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tv   NEWS LIVE - 30  Al Jazeera  May 5, 2018 3:00am-3:34am +03

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i also lost my more than one hundred fifty volunteers working for several walking busses is working class attendance has improved the volunteers for security guards going green bacteria in a. gas escaping from volcanic. basin in the throat what happened to experiments. and. how the impacts of climate change the science of capturing. the science on the back environment and why does have to contend.
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mark my words we will fight. more than fifty thousand hunter and to call the us to risk being deported. and i'm a hell of a home as solid as they are a line from joe how also coming out donald trump says the venue has been chosen for a summit with north korea's leader kim jong un but keeps the world guessing on details. another quake hits near hawaii's most active volcano which is a rocketing sending residents fleeing to safety plus. one hundred. fifty
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seven thousand honduran immigrants living in the u.s. could be facing deportation officer a change in the law ministrations says it's ending what's known as temporary protection status for hunger and it was granted in one thousand nine hundred nine after hurricane mitch devastated the central american nation those affected will have until january twenty twenty to either leave the u.s. or apply for visas if they qualify the one juror's all the latest to have that temporary residency scrapped there among about four hundred thirty thousand people who have traveled to the u.s. under the program escaping violence and natural disasters ninety two hundred thousand salvadorians must leave by september next year while forty six thousand haitians and almost nine thousand nepalese are also facing deportation by june
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twenty ninth but more than seven thousand people from syria somalia and yemen and some from cells are done still have the temporary rights to stay in the u.s. and he got a has more details in washington d.c. . well the temporary protected status program began in one thousand nine hundred ninety and it's basically a humanitarian bill that enabled people whose countries were hit by wars and natural disasters to come to the united states and live safely in the case of hondurans they came here after hurricane mitch which struck the country in one thousand nine hundred nine and now what the trumpet ministration is essentially doing is winding down the t.p.s. program most of those people who live under it are from el salvador haiti and one juror said over the next two years basically around four hundred thousand people will be asked to leave the united states for one juror and it's about fifty seven thousand people many of whom have lived in the united states for decades among those fifty seven thousand people affected they've had five thousand u.s.
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born children who are of course u.s. citizens so it is say humanitarian groups a heartless and unnecessary move many of these people who are legally living and working in the united states have set up businesses and families of their own and of course they're returning to a country that many people see is entirely unsafe the migration from one jurist continues apace because of the drug violence and the gun violence in that country so this is seen by humanitarian groups and business groups as being a totally unnecessary move but it seems the trumpet ministration is determined to essentially end this program over the next two years they will stop t.p.s. for around ninety eight percent of the people who are living under at the moment essentially telling four hundred thousand people who have legally lived and worked in this country to get out. president trump will host south korea's leader moon j. in later this month the white house made that announcement shortly after trump revealed that a date and location has been set for his meeting with north korea's leader kim jong
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un trying previously suggested that the meeting could take place in the demilitarized zone where kim and south korea's president in held their historic summit last week. were having very substantive talks with north korea and a lot of things have already happened with respect to the hostages and i think you're going to see a very good as i said yesterday state i think you're going to be seeing very very good thing. and also the trip is being scheduled we now have a date and we have a location will be announcing it. earlier we spoke to christopher hill he is a former u.s. ambassador to south korea and he also led the u.s. delegation at the six party talks on the north korean nuclear issue he says the location is just one of many questions surrounding the summit. i would not focus too much on the venue i would focus on the fact that this is the first time you
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have a u.s. president meeting a north korean leader and the question is do they really know what they're going to talk about much less do they know what they're going to agree on normally in a high stakes summit like this you have a pretty clear understanding before the summit begins as to what the outcome is so far if there is such an understanding we're not privy to it the first thing they need to do is understand whether the north koreans are ready to give up their nuclear program there have been some hints that john hunt is prepared to discuss giving up that in their program but that is not very specific the efforts that we had during the george w. bush administration were to try to work on a step by step basis finally however the talks broke down because north korea would not give a verification regime the capacity kind of international standard so from what i can tell there were near getting to the point of verifying for example that north
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korea is no longer producing plutonium or producing the solid material and what i can see they have got close to them so there needs to be an agreement on the steps fall through example international inspectors these kinds of of issues and so a lot of were there and it's unclear what they could really accomplish in the context of what meeting with respect to a process that could take several months even if that goes on the north and south korea al moving ahead with another display of unity and this time it's with that time zone that talks end of kral now be set forward by hoffa nalang to realign them with cell time have enough experience. these flowers in the center of seoul are symbolic of the renewed hope that many people here are feeling about this country's relationship with north korea the display depicts a map of
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a unified korea before this peninsula was divided into two countries korea was a japanese colony the legacy of that period is still a strain on japan's relationship with both koreas there's a reminder of that right here the former city hall was built during the time of japanese occupation so in two thousand and twelve the city government opened the new modern building behind it three years ago north korea made its own symbolic statement it set its clocks back by half an hour saying that pyongyang time would replace tokyo time which was imposed by what it called wicked japanese imperialists as a result pyongyang no longer shared a time zone with seoul either thank goodness korean leader kim jong un stepped over the border and thirty minutes ahead in time a week ago state media says he felt it was painful to see two clocks on the wall of the summit venue indicating pyongyang and seoul times so he decided to realign the
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time zones as the first practical step for national reconciliation and unity. approve the koreas are to unify in the future the standard time should unify first is what you need this is just the beginning step by step maybe not in our generation but in the next year we will have unification south korea welcome to the move saying it represents a decision to remove the obstacles in the path to enter korean and the u.s. north korean exchanges and cooperation that are to come. big island has been struck by another series of earthquakes volcanic eruption has forced more than a thousand people to leave their homes with lava flows threatening residential areas and the hayward reports. in the heart of a residential area in hawaii molten lava pools down the road burning through woodland and sending smoke ash and rocks into the sky.
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killer way up to dive to several quakes were felt on hawaii. and hundreds of people living close by and now being told they have no choice they must leave their homes since it's right there behind we could hear this loud. exploding. right from the house and so you know there is a house going to still be there when we go back over to. the emergency services are now involved in a major incident trying to assess the scale of the eruption on the ground and in the air and how best to help those who live and work in its path roads are being blocked talk to keep people out of the most dangerous areas is a crack right in the road rage right here. helicopters smugglers talk. all right so. they are one street over from. kenya
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where has been erupting continuously for more than thirty years but there's been more activity in recent days. about fifteen kilometers away from where it had been in for roughly two or three days or a high frequency of earthquakes it's not known how long this current eruption will last a wise governor is urging people to stay safe and. emma heywood. has iran monitor vulcanologists from the carnegie institution for science in washington d.c. she says the biggest concern with the eruption is property damage. for this type of an eruption the big risk is more to property and infrastructure than to people obviously there are concerns about air quality with gases being released by by the lava and also fires that are being set in the area as this lava moves through but really the concern is about people's houses roads potentially being blocked and
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cutting off access to supplies or medical care but the concern is largely you cannot walk a lava flow but you can't move a house out of the way so so property is likely to be lost in a situation like this one the question is often not if or when but where the volcano will erupt the challenge with this activity is the fact that it occurred in a populated area now the question is will it stay in that area will it move to another part of the volcano and how long will it last we have a wide range of technology but we still learn things just by simply watching the volcano so in fact some of the clues were simply visual changes at the summit of the volcano but at this point we have very sensitive instrumentation that we can install on the volcano and we can also watch for signs of unrest using satellites which lets us look at volcanoes around the world even in remotely populated areas so the technology and the science has really advanced incredibly in the past few decades that. say that they've reached only
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a quarter fifty thousand families who are in need of shelter weeks of rain the red cross says it doesn't have enough money to fund its emergency operations and traveled with one team along with. it looks like. this is the river it's consumed villages. from the river deep into the book. the mango trees full of fruit oh hardy. the birds make good out of most situations. because any illusion of normality is lost when you look through the clearing. was a seasonal stream has turned into this. the forces of nature on the water line that
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still rising. on the shoreline ahead people who have walked for hours from higher land they've waited days for help to arrive no cheers no shouts no pushing but the need here is deep seated it's not everywhere in the world where you'd find people so calm in a situation like this when they've been marooned for several days with absolutely nothing coming in until now but there are pockets of anger. in the city and i know that the. satellite here that i have been waiting for the help i haven't received anything. and wheat in it i need it now. he has all the right saying but again i can also help way come. across we've done what we can for now and we are asking more people to come and help us so that we can reach more people. and
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even some of those getting their rations of food anough aid to give them basic shelter feel it's not enough this mother of eight is setting out on a two hour walk back to where she's living rough her home has been lost along with her life stuck on so much that it was on i did i was on the i'm scared about my children the hungry they're exposed to the rains and because of that we're likely to feel sick. for those left behind you can see it from their expressions they need help now along with so many others in even more remote places than this hundreds simmons' al-jazeera in kenya is ten a river county. coming up al-jazeera a vow to set up action as hundreds more palestinian protesters are injured at gaza's border with israel. and argentina's government takes drastic action to avoid and nother economic crisis.
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from the neon lights of asia. to the city that never sleeps. hello the rains about to get a bit more intense in china on a specific line more or less following the river so i want to hand twenty eight human degrees here constant feet of moisture which is increasing the cloud and thunderstorm likelihood in hong kong gets a little bit warmer come sunday there's a bit of circulation when it's dark green suggests heavy rain circulation calm firms it the likelihood of flooding he exists here south of that though it is humid it's dry with a scattering of good big showers in the philippines across the vietnam war the heaviest in the last twenty four hours has been on the malaysian peninsula ninety four millimeters in the last twenty four hours and that sort of big shower is certainly possible again the same sort of area but the concentrations probably
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going to be north in borneo up to the philippines to cross to vietnam cambodia myanmar and thailand as you might expect it to be at this time the year at a more or less ties in with the heaviest shower potential in india or pakistan or bangladesh it's not really anywhere over here that's an occasional rare thing that just happened now these cowboys sharkey's in british northeast of india big thunderstorms down the they are deadly they're still there in the forecast for most it's cotton done but it's exceedingly hot and getting steadily hotter. the weather sponsored by qatar and race. he was the world's most wanted my last meeting i had with him was off to the. bin laden was very nervous about nature does not match a western reporter patrol in part two of an exclusive two part documentary. speaks to those who met osama bin laden he never showed up to the cheatwood near
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the west our new bin ladin continues. again you watch al-jazeera a lot of our top stories this hour there gratian rights groups are protesting against a new little wish could see fifty seven thousand hung jury ends expelled from the u.s. the time that ministration says it's ending temporary protection prompted after hurricane mitch in nine hundred ninety nine darren joined government says it's deep deep in the limits of this issue. the u.s. president says a date and location have been set for meeting north korea's leader kim jong un but
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he's kept the ball guessing as to where the trump will host south korea's president when joey in the white house on may twenty second to discuss the talks with kemp. and aid workers in kenya say that they've reached only a quarter of nearly fifty thousand families in need of shelter off to weeks off torrential rain the red cross says it doesn't have enough money to fund its emergency operations. now at least three hundred fifty people have been injured three of them critically in the latest protests at israel's border with gaza israeli forces fired live ammunition and take the palestinians demonstrating near the fence high force that reports. six fridays now more than forty killed and over a thousand shot and wounded and still protesters face off against the israeli army at gaza's border fence as last week there appeared to be some coordination ahead of time squads of young men and boys rolled tires to be burned at specific locations
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providing a smoke screen from israeli snipers. emerging from the smoke into gas a senior official of islamic jihad promising an escalation of these protests as they approach the fourteenth of may seventy years since israel declared statehood and the day the u.s. is moving its embassy from tel aviv to jerusalem we see it clearly ok that the next days the next friday this is the way to have a good message also from. the continue of them is that it should make those people who was eating or the boys to see what. israel continues to accuse islamic jihad and especially hamas which controls gaza of using the protests as cover for what it calls terrorist activity proximately seven thousand palestinians participated in these riots we had several attempts to cross the technical fence and to throw molotov cocktails and other terrorist devices against israeli troops. here comes
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more tear gas there's been a lot of tires being burned just behind which people have been gathering some of using slingshots to throw stones and here comes the tear gas in response from the israeli side. as people marched at a second location south of the main protest site the tear gas volleys intensified. as did the sound of live ammunition and bill and says departing with greater frequency. the protesters have seen this for weeks now dozens dead and hundreds injured even the wounded keep coming back and a bed was shot in both legs during the first demonstration on the thirtieth of march. i'm ready to go back to the israeli border to tell the world that this is our right and that we should get our land returned to us as soon as i recover i'll join the protest again. the head of gaza's mental health committee says the deadly sniper fire is so far having little deterrent effect would that increase the anger
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among people or would that make them more scared you know and more scared of what the most scary thing that people are scared off as their daily life conditions you know what he or she have to do. and live this moment come give them the right to speak in southern goes and the only card to crossing from israel protest is going into the gaza side of the city the israeli military said they damaged pipelines that carry fuel and gas into the strip kind of student sources so the damage could run into the millions of dollars and take weeks to repair the force that al-jazeera goes or. the u.s. president spoke at the national rifle association annual conference in dallas and he attacked as critics and defended his policies again and all saying gun rights which i think his case for arming teachers as well the gun lobby has faced intense condemnation following several mass shootings trunk criticize europe strict gun laws saying the outcome of the twenty fifteen paris attacks but have been different
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if people had been armed. they took their tongue and gun them down one morning won't come over here won't come over here blow if you were. in those rooms one of those people and this is on those. issues where's the. what if you want employees. were just want to take you had a gun. or if one person in vis room had been there with a gun aimed at the opposite direction. the terrorists would have fled or been shown and it would have been a whole different story. right. how quarter the u.k. has ruled human rights campaign this can go ahead of the case to stop
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a british cell society ever abia the campaign against strayed says the u.k. weapons are being used in violation of international law in the war in yemen britain has sold more than six billion dollars worth of alms to saudi since its campaign began and twenty fifteen the un estimates more than ten thousand people have been killed in the conflict underspent is the spokesman for the campaign against trade which is taking on this case he's confident that the group's arguments will be accepted by the court. sadia regime has been widely condemned by humanitarian organizations across the world it's been widely condemned by a un expert panel because of the terrible systematic ways as abused international humanitarian law and its brutal bombardment of yemen phases of people have been killed and the worst humanitarian crisis in the world has been allowed to take root and yet u.k. arms companies have profited from it every step of the way we don't just want to
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see the u.k. ending arms sales to say g.d.p. of oppressive regimes around the world we want to see all the major arms exporters doing exactly the same thing the u.k. is meant to have standards that's meant to stand for human rights and democracy or in the world that's what we're constantly being told and you can't do the arming and supporting some of the most brutal and repressive dictatorships in the world. now argentina's teso currency has rebounded after the government raised interest rates to counter a plunge in its value the measures have been taken to try to prevent another economic crisis and how strong are reports now from buenos aires. these are nervous times in argentina so government ministers were quick to reassure markets and carmen anxious population their economic policies are on track they said there's nothing to worry about. the economy in the context of a growing economy and with rising employment and less poverty we have an argentina
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that will keep growing for many years to come but we have never seen such a big drop in public spending. but soothing words are not enough and the argentine central bank took the drastic step of raising its keep borrowing rate to forty percent the third rise in a week it's to boost the base saw that this year has lost fifteen percent of its value against the u.s. dollar that creates inflation which the country has suffered plenty of in recent years this is nothing new in argentina but that doesn't make the frets of an economic crisis any easier to bear with everybody nervously watching the interest in currency exchange rates knowing that the impact of any economic meltdown is brutal. many are still traumatized by the economic crisis of two thousand and one two thousand and two when argentina defaulted on sovereign debts of ninety three billion dollars savers were refused access to their own bank accounts a millions were plunged into poverty. some fair it's coming again others believe it
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can't happen again. where walking on the brink that's what it seems like to me. in two thousand and one the economy was all deposits had to be turned in dollars but it's not like that now the banks have pesos and won't have the same problems it has nothing to do when the president is still. came to power two and a half years ago he promised to make argentina what he called a normal country of two years of economic turmoil it's still not clear how close argentina is to achieving normality we have to follow the next days and weeks how this very high interest rates will affect. not only the massive market which probably will give some breather but also how the economy will respond to that consumption investments and so forth as it is very difficult to maintain such high interest rates for long term. inflation is still high and investment is lower than
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many expected the dow ten thousand is hoping praying the president's promise is still on track. when cyrus. well the head of f ron scale has resigned after the airline's french stuff rejected a paint deal more than half of the workers voted against the agreement calling it too little too late a series of strikes in recent weeks have cost the airline more than three hundred million dollars and the fifth anniversary of a turning point in french modern french history is being mocked through a series of nationwide exhibitions the uprising by the mainly left wing students and workers in may one thousand nine hundred sixty eight almost overthrew the conservative government of general charles de gaulle slogans and posters were important in mobilizing support now the ottoman imagery is being revisited popular
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ports. plastered on walls across paris were posters that became the emblems of the main one nine hundred sixty eight uprising images and slogans that inspired students and workers as they protested against the government and turned the city into a battleground. the prints were created in the city's top art school fifty years on one of the artists behind them remembers on of it afforded we had the folly of youth the dream of revolution but at the same time none of the six years has wanted power same with the unions they just wanted better pay and conditions we wanted france to change to modernize to get rid of the old way of thinking just have a was among those who occupied the school day and night they created striking graphic works pretty tough his arms are on the top of that one small poster like this had more impact than a major advertising campaign across france the exhibitions popular with visitors the curator says it is an indication that many of the issues of then still resonate
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today you can see that the support for migrant workers started in one thousand nine hundred eighty eight the women's rights issue. and the sexual rights issues where very prevalent or became very relevant during the period for many people may sixteenth was a real cultural revolution young people really wanted to break away from the french conservative establishment there was a real sense of liberation and excitement in the air and that inspired artists not just then but it continues to do so today this new mural by graffiti artist esque if echoes some of the uprisings most famous slogans. for all to the bell may sixty eight was a unique moment and he continues to create all the denounces violence and depression we know that art has to say no to all forms of repression including torture including prisoners including the slave trade that's what our art is about
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continuing the may sixty eight uprising in artistic form the anniversary is being marked with exhibitions across france the protest didn't succeed in immediately bringing down the government of president shall de goal but they all should in a new era of hope and creativity at a time when many people with thirsty for change natasha butler al-jazeera paris. headlines are not as they are a hell of a home an immigrant rights groups are protesting against a new law which could see fifty seven thousand hondurans expelled from the u.s. the top administration says it's ending temporary protection granted after hurricane mitch in one thousand nine hundred nine the honduran government says it deeply laments the decision. donald trump will host south korea's president when
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j.n.f. the white house on may twenty second to discuss talks with kim jong un trump says he set a date and location that have been set now for that meeting with kim jong un but he is still keeping he still keeping the world guessing as to where. we're having very substantive soft results to rear and a lot of things i've already have a good research that asked ridges and i figure she's very good as i said yesterday is very good i think you're going to be seeing very very good thing. and also the trip is being scheduled we now have a date and we have a location will be announcing it. and aid workers in kenya say that they've reached only a quarter of many fifty thousand families in need of shelter after weeks of tarantulas rain the red cross says it doesn't have enough money to cover a submerged in sea operations and a court in the u.k.
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has ruled humanity him and rights campaigners can go ahead with the case to stop british on cells to saudi arabia the campaign against on straight says u.k. weapons all being used in violation of international law in the war in yemen britain sold more than six billion dollars worth of ons to saudi since its air campaign began in twenty fifteen. all those headlines the news continues here on al jazeera off the inside story of why. the u.a.e. has deployed more soldiers in yemen's remote.

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