tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera May 6, 2018 3:00am-3:34am +03
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the last meeting i had with him was off to the. bin laden was very nervous about nature has not met a western reporter before in part two of an exclusive two part documentary al-jazeera speaks to those who met osama bin laden he never showed the cheatwood me of the west i knew bin ladin continues. of all my friends and coworkers who were detained i am the only one who survived they were all waiting for news of the menfolk was only one word on when they. 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 is civil war was darkest secret bosnia the count on al-jazeera.
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and more than a thousand arrested in russia and protests against president putin opposition leader valmy is among them. live from doha also coming up. the u.s. brings back the second naval fleet to patrol the atlantic and confront russia. thousands of kenyans hit by floods face worsening conditions in emergency camps. fears of more tremors after an earthquake hits how why as an erupting volcano forces thousands from their.
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riot police in russia have detained opposition leader alexei no valley as well as more than a thousand of his supporters in anti-government demonstrations he called for nationwide rallies against president vladimir putin will be inaugurated for a fourth term on monday roy challenge reports from moscow. that two days before friday may putin's fourth presidential inauguration these russians wanted him to hear their demonstration slogan you are not ours are not we have a fascist state a totalitarian regime we should do something about it there is no election and russia. i'm here because i disagree with the politics the government and our so-called president are leading i want to tell him that he is not and that his place in the hague and imprisoned again on the. several thousands joins the unapproved protest in moscow thousands more demonstrated in other cities across
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russia. but i almost always pushkin square they were met by a small group with very different values. and describing themselves as patriots they want to prevent a ukraine stop arising in russia just currently being officially ruled by a constitution that was written for us by american specialists well under foreign rule not everyone here is not all the supporters people came here because they see that things are bad in the country but they don't understand why so and they were told by some people that it is putin to be blamed in everything people can't figure out such things for themselves. tempers started to rise at that point the police moved in. so they were arrested began in other parts of russia during the day now that. you know let's go out the police have just grabbed the young guy out of the crowd and looked like she was crying. dragging her off to the police and. the
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numbers of detentions ticked upwards protester after protester was dragged away so too was the man who calls this demonstration alexina valmy he's an anti corruption opposition leader who was banned from presidential elections because of a fraud conviction he insists was fabricated his online videos exposing the corruption of russia's ruling elite have made him a critic of the kremlin and a popular resistance figure among many russians who want something different. but ready made putin's hold on power for another six year term he's tightened control of the media and internet and made protesting much harder his assertive foreign policy is popular with many russians moscow's riot police follow detentions with a neck stacked in their rough clearing the square the valley supporters have been through this before and they'll probably go through it all again they feel it's their only remaining way to be heard. al-jazeera moscow.
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is beefing up its naval presence in the north atlantic as russia gets more assertive and has been a buildup of russian and nato forces to levels not seen for decades by an estabrook with force. the u.s. navy says its second fleet will be back in commission this summer operating out of norfolk virginia the fleet which was eliminated in a cost cutting move seven years ago is being reestablished to counter what the pentagon calls a rising throughout from russia at a ceremony in norfolk on friday admiral john richardson chief of naval operations said our national defense makes it clear that we are back in an era of great power competition as the security environment continues to grow more challenging and complex. russia's navy has stepped up patrols in the atlantic and both russia and nato have been building up forces in eastern europe at levels not seen
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in decades while russia has fewer ships than it did during the height of the cold war u.s. officials are especially concerned about its expanded submarine fleet and increased presence in the atlantic ocean but one military expert sees this more as saber rattling than an outright threat of war i think what the russians will do is probably over time react with more submarines operating in the atlantic more messages to us that be aware but i think that this will be kept at a relatively low level and i really don't see a huge escalation or any escalation proceeding from these actions the u.s. second fleet will be responsible for an area extending halfway across the atlantic and will include a staff of more than two hundred dian us to brooke al-jazeera the united arab emirates could be removed from the saudi led coalition in yemen after deployed forces to a yemeni island without consulting its exile government have been further protests
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on the taffy in the arabian sea against the u.s. military presence there it's not clear when iraqi troops will leave saudi arabia has sent a delegation to the island off to soldiers from the u.a.e. took over key locations there last week. thousands of people who took refuge in schools after losing their homes in kenya's floods are being moved into makeshift camps the government plans to reopen the schools on monday but as andrew simmons reports from the town of karachi in khalifi county people are now facing worse conditions than before it's a school classroom but this isn't about learning it's evil thousands of kenya's flood victims found food and shelter in schools but their stay is over it's time to move again the government wants to reopen the schools think i've got nothing in there is no way i can refuse to move i have no place of my own anymore.
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i have no peace of mind. and so the registration begins and these people are then sent on their way with some basic survival kits they're heading for a place known as the chief's camp but there's little in the way of comfort there they're all homeless with no possessions surrounded by floodwaters and there's no sign of what's going to happen next this camp may have the advantage of being on higher ground but it's a small hill top space is limited and it's overcrowded already the people have had to go elsewhere it's getting really bad for them the weather is still wet and their conditions of got worse. they have to get wood to support the top pullens they've been given the to do is sell shelters and there are no facilities here yet for the moment the nearest source of drinking
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water is a want to a round trip away by forte and it means wading through these floods no bomb no. longer. the local chief has orders to reopen schools on monday but admits facilities for the displaced place yet what do they have it's not enough about toilets about what it's not good these resilient people are remarkably tolerance some accept the education of their children must come first but at what cost in terms of hardship and health risk. we are suffering it would be better to have this elderly device business it's difficult now moved back and forth you never know you might be able to get. uncertainty like the rain clouds hangs over these people andrew simmons al-jazeera
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khalifi county in kenya a two people have died and tens of thousands of homes are without electricity in the canadian provinces of ontario and quebec powerful winds there brought down power lines and toppled trees gusts of up to one hundred kilometers an hour been recorded. thousands of people have been forced to move after a magnitude six point nine earthquake shook her wise big island the biggest to hit the area in decades and that comes after the eruption of killer volcano which began spewing lava on thursday could be seen bubbling up through cracks on the streets in the lane lonnie estates and lenny poona gardens neighborhood from where people have been ordered to leave. get the latest now on this from les irania states in hawaii where rob reynolds joins us live so rob what are the latest warnings for people in
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those affected areas well people have been told to leave those affected areas they're in now eight active vents spewing lava and spewing toxic gases like sulfuric dioxide so if your site is very harmful gas it can be fatal and the health authorities here are saying to people especially young people kids older people people with any kind of breathing chronic diseases like emphysema that this is really bad stuff and it could cause some serious problems so they're urging them to be careful to stay indoors if necessary to wear masks and and so forth the vents have been opening up regularly to within the last twenty four hours the why volcano observatory says that this kind of erupt of activity is
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ongoing and will continue nobody knows how long it will continue five hollows is so far in the leylandii states area which is over in this. area over my shoulder have been consumed by flames we've talked to people who saw the vents open up and said it was a sound like a cannons going off and then they could hear the rushing of gas and then they got out as quickly as they could many people with little more than just a bag of supplies or even less so that's the situation here and the thing is that for the people who have been evacuated they have no idea when this is all going to be over with and when they can go back home and all the many launch population centers risk there rob. well that's the. if you could look at this with with the sort of an upside.
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there are non this is a rural area this leylandii estates is in the middle of farmland and forest there is a city on the big island not far away maybe forty fifty kilometers called hilo that has about fifty thousand people but the the the biggest population center in the state of hawaii of course is honolulu that's an entirely separate island so what has been done is that a lot of businesses have closed the national park that encompasses the killer way a volcano has closed a lot of the tourist activities have been suspended so there's going to be a definite hit to the local economy but that at the moment there are no large towns or cities that are at risk of being impacted by the lava flows rob reynolds life first thing in hawaii thanks for. a summit head on as you know violence flares in indian administered kashmir protest ace killed after being run
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over by indian security forces. and why this woman's condition was made worse after an operation in mexico and she's not the only one. from the clear blue sky of the doha moon. to the fresh autumn breeze in the city. it's about to get very wet again in some parts of china the spring rains are boosting themselves around will hands a bit of a circulation the right extensor shanghai south of that is not to be cloudy and humid as occasional showers more likely probably on monday than on sunday and the main rain band is drifting south during monday as well were in the thirty's it's got sticky had a cough rain seems likely will handle feel fine there come monday and can do with any flooding that was the result of sunday's right to the south of that time we talk about discrete showers what top showers it develop of the philippines and just
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slowly west hitting the mainland vietnam cambodia and thailand also me and i will see a few this is a pretty big ones down soup and it's going to lazier as well and in north and borneo and still a ways back in the wet but this is more often draw them wet down here as it looks like it might actually be in indochina weather cloud but the showers are infrequent but they can be big as they can be in bangladesh north east india the cowboys sharkey's a vicious things they run sure you might get a day off in fact this is an example of a day off but they're still in the forecast particularly for northeastern india this is raining cloud the fall north of course otherwise it's just pretty monsoon heat. the weather sponsored by qatar airways. what began as a small extremist group in africa's most populous country we learn that that was invented from the government to just shoot him soon turned into
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a battlefront for the nigerian government how do you why. the tourists for abducting over two hundred schoolgirls the killing and displacement of thousands of people al-jazeera investigates the origins and bloody rise of iraq on al-jazeera. hello again you're watching al-jazeera mind of our top stories this. riot police in russia have detained opposition leader. and more than a thousand of his supporters anti government demonstrations did call for nationwide rallies against president vladimir putin will be inaugurated for
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a fourth term on monday. the united arab emirates could be removed from the saudi led coalition in yemen that's after it deployed forces to a yemeni island without consulting its exiled government have been further protests on the territory in the arabian sea against the u.a.e. military presence there. thousands of people have been forced to move on after a magnitude six point nine earthquake shook a wise big island the biggest to hit the area in decades this follows the eruption of killer whale volcano which began spewing lava on thursday. voters in lebanon will head to the polls on sunday in the first parliamentary elections there in nine years or than five hundred candidates have campaign promise in stability and economic growth the country is divided along sectarian lines though raising questions over what political changes may result. from beirut.
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it will be the first parliamentary election in nearly a decade polls were repeatedly postponed until a new electoral law was agreed proportional representation has replaced lebanon's winner takes all system but some are criticizing the new law for benefiting the ruling political class who have been forging unlikely electoral alliances just to stay in power their main objective is to increase the number of seats or save the number of seats in parliament the new law is supposed to give a chance to first time hopefuls but breaking the establishment decades long hold on power is not easy the problem is that the civil society represents. not one group now they say that they are in one list just to say that. in reality they are divided. as are the only parties that formed joint
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editorialists at a national level they have long dominated the muslim political landscape but they are facing opposition from within limited but a challenge nevertheless and that is why hezbollah has been campaigning extra hard . against. votes as a new thing so i you know i don't know to what extend this will change the political scene one thing will change prime minister saddle had it he will lose seats because of the way electoral districts are carved out but he is expected to be the sunni leader with the biggest bloc in parliament he does however face opposition from within his community. him for not taking. christian candidates are also battling for leadership of their community the pull
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their popularity a few years before they vie for the presidency a post reserved. of the past. and the pro. military power which. has. been focusing instead on securing their power if the hope was to bring about a new generation of leaders that likely will not happen there may be some changes within parliament but there is a general consensus that these elections will not major changes to the political landscape. an explosion.
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the blast which injured three others happened in a residential neighborhood in. trying to deal with an unexploded. to the twenty fourteen war. at least four people have been killed in violence in indian administered kashmir a man died in srinagar after being run over by indian security forces and earlier at least three separatist fighters were killed during a raid by soldiers a warning you may find some images in osama bin genevieve's report disturbing. this is the moment when an indian security vehicle crashes a protester. the vehicle drives on and the wounded man is left behind he later died of his injuries indian forces say they are investigating what happened it is now under control as a guard that could have a civilian system to be a certain make you want to practice all these accounts. more than
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a dozen people have been killed in escalating violence in indian administered kashmir last month the un secretary general urged that the loss of civilian lives needs to be investigated. and yet it's been one of the day of violence. this time it began when soldiers raided homes in a densely populated area in the city ocean over security forces say they had information that fighters were hiding in that area when they were asked to surrender the soldiers say the fighters started shooting opposition is going on things are not under control everything is an under control you want to look. there is not much there is more damage of a civilian property and another thing so i think that under control. fighters were killed by security forces during the operation police accused protesters of trying to impede their operation and help the rebels so. our brothers
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who've left in the path of allah they left for us and they've taken up arms after seeing the tyranny in kashmir now we have come out to rescue our brothers. india continues to blame neighboring pakistan for instigating trouble in the disputed region which pakistan denies. activists say more than seven hundred thousand indian troops and security personnel have been deployed in kashmir and the army is opposing calls to repeal a special powers act which prevents the prosecution of soldiers accused of abuses human rights watch has urged india to carry out prompt investigations into allegations of abuses and to prosecute those responsible but rights groups say thousands have already been killed in kashmir in nearly three decades of violence with no sign of reconciliation any time soon. as in. a coal mine explosion in southwest pakistan has killed at least sixteen minus emergency crews are trying to free dozens of workers who remain trapped the blast
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in the model water coal fields in baluchistan was caused by a buildup of methane gas inside the mine. ah people from the caribbean invited to work in britain after world war two have marched in london they were protesting after the scandal over a government policy threatened their right to live in the country after decades members of the so-called wind rushed generation took their protest directly to prime minister theresa may in london song you're going to go was there. a call for amnesty for the victims of a scandal that goes to the heart of the british government a scandal that's affected thousands of people of caribbean origin and their fight to remain in the country meant to be their home i still have family friends who were affected finals some people i know i was sent back and cleaned in the middle of the night we couldn't do anything about it because by because batman stories so
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open the wind rush generation who went to britain between one nine hundred forty eight one thousand nine hundred seventy one were vital in rebuilding the nation after the second world war but for many the right to remain in the u.k. has been fraught with difficulties by government blunders no records were kept of those who will grant to permission to stay permanently and no paperwork was issued to confirm it and in twenty ten the british home office destroyed landing cards that belong to wind rush migrants risking the status of people who have been living here illegally in the u.k. for decades many of those affected lost their jobs and where denied access to health care benefits and pensions they were even threatened with deportation while the government has promised to resolve the we're right within two weeks there are still so many unanswered questions and just last week the ruling party voted against the release of secret documents relating to the wentworth crisis saying
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that it was disproportionate during last week's prime minister's questions reason may promise more transparency into how such wrongful deportations and detentions occurred. but so far she has resisted discarding further immigration controls despite increasing pressure we all share the ambition to make sure we do right by members of the interest generation and that's why he will be announcing a package of measures to bring transparency on the issue to inform make sure the house is informed to reassure members of this house but more importantly to reassure those people who have been directly affected under emergency government measures thousands of people will be offered the chance to obtain british citizenship free of charge as well as the right to compensation for those affected it is perhaps too little too late you little know like here and they're telling you you don't belong. so the anger and hurt of a generation who were betrayed by
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a country be believed in sunnydale egle al-jazeera london. for peace talks between the colombian government and the year len rebel group will move to cuba the original host ecuador polled its support for the talks the negotiations started fifteen months ago in quito after more than fifty years of fighting ecuador stopped hosting the talks after two ecuadorian journalists and their driver were killed by former fox rebels and al jazeera investigation has found that hundreds of mexicans have undergone experimental and unrelated medical procedures by the country's flagship neurological institute over a fourteen year period the patients were fitted with a device meant to drain fluid from the brain but in some cases it made their conditions worse john harmon has part one of this investigation. it's painful for you learned to look back at the time before she was hit by
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hydrocephalus a debilitating condition in which excess fluid builds up in the brain it's left her with massive headaches and speech problems. everything changed because i was a sports woman before i spent twenty years doing sports and i sold clothing everything and that she hoped that an operation at mexico's flagship institute for new role a-g. noori surgery would help her but what she didn't know was that doctors would hope with an experimental and the north arise device. and not just her four hundred seventy three other patients who went to the facility so implanted they were essentially guinea pigs in an unofficial trial carried out over a period of fourteen years they never asked me anything before operating they said something to my husband but never that they were going to do an experiment.
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three doctors working at the institute at the time spoke to al-jazeera all said that like you learned the nearly five hundred patients weren't told the device was unauthorized nor nobody's case file included an informed consent about the experimental nature of the device not one of the national institute has refused to clarify if patients were informed or not but we got access to six patient falls this is what's key to all of this the medical consent form in one of the cases and it's very general it doesn't mention that this is an experimental device that hasn't been authorized by the health ministry. but that's not all the three doctors out to syria talk to say the device was simply a tube that relied on gravity to drain away fluid from the brain down to the stomach area and that relying on gravity meant that if a patient lay down it would flow back other devices used valves to stop that.
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it's just a tube it's technology from the fifty's it doesn't represent any sort of progress. by a publish studies the inventor of the cheap claimed it's precisely calculated diameter did regulate flow and stop fluid going back to the brain even when patients were clawing and he said it worked better than valve eula devices. doctors told us several patients had to have the device replaced but it's unclear how many suffered from any ill effects the names of those implanted have been released a many came from paul remote communities. it's a problem especially with patients without much money they feel ok and they go there last. year learned that was able to have another device fitted several years ago but the health continues to worsen at this point hopes of getting better or for justice a fading john home and al-jazeera mexico city and john harmon has
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more from mexico in the second part of this special al jazeera investigation he explores how he unregulated practices were allowed to be carried out and discovers the consequences for all involved that's on al-jazeera on sunday. this is al jazeera let's get a roundup of the top stories riot police in russia have detained opposition leader alexina valley as well as more than a thousand of his supporters in anti government demonstrations he called for nationwide rallies against president putin will be inaugurated for a fourth term on monday the united arab emirates could be removed from the saudi led coalition in yemen deploying for after deploying forces to a yemeni island without consulting its exiled government that's according to a senior yemeni official who spoke to the associated press they've been further
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protests on the territory in the arabian sea against the u.a.e. is military presence there. thousands of people have been forced to move after a magnitude six point nine earthquake shook her wise big island the biggest to hit the area in decades this follows the eruption of killer way you volcano which began spewing lava on thursday several china's have struck since then two people have died in tens of thousands of homes are without electricity in the canadian provinces of ontario and quebec powerful winds brought down power lines and toppled trees gusts of up to one hundred kilometers an hour been recorded the un is warning of disease outbreaks from severe flooding in kenya at least one hundred twelve people have been killed and more than two hundred sixty thousand displaced over the past two months aid workers say they've reached only a quarter of the families in need of shelter the red cross says it doesn't have
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enough money to cover its emergency operations at least four people have died in violence in indian administered kashmir a man lost his life in srinagar to be run over by an indian security forces and earlier at least three separate fighters separate fights as were killed during a raid by soldiers from. an explosion in the gaza strip has killed five ham ass members of the military wing the kassam brigades three others have been injured in the village of the way to where the blast happened those are the headlines it's our stories next. it's for for decades for.
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