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tv   NEWS LIVE - 30  Al Jazeera  May 5, 2018 10:00am-10:34am +03

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really the halt. in the for. the science. and. what began as a small extremist group in africa's most populous country. the. two hundred schoolgirls the killing displacement of thousands of people. investigates.
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well come no more close to fifty thousand on germans living in the u.s. face deportation after a change and then all. of them are kyle this is al jazeera live from doha also coming up trump says the date and venue for his meeting with could north korea's kim jong un has been finalized. syrian rebels surrender tanks and heavy weapons as they pass and leave an enclave of homes in evacuation deal. plus more than a thousand people are forced from their homes after a volcanic eruption and earthquakes on why is big island.
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the u.s. has announced a change in policy that could lead to the deportation of tens of thousands of immigrants donald trump's administration is ending a program that allowed them to stay in the united states humanitarian groups are calling the decision heartless and gallica reports from washington. fleeing violence and poverty in central america migrants gather at the us mexico border seeking asylum. like the last few weeks this so-called caravan of people has attracted the attention of president donald trump he says the u.s. border is under siege and the immigration bills a week but to protect our families we must secure our borders and the good thing about the caravan people are watching people are watching you watch house horrible they're coming in from honduras they're coming in. from other places they're taking this long trek up more mexico. now the temporary protected status of fifty seven thousand on jurors living in the u.s.
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is set to wind. the program was set up to offer refuge for those whose countries are ravaged by war and natural disasters many end of the program of legally lived and worked in the u.s. for decades democratic leader nancy pelosi released a statement that in part reads today's decision by the trumpet ministration to when temporary protected status is a cowardly assault on the fifty seven thousand on durance which will tear apart families and communities across america and joins aren't the only ones affected six out of the ten countries offered protection or to lose their status close to from one jurist el salvador and haiti it will wreck their lives it will it will destabilize their families it will separate their families because we are talking about people who have been living here for an average of thirty years. they have deep roots in our communities critics say the trumpet ministration is all but running down
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a humanitarian program that began in one thousand nine hundred ninety on jordan's have been given an eighteen month extension but over the next two years almost four hundred thousand people who've been legally living in the u.s. for years will be told to leave and he gallacher al-jazeera washington the white house says donald trump will meet south korean president moon j.n. later this month now discuss upcoming talks between the u.s. president and north korean leader kim jong un trump says the date and location of the meeting have been finalized but gave no details earlier he had suggested it could take place in the demilitarized zone where kim and south korea's president held a historic summit last month. we're 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 very good things as i said yesterday state dude i think you're going to be seeing very very good thing. and also the trip
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is being scheduled we now have a date and we have a location will be announcing it for. the south korea christopher hill led washington's delegation at six party talks on north korea he told us there are other issues to be settled ahead of the meeting. i would not focus too much of a venue i would focus on the fact that this is the first time you 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 i have a 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 the nuclear program but that is not very specific the efforts that we had
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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 them verification regime that capacity kind of international standards so from what i can tell there were either getting to the point of verifying for example that north korea is no longer producing some tony him or producing the solid material and what i can see they haven't gotten close to that so there needs to be an agreement on the steps by all three sample international inspectors these kinds of of issues and so a lot of work to do and it's unclear what they could really accomplish in the context of one meeting with respect to a process that could take several months even if that goes. as the u.s. prepares for talks with pyongyang north korea and south korea going ahead with another display of reconciliation this time but that times and talks in north korea
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will be a step forward by half an hour to align them with hello kathleen i have a quick points. 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 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 japanese imperialists as
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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 time zones as the first practical step for national reconciliation and unity. up through 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 what 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. and syria rebels from various factions are set to leave an enclave now homes under
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a deal brokered by russia five says handed over heavy weapons to the syrian army off to more than two weeks of asked rights have been given two options join the assad forces or leave for rebel held areas in the north else where government forces have continued as strikes in the lip homs province and southern damascus. hawaii's big island which is dealing with a major volcanic eruption has been hit by a series of earthquakes more than a thousand people have been forced to leave their homes under threats from lava flows and sulfuric gas and i would 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. killer way up to deaf 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
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since it's right there behind our harsh 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 top to keep people out of the most dangerous areas there's a crack right there the road rage back and. helicopters smugglers talk. all around so. they are one street over from a. killer where has been erupting continuously for more than thirty years but there's been more activity in recent days. about fifteen kilometers away
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from where it had been in for roughly two and. a high frequency of earthquakes it's not known how long this current eruption will last or why it's governor is urging people to stay safe and i am haywood. the french president says continuing his tour of the pacific i want to crawl has attended a ceremony to mark thirty kids since the hostage crisis in new caledonia back in one nine hundred eighty eight twenty three people were killed after separatists kidnapped french security offices caledonia had been a french territory since eight hundred fifty three visit is seen as a symbolic gesture towards reconciliation ahead of new caledonia is independence referendum in november andrew thomas was at the ceremony. in one thousand nine hundred eighty a group of pro independence cannot command took more than twenty french policemen hostage in the process four of those placement were killed while they were held two weeks in a cave two weeks later the french military raided that even in the process of
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nineteen of those cannot men were killed and they say is where they were buried this is a memorial as well so those men all the time from call both men terrorists that was the official position of the french government but on saturday president became the first french president to visit this island and i very symbolic meeting that was all about reconciliation he planted a coconut tree to mark the respect between the french states and the people here. he also met with the families of all these men who died thirty years ago he gave them flowers and then walked down as the families placed the flowers on this site well out of that violence came a reconciliation process that was always going to take decades that was the plan was always going to end in an independence referendum and that is what is happening
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in the van so before that actually took place president micro felt it important to come here to feel there was a degree of welcome here and see that process through. still ahead head on out is there a. line under the reporting on the reverend love of the reign of red. on this red roan ride the waves of the moon river. and americans are growing increasingly lonely and you may be surprised to find out yes the whole. hell i was getting wet in italy and such a big surprise very very circulating low just to the west for a day or sorry now and it's still there it's expanding so it's throwing a shot of it to switzerland he sed and spy and then to our geria as well paf not
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there's not a lot going on in years a cold front in here which is it in a bit tell you because whilst overnight that just shows little bit of cloud in the showers continues for the south by the time we're not you know days now and you've captured here the remaining hot harry in europe so that he in bucharest but of a different side of it is take about ten degrees or so off so warsaw is up to about nineteen degrees however beyond that enjoy the weather the hot air gets squeezed even more about how to get to sunday's bit more like spring should be high teens low twenty's what we have nicely in northern france on the british isles twenty three on london apps be a holiday in the not so very pleasant weather now i said that low in the western mediterranean still circulating so soft that it's rather wet unpleasant windy not very warm time analogy is that that does clear up for sunday on the other side of the mediterranean that just science we've got forty seven is a forecast announce one bit better manji in kyra.
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and again you're watching out there as reminder of our top stories this. policy that could lead to the deportation of tens of thousands of immigrants donald trump is ending a program that gave him temporary refuge. twenty years ago. the white house says donald trump will meet south korean president lee j. in washington later this month upcoming talks between the u.s. president and north korean leader kim jong. un location have been set for that meeting. and in syria rebels from various factions are set to leave an enclave near the city of homs under a deal brokered by russia has handed over heavy weapons to the syrian army after more than two weeks of strikes. the united arab emirates says more soldiers to the yemeni. despite condemnation from the government. forces yemeni forces to leave key locations in the important territory in the arabian sea a delegation has
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been sent to mediate the crisis whilst yemeni government officials are also currently on the island. aid workers in kenya say they've managed to help just a quarter of the nearly fifty thousand families in need of shelter after weeks of torrential rain red cross says it doesn't have enough money to fund its emergency operations and are seven travelled with one of the relief teams. it looks like a vast lake yet this is the river town or it's consumed villages and lives. we changed the way from the river going deep into the bush. the mango trees full of fruit. the birds make good out of most situations. but any illusion of normality is lost when you look through the
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clearing. was a seasonal stream has turned into this. the forces of nature are the water line that 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. here that i have been here for three days waiting for the help i haven't received any. i can wait any longer i need it now. yes all the right saying that but i guess i can also help way can't. because we've done what we can for not
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asking more people to come and help us so that we can reach more people. and even some of those getting their rations of food nuff 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 story oh i don't know my father was on i did i was on the i'm scared about my children they're hungry they're exposed to the rains and because of that we're likely to fall sick for those left behind you can see it from their expressions they need help now along with so many others and even more remote places than this andrew simmons al-jazeera in kenya is ten a river county israel's defense minister has rejected an apology from palestinian leader mahmoud abbas calling him a holocaust denier abbas said he's sorry for suggesting the persecution of european
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jews was related to their professions and not their religion he says backtracked saying it was not his intention to offend and he fully respects the jewish faith u.s. ambassador to the u.n. says the comments undermine prospects for peace at least three hundred fifty people have been injured three of them critically in friday's protests at israel's border with gaza israeli forces again fired live ammunition and tear gas. demonstrating near the fence from gaza hard for said 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 providing a smoke screen from israeli snipers. emerging from the smoke until i guess 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
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and the day the us is moving its embassy from tel aviv to jerusalem we see it clearly ok that the next days the next for a this is the we have a good message also from. the continue of them is that it should make the worst people 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 more tear gas there's been a lot of tires being burned just behind which people have been gathering some are being using slingshots to throw stones and here comes the tear gas in response from the israeli side. as people marched at
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a second location south of the main protest site the tear gas volleys intensified. as did the sound of live ammunition 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 abed 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 the terror and effect would that increase the anger among people 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
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crossing from israel protest is going into the gaza side of the facility the israeli military said they damaged pipelines that carry fuel and gas into the strip kind of study and sources said the damage could run into the millions of dollars and take weeks to repair the force that al-jazeera girls are. the world's chemical weapons watchdog is considering a french offer that would enable it to assign blame for chemical attacks carli a p c w can only determine whether an attack with a banned substance has taken place knows who carried it out it comes as the czech president and misses his country had tested a substance that britain alleges was used to poison a former russian spy on its soil last the man confirms moscow's allegations the czech republic could produce novacek the nerve agent. and his daughter. i have drawn this conclusion was produced and tested here though in a small amount and then destroyed we know where and we know when it's hypocrisy to
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pretend like none of this happened. some bob ways were lying pos he has launched a campaign in july's a presidential vote president. remains the new p.f. succumb to this in the polls the party lost several seats in recent primary elections suggesting a victory will not be easy for him it will be the first election without formulator vote regard and power since independence in one nine hundred. thirty s. . that's. what. party you're left first people who work for you. retain first heard. this. show and that was. his first president and laser vision for the
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future. the head of our france kalam has resigned after the airlines french software jack to a pay deal more than half the vote has voted against the agreement calling it too little too late a series of strikes in recent weeks of cost the airline more than three hundred million dollars. and the study in the us suggests americans a growing increasingly lonely any hof the participants said they feel alone isolated or left out at least some of the time of those givers on their report. a person off in the distance alone in their thoughts sitting in a park in darkness a portrait of a man walking in the snow all by himself a young man playing basketball with nobody else around all pictures of people in new york in situations of solitude perhaps loneliness. to court a sick polish photographer snapped the pictures he says he can relate to the
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subjects he moved to new york city four years ago knew almost no one and discovered many people suffered from loneliness just by chance many of his photographs were of people alone you know you come here and you are busy with your work life and then you realize that all your family all your friends and social life and in many ways is behind and i was used to it but i talked to a lot of people a lot of new york is here my friends are strangers. and the theme of loneliness just kept coming back according to a study sponsored by cigna the global health an insurance company americans are alarmingly lonely and being alone can bring about serious health risks. research has been done that has shown loneliness the linked to heart disease diabetes depression substance use and other chronic illnesses as well the study was focused on the u.s. researchers say the numbers are similar in other parts of the world but perhaps
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what stood out most in the study young people between each gene and twenty two years old scored higher than any other age group in the loneliness survey horrible or lonely than people seventy two and older researchers aren't exactly sure why but they say high social media consumption does not help. we've all seen it a million times young people in parks like this and instead of sitting next to family and friends and talking. over there phones like this checking social media in social media is very anti-social as for luke courtis he is not trying to start a social commentary about loneliness with his pictures he simply discovered taking pictures of people usually showed more often than not the people were alone gabriel is on doe new york. second place around the world to mark the two hundredth
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anniversary of the birth of col marx the philosopher a revolutionary socialist was born in eight hundred eighteen in track and western germany marx grew up in the shadow of the french revolution joining a movement that challenged political and cultural establishment the radical nature of his writings so i'm expelled from germany france and belgium marx is best remembered for to work the communist manifesto and us capital which he laid out his views of the capitalist system as if we all did not live to see his ideas carried out in his lifetime although his writings have formed the theoretical basis of modern international communism bicentenary events have been officially lost in a fairly interest but silica reports. can marx is everywhere in tree here his face is on posters his name is on street signs his image is even on the traffic lights tourists are flocking to the house where he was born and to coincide with the bicentenary three new exhibitions are opening here to examine marx's life
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and his pioneering work in political theory and economics marxist this weekend and marx is such an important thinker because he connected an analyst society and a developing capitalist production in a way no one else did so intensively it is especially dark connection so significant even though it now seems self-evident and we can learn to do the same thing today our circumstances because we live in complicated times translated into dozens of languages marx's communist manifesto change the world it inspired revolutions in china russia cambodia and cuba and profoundly influenced modern day social democrats across europe and beyond his prediction the communism would inevitably overthrow capitalism has since been proved wrong but marx is analysis of the unequal relationship between workers and capitalist bosses remains relevant to this day. germany has a somewhat ambivalent attitude towards marx but interest has embraced in
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a way that the man himself may not have appreciated the bicentennial of the godfather of communism is actually turning into something of a capitalist bonanza for the town of trivia here in the souvenir shops as a whole variety of comics products on sale comic books comics clearings a money box a mug even a calm ox rubber duck here look a calm ox wine naturally it's a red wine perhaps this image appropriation proves that his analysis was actually correct of evidence until he would see his theories is being confirmed because he wrote that everything becomes good so much in dyson capitalism now here in south has become the dice marx's image is certainly iconic his profile instantly recognizable of marx's funeral friedrich engels eulogized his name will enjoy through the ages and so also will his work it certainly has paul brennan al-jazeera
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. here with us there are these are our top stories the u.s. announced a change in policy that could lead to the deportation of tens of thousands of wonder and emigrants donald trump is ending a program that gave him temporary refuge after a harken hit andras elite twenty years ago. the white house says donald trump will meet south korean president move jay and washington later this month they will discuss the upcoming talks between the u.s. president and north korean leader kim jong un comes as the date and location have been set for their meeting. we're 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 very good things as i said yesterday if they do i think you're going to be seeing very very good thing. and also the trip
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is being scheduled we now have a date and we have a location will be announcing it. in syria rebels from various factions are set to leave an enclave near homes under a deal brokered by russia fighters handed over heavy weapons to the syrian army after more than two weeks of airstrikes they've been given two options joining the assad forces or leaving for rebel held areas in the north of the country the united arab emirates has sent more soldiers to the yemeni island of so culture despite condemnation from the government on thursday and iraqi troops forced yemeni forces to leave key locations on the strategically important territory in the arabian sea a saudi delegation has been sent to mediate the crisis on c.n.n. a government officials are also currently on the island the french president is continuing his tour of the pacific and on your macro has attended
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a ceremony to mark thirty years since the hostage crisis in new caledonia back in one thousand nine hundred eighty eight twenty three people were killed after separatists kidnapped french security officers and aid workers in kenya say they reached only a quarter of nearly fifty thousand families in need of shelter after weeks of to ensure rain it's estimated that more than one hundred people have died as the flooding spreads the red cross says it doesn't have enough money to cover its emergency operations those are your headlines we're back with more news here on al-jazeera after inside story stay with us. until now the coverage of latin america most of the world was a cover included todd's tragedies. and that was it but not how people feel how they think and that's what we do we go anyway five and a half months of demanding an end to an education system that was introduced.

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