arabia a sponsor of a three day trip to the reach him on paper was sworn in to his new post on thursday after his predecessor rex tillerson with some last month he met with the saudi foreign minister. before having dinner with crown prince mohammed bin solomon are expected to discuss the around nuclear deal following donald trump threats to pull the united states out of the accord next month kristen salumi has them all from washington d.c. the state department says a strong u.s. saudi partnership is crucial to peace and prosperity in the middle east so perhaps not surprising that might pompei i would make
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a visit to saudi arabia part of his first official trip as secretary of state he also has the fast approaching deadline of may twelfth when president trump must decide whether or not to reimpose sanctions on iran a move that many feel will be the end of the iran nuclear deal might pump a zero is much closer to president trump on this issue than his predecessor rex tillerson was tillerson was sympathetic to the european point of view which is the deal should be strengthened and not abandoned he lost his job essentially over that mike pompei a will also no doubt be talking about the situation in syria during this visit president trump has called on gulf countries to do more to stabilize the situation there in terms of troops and funding from saudi arabia pompei o heads to israel and then to jordan. the annual white house correspondents dinner returns this weekend with one note suppose a mission the president don't show again for
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a second year in a row instead he's hosting a campaign rally in michigan barack obama was the last president to attend the dinner which celebrates the relationship between the press the white house press secretary sarah huckabee saunders is taking from this place and come expect some light grilling from media and a host michel wolf well done estimate joins us now live from washington d.c. i believe president was there in twenty eleven and got quite a lot of mocking is that why isn't turning out. that might have something to do with that this is a president that doesn't have much of a sense of humor so that could be keeping him away and ironically the ribbing that he got at the hands of president obama back in two thousand and eleven many think inspired president trump to run for office and then try to undo many of the policies that president obama put in place that clearly he takes this rather personally is the relationship he has with the press as bad as.
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well it's not good it's never been good and it doesn't seem really to be getting any better look this is a president that as a private citizen used the media very effectively to promote his business so when he came into office he sort of expected the media to promote his policies as president and he doesn't understand that that's really not the job of the press the job of the press is to challenge him and to ask tough questions and you know this contentious relationship that he has with the press and calling things fake news does tend to fire up his base but it's also alienating some of the people who reluctantly voted for him back in two thousand and sixteen as you say he's not a person this sort of known for law finance himself how have past presidents cope with this kind of atmosphere in the white house correspondents' dinner. most of the presidents in the past have enjoyed going to this they know that
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they're going to get ribbed they take hot shots at the media and they make fun of themselves as well and this is a way for them to humanize themselves and to connect with the media all of the presidents have gone and in fact even the only president in the last forty years that hasn't gone was ronald reagan in one nine hundred eighty one and that's because he was recovering from a gunshot wound although he ended up calling in anyway well i went one year and i the great times i think is missing a great ticket. for a. united nations security council delegation is the thing where hinge a refugee camps in bangladesh the team will then travel to mammals russia kind states who are around seven hundred thousand flags a military crackdown last year. that reports from courts of how long refugee camp ahead of the visit. shamsul has pulled his five year old daughter to this
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field clinic in the coupon the refugee camp in bangladesh. north face is swollen and she's in pain. shamsul and his family have lived in the camp for a year and a half since fleeing violence by the myanmar military against the ranger in rakhine state. and since august last year around seven hundred thousand ricky just fled the latest myanmar military crackdown 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 a living in what is becoming the largest refugee camp in the world i.o.m. alone is already treating eighty thousand people
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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 that funding has to be in place now to help protect people otherwise we will see you know protection of preventable loss of life and that's a very frightening prospect the mainly muslim or hindu had their citizenship taken away by what was then the permits government thirty five years ago rights groups say the rangers have suffered decades of violence and persecution they say the myanmar 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 rick enjoy a rebel group. the u.n. security council delegation is due to visit the refugee camps in bangladesh before heading to myanmar for what is expected to be
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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 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 and. the u.s. state department is leading an investigation into claims of extrajudicial killings rape and arson by the myanmar military a repatriation plan by bangladesh and b.m.r. allowing refugees to voluntarily return has so far failed to get off the ground shim still says he will never return to me and moralists the government guarantees
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his family citizenship security and the same rights as other citizens of the country he and his family from. that al jazeera to prolong refugee camp on with their fish. meanwhile thousands have fled renewed fighting between man mars' army and rebel fighters in the northern catchin states the u.n. says more than ten thousand people have been forced from their homes since the start of the memos military is said to be pounding rebel positions with and artillery strikes the kuching christian minority group. they fought for greater autonomy since the nine hundred sixty s. well for more on this and what's happening inside catching the state let's speak to in sangam son is the president of the kitchen alliance and joins us now from harrisburg pennsylvania via skype thanks very much for coming on and first of all can i ask you there are reports that the people some of the people are fairly desperate for medical aid can you just give us the latest as you understand in this
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particular area yes there has been blockade of any international assistance to the regions that's controlled by the kitchen independence organizations but since april nineteenth we have reported about recorded over five thousand people that's been displaced and the most. fearful part is the people that's been trapped that we record over two thousand in western kitchens state and north and kitchen state at this time why are we not hearing more about this obviously the range of situation has gained so much international publicity but it says that we're not really finding out an awful lot about this is it just that people aren't getting into it to report on it as you know the media access. absolutely limited. and intimidation is another portion and. when we say intimidation it could be litigation process
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arbitrary detention as you know the person to pass through or just released recently because they were interviewed. on the bombing of mongo year and a half ago or two years ago yeah i was about the authorities once about the presidential office what about the military are they being challenges to what he's going along the hands of the mammoth tree yes there's the government is. in short we would say girl ation of duty so so-called some people call it strategic silence. the government is unable to do anything not sure. if it's working and hence what the army but currently the people that's been trapped in all lot or. my own cool
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and right now i'm in quito jedi government is unable to have access to anybody. but obviously it's us the army is the reason that's blocking access. so that's the last report that we have there have been accusations that some of the guerrillas there are also fighting planting landmines and such not to the extent of the brutality of the mammoth military but there is there is actually a guerrilla army actually operating out of there isn't that yes but that's if for. two ways that we can see there was seventeen years of cease fire and the chin state as you know the capital kitchen state is actually powered by the hydro power that's constructed by the kerio but when we talk about land mines probably the prevention of the burma army because the burma army is used in
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this criminal force to put disproportionate forces as you know in the recent days that has been produced as amount of. troops that's been mobilized some from the north in the common. to the kitchen states and for those reasons. you know there is a possibilty that the karaoke use mines in order to deter or right now for example has been surrendered its surrendered or its bases has been captured at least three or four battalion headquarters has been captured and one brigade headquarters has been captured so from our from our standpoint it's more to repel aggression well let's hope we're giving at least some publicity to the situation there that the people might be able to get some
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assistance and sign them some thank you very much for talking to them is there a problem thank you very much. still to come on the program china aims to put its name on the moviemaking map with the opening of the world's largest film studio and now this year's one is there is book fact time political will tell you what's driving readers to protest and in sport chelsea keep their hopes of champions league football and life. however cause some rather unsettled and cool weather making its way into western parts of europe now it's a cloud still again from the atlantic is going to have it grim over the next few days actually temperatures really struggling areas of low pressure just piling in a very nasty storm this one actually which will run its way across the north of
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france affecting southern parts of england look at that for temperature seven degrees celsius in london this is twenty degrees down what we had just over a week ago fourteen celsius in the cloud and rain across a good parts of france heavy downpours into southern france and also around the pyrenees central areas on the other hand fine and dry some gorgeous sunshine coming through and we are going to see the system make its way further inland pushing eastwards there a bit of snow over the the alps and the ponies for a time even worse in london on monday six degrees celsius wet and windy it really will not feel anything like spring sunshine arest still find it dry twenty five celsius there in vienna and some lovely sunshine across the mediterranean front to try to across much of north africa some heat in place for karo thirty five celsius could even touch thirty eight as we go on into monday there is that dry weather across northern most pos but always a chance of the yacht showers across northern parts.
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canada a country of promise and opportunity for migrant workers but with little protection from the state authorities many are forced to pay extortionate relocation phase and a saddled with heavy debts as an adult under law to come to canada year seven and lot of money in and one brave group of indonesia and workers speak out and seek justice for their exploitation migrant dreams a witness documentary on al-jazeera. discover football winning programming from around the globe challenge your perception but i was hearing sounded so far fetched that i thought there were five more behold it was truly groundbreaking documentary. fearless journalism their life their reality. see the world from
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a different perspective on al jazeera. welcome back a reminder of the top stories say on al-jazeera russia's foreign minister has accused the u.s. of trying to divide syria into parts made the comments in moscow while meeting its turkish and iranian counterparts to discuss the war in syria i mean his ruling party has announced it will not nominate a candidate for prime minister after a massive antigovernment protests in the city of gori and saudi coalition airstrikes have killed dozens of hooty fighters including two key hootin leaders thousands of people have turned out for the funeral of on
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a high ranking rebel commander. southeast asian leaders have been warned that a growing trade dispute between the u.s. and china is putting their economic growth at risk speaking at a regional summit singapore's prime minister urged to leave the of the ten block content country block to do more to promote free trade he also warned of the growing threat of cyber attacks we need to be resilient to both conventional threats and also unconventional threats such as terrorism and cyber attacks some of these issues that peace but these threats are very real. isis continues to propagate this idiology and to form trouble in southeast asia despite having been defeated militarily in the middle east and we're also seeing more cyber attacks as we push for digitalization millions of koreans have been reacting to friday's
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historic meeting of the two leaders of divided peninsula while south koreans were able to watch the summit between their president in north korea's kim jong il live on television a message across the border was more tightly controlled and tension is now switching to a proposed meeting between came and the u.s. president james space 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 communal junge consignments 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 know 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.
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president stablish in a good personal relationship that would then lay the groundwork for real detailed talks among experts i think is the best way to go and this could 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 will remain open as they discuss the substance and venue or possible trump kim summit james bone out zero seoul. dozens of people have been killed in two attacks in mali over the past two days the attacks happened in the northern region the original governor says at least forty twenty people have died in the violence. malawi's a former president joyce banda has returned to the country after four years abroad despite facing the threat of arrest over allegations of corruption she was met by
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hundreds of supporters when her flight from johannesburg landed in blantyre the fled malawi in twenty fourteen after losing power and made the scandal known as cash gate when tens of millions of dollars were stolen from the state she thanked those who turned out to greet are. totally surprised but we know putin. to recall that you came. bound with malawi's first female president and the second woman to lead an african country the cash gate scandal in twenty five thirteen so thirteen million dollars stolen from state coffers in the space of just six months the scandal hurt malawi's international reputation for and has pulled one hundred fifty million dollars in aid from the country it was still an active arrest warrant for banda a fact that led her to perspire a planned return to malawi last year alex vines is head of the africa program at
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the chatham house think tank here in london she says unbound has returned to malawi for personal reasons she's homesick she wanted to go back to malawi she wants to go back to her house no zomba and so it's for years and she thought this is time to return i think she's also had a conversation with the current president the first in the to reka to try and ensure that she had a soft landing in terms of her return and she is a malawian patchett that is the country that she wishes she loves and was brought up in i don't think she particularly enjoyed doing the talk circuit and staying research institutes universities and think tanks over the last four years in the united states her husband's also been pretty ill so another incentive for her to come home. now to china where a billionaire businessman wants to turn a northern port city into a global film big enough to rival hollywood the chain dow oriental movie metropolis
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is an eight billion dollar project to build partly on an artificial island the site covers four hundred acres which is equivalent to more than two hundred football pitches as well as the world's biggest movie studio the site is so large it also includes hotels a theme park and a yacht club joining me in a serious issue sun she's a film director active director of filming festival thanks very much for coming into our desire this has the potential to be enormous absolutely huge it's difficult to get the idea but how big is the potential is the is the viewing audience in china i think is huge as a filmmaker myself worked in both the u.k. and china i see wonder what they are doing it's like to show they had resolved this potential and then bishes to flex it it. still must stick filmmaking as
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well as international side so it will really boost the chinese food industry and also turn qingdao the very lovely and. this city. hope for the international film make how will it differ from hollywood from bollywood i'm thinking about the sorts of actors are going to get roles now that probably wouldn't have done in the sort of western films but also what about the censorship power as a director is it different for you in that industry to main in chinese film market is huge it's a lot of potential lots of opportunities so to be honest i do feel very positive about that and also the policy is different censorship is different however for the new talent is
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a completely new wall so you feel that energy is you know so the new generation of filmmakers from china have been studying in different places in in the world in western countries so i think in their generation i mean even younger than me is a time for dumb to try to marry the western and eastern culture in the filmmaking will it be controlled will there be certain topics that will not be allowed to be made i think in every country it happens and also in china we have our famous censorship but it's understandable but. i think more importantly is to end the stand our mark and an audience more like them oh the old it's quite different from the western audience here like the average age if the different cinema goers is so young is that like a about twenty year old they see they need different continents and if analogy what
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about the influence our own the likes of hollywood crossover i know there's a very great excitement about this film crazy rich asians which which is i think partly singapore hollywood's it's a it's a see there's a crossover whether it is or not put to you think this huge now burgeoning chinese movie industry will actually seep into the rest of the movie culture. i think it takes time people there trying like myself we work here we're trying to engage with both old ins but it takes time it specially developing a new type of story to try to attract those all the ins that's that's the area we need to develop and i think from the script stage from people who work behind the thing we develop that and we provide the. platform for the
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actors for them to create characters that's likes that best that work for to see one of your phones something very mature thank you so much. now a new way to appreciate cinema is being showcased at this year's tri beca film festival is being described as an immersive a fellow experience where viewers get a full three hundred sixty degree view of what's happening on the big screen. explains. taking virtual reality a step further this is the trifecta cinema three sixty eight 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
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is all through the headset with noise canceling earphones. what makes 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 us 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 so cool what the what the storytellers are doing to really use this tool of three sixty it's traditionally a 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 three d. or something like that it is not it's own media so i think once you have an opportunity to experience it and experience the best of it then you understand that
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this is a new tool in a new grammar that's being developed for entertainment it's all part of trade because of virtual arcade it's second year it's where people can experience what's called immersive storytelling through virtual and augmented reality. they're twenty six interactive exhibits of rooms scale virtual reality filmmaking. everything was trying to evolve to me in the hands of 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 earth 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 read a new york. now to argentina where the annual board has air is books has kicked off on the political note organizers say there's been a drop off in book sales juta the struggling economy and high inflation turns about
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reports. they want to cite his book fair began with a protest against the government of president marketing. students protested against education reform and the president of the book foundation used his initial remarks to draw attention to a drop in book sales in the country. we are demanding a decrease in taxes that takes our competitiveness in the region we are sorry to say that the government is not buying the books it usually does imports of increased exports remain the same they want to cite his book fair as one of the most important in the spanish speaking world the place where authors and publishers reach out to the public. says he tries to be here every year. it is important to be here and gain new clients our challenges to edit new titles to get people interested it is a sacrifice because it's not cheap but worth it because we make connections with
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people from all around the world the theory lasts for about three weeks and authors from all over the world are expected to show up among them two nobel prize winners about a million people are expected to visit this book fair this year but argentina's economy continues to struggle with time for nation among other problems and that's why the organizer. i giving all sorts of incentives so that people continue to buy books there are events for children as well so san antonio says she comes with her family every year. this is the most important event of the year for us we come during the week because it think it is cheaper and we wait for the third to buy the school books because we get much better prices here a major cultural event that organizers hope won't be tarnished by the political differences that exist in argentina i will i just want to cite us. still ahead on
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the al-jazeera news our. music is making these youngsters in somalia forget about living with violence and war and in sports and then miss us toro rosso teammates almost collide in formula one qualifying in battle. from planting forests with drones to surviving drought small funds al-jazeera award winning environmental solutions program which. now the mood of the them to a real job but. making the people communities and organizations addressing some of the greatest man might environmental problems threatening our planet. a new season of birthrights on al-jazeera.
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with bureaus spawning six continents across the globe. to. al-jazeera has correspondents live in green the stories they tell. me are fluent in world news. now young people in the somali capital are using music as a way to gather and socialize despite opposition from when they just letus years of conflict have consigned a generation to
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a life behind closed doors but does mohammed and the reports changes in the air. security's 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 somali british singer kim is to take them to a hostile house. i was expecting this is a surprise. as we welcome them to the dishes so seriously. not everyone is happy with her presence though this is the function look at issue but it's looking good we will see there were threats of let's talk a little bit i think to look for the summons to the forty thousand from the middle
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of the city to look for the plane then we fulfill the triple look to. the moms of the men feel forced to music and the free mixing of men and women for one i'd be a poor man and she came all the way from london to spread mischief these concepts should not be allowed to happen if they continue with this 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 the people of mogadishu have been through a lot of pain and agony we're here to give them happiness the ease of each i. the close down state of insecurity means it's not everyone meit's music lovers in mogadishu can hold such an event so they make the most of it on the rail questions when they come. mohamad at all just morticia some money. now let's get a spot with tatiana. thanks very much so we start with tennis and roughen adele has
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shown why he's often referred to as the king of clay the wild number one winning his four hundred play call career match on saturday sweeping aside belgium stuff it got fun to reach the bottom line open final six four six life was the score he's now just one win away from an eleventh title of this tournament and ronnie wood has also extended his winning streak on his favorite surface to forty four consecutive head thank you very much yet i have you know having a great afternoon i played i think my best much in the tournament so far. yeah it was a great first said in my opinion on both of us with very high level and then in the second before that we just had a tough week playing all that much as i said he said and after that probably he felt it would be a modified and all but. very happy the way that i played. hell face greek teen
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sensation stephanus at the pass in the final the nineteen year old shocked face a seed capital at a noble start and straight sets in the other semi pursuits the past sunday's decider will be his maiden a.t.p. final and he's the fastest greek player to reach it all final since nineteen seventy three. american coco vander ways through to her first ever clay court final she got past caroline garcia france with a straight sets victory in stuttgart an easy win six four six to show me fifth seed catalina escobar in sunday's final. shocking griffin has become the first one hundred player to be drafted by an n.f.l. team the twenty two year old linebacker how does a left hand amputated due to a congenital birth defect when he was just four years old and now he's been selected by the theater with the hawks in the fifth round of the draft he joins his twin brother who was signed by the team as a cornerback last year. chelsea have kept their champions league hopes alive after
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a one no when over swanzy first fabregas scoring the lone goal in just the fourth minute it's his fiftieth premier league goal the winner is the gap with tottenham to just two points but spurs have a game in hand was one theory just one point pair of the bottom three with no wins in six games for. good we. go t. bones for us. is very important if we want to keep an eye to the police because league. was once a. good game space in the second lot of. those. liverpool were held to the goal of story games stoke mohammed could have broken the league goal scoring record in the fifth minute but he chipped it wide
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danny ings then how to goal disallowed for offside just before half time the reds had a late shout for handball which was turned down bernie's deal with brighton means they need just one more point from their last two games to secure their first taste of european football and more than fifty years in crystal palace of one bank's about premier league games for the first time in over a year after thrashing in leicester. sebastian vettel has claimed pole position for the third time in a row ahead of the other by john grand prix but i was very nearly a huge collision in the opening session when tara ross the driver pia ghastly had to swerve to avoid hitting is teammate brendan hartley who had a puncture to me reichen and looks set to join vettel on the front row until his cascaded until now starts to kick butt on the tight trees circuit where accidents a common the miss a day's pairing of lewis hamilton involved three who will start second and third no
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anything can happen. so rush into the good job they were quickest all week and they will see what a phenomenal car this year but really happy with the job the team did to get us from where we were yesterday to what we are today and that's you did also a great job so we're going to we're in the mix this is the best direct to ever take i think so doesn't mean it's impossible but we're going to get it on the trying to sebastian hard talk. drivers have struggled to keep their cars on the road amid heavy fog on the third day of rally argentina a stony and who won who won five of the seven days stages he takes a comfortable forty six second lead into sunday's final three speed test. them plenty of drama in the latest formula erase in paris nico prost with it shortly after the start of the right under a lot or a missed out on a podium position after he was hit when he ran out of energy in his battery on the final lap john erik van extended his championship played with his third win of the
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season. the jack years of beaten a new zealand team and super rugby for the first time since they joined the competition two years ago the argentine team adopted better to the driving rain in oakland running in three tries to be the blues twenty to thirty in the historic win list the jacket was to second in the south african conference while the blues remain lost in the new zealand conference with seven losses from nine games. and this ball for now is back to sit in london. is it from may's suits for news hour but i will be back in a moment with much more of the day's news don't go away thanks for watching the last hour.
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early. the new poll ranks mexico city as the pool with worst in the world for sexual violence many women are attacked while moving in the crowded spaces of the metro buses and even at the hands of taxi drivers the conversation starts with do you
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have a boyfriend you're very pretty and young you feel unsafe threatened i think about how to react what do i do if this gets was no money on the uses a new service it's called loyal droid it's for women passages only and drawn by women drivers. to some extra features like a panic button and twenty four seven monitoring of drivers. everything to do is being analyzed it's being weighed and measured. and it's not just. fans of the state at the moment. there was act. of digital dissidents at this time on al-jazeera.

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