tv Al- Nakba 2013 Ep 4 Al Jazeera June 4, 2018 11:00pm-12:01am +03
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i think there that if the president is to be impeached the house of representatives can do it and the senate can remove him from office if it chooses to do so and the other argument that there needs to be taken to consideration in all of this is that certainly the u.s. justice department back in the early one nine hundred seventy s. did write a memo saying that the president cannot south part and in fact what it says is during the nixon political corruption scandal no one can judge one's own case the president cannot pardon himself i can tell you if the president tried to do this given the divide the political climate right now in the united states there would be no question the research only be widespread unrest if the president decided to go beyond what most americans feel is a limit to his power that no president is above the law can be many thanks i was serious kimberly health at the live in washington.
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and al jazeera investigation has found that saudi arabia played a bigger role in causing the gulf crisis than previously thought the report shows that the cell that hacked the castle news agencies website in may last year worked from a saudi government ministry in riyadh the phones and computers were connected to a saudi communications company hackers posted faith quotes attributed to cattle amir that led to saudi arabia the u.a.e. bahrain and egypt to cut ties with impose a blockade that's the first anniversary of the blockade of cats are approaching is their efforts in the u.s. to try to win over u.s. support president donald trump initially parked blockading countries at the blockade in countries rather before calling on all sides to resolve the dispute article haim looks at the role now that lobbying has played in the crisis. the nation of qatar on fortunately has historically been a funder of terrorism it was
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a shock in washington and across the globe a u.s. president publicly going after cutter a close ally that houses the biggest u.s. base in the middle east siding with the blockading countries. at the time many believe the saudis fawning treatment of him in riyadh played a part but we now know thanks to e-mails leaked to the associated press that the push to get the president to side with saudi arabia and the united arab emirates began months before the emails are from brodie a big time republican fundraiser according to the a.p. he was working with george nader who said he was close to both of the crown princes from saudi arabia and the u.a.e. broady reportedly lobbied the president and later received hundreds of millions of dollars worth of defense deals from the u.a.e. in one email bertie boasted about his role writing trumps vocal support of saudi arabia at this summit quote is a direct result of the campaign we have led over the past two months to highlight
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the funding of terrorism by cutter and the muslim brotherhood brody is suing cutter he says they hacked his e-mails a charge they deny but cutters facing more scrutiny because of another court case prominent guitars are being sued by rapper ice cube he says they didn't pay him as promised in a business deal and his partner testified that they tried to use them to get to steve bannon in testimony describing their offer as a bribe which they also deny all sides of spent millions of dollars on lobbyist trying to sway the traffic in a straight line country in the gulf region is a threat to global security are put ads in the president's favorite cable channel placing op eds in prominent papers lobbying lawmakers stand with the united states to defeat terrorism and. there are a lot of guys who are making an awful lot of money and mr former lobbyist stephen billet thinks they're likely wasted. millions of dollars because you never really see any evidence of it later on you know you'll see decisions made at
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a later time that indicate that there was a positive outcome according to the new york times the saudis and u.a.e. offered to help the drone campaign before the election it's unclear if anything was done on his behalf with their money but it's an allegation special counsel robert muller is likely looking at the man at the center of many of these questions george nader is cooperating with the investigation. al jazeera washington will choose day as the first anniversary of the beginning of the blockade and we'll have a special program looking at the political economic and human impact of the crisis you can see it at eighteen hundred hours g.m.t. on tuesday here on al-jazeera. the wall street journal is reporting that the u.a.e. has asked the united states to help to take control of yemen's ports of her data from hooty rebels the red sea ports says the main entry point aid to reach millions of yemenis amorality and american forces work together inside the country but the
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u.s. is sort of stayed away from any fighting around the force a weather update thanks to announce a zero then looking for bodies in the iraqi city of mosul we'll tell you why it's still so dangerous despite the defeat of ice plus. why this kid says landed the philippines president it hot water. hello there we've got a lot of wet weather on its way towards the southern parts of china and viet nam in fact some of us the rain's already with us you can see the cloud here just to the west in parts of hong kong and then all the way down through parts of viet nam it's already giving us some very heavy downpours in vietnam some places reporting well over one hundred millimeters of rain in twenty four hours and it's all thanks to
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a tropical depression that's working its way northward we are expecting it to be the equivalent of a tropical storm by the time it makes landfall in high nan and so the winds will be fairly blustery but it is going to be the rain that is the main issue and this system is moving incredibly slowly and generating plenty of showers over a huge area so for many of us there will be a prolonged period of very heavy rain and that could give us an issue with the flooding we've had the towards the west there's also been some heavy downpours here as well courtesy of the monsoon it's gradually pushing its way northward and as you can see at the moment some of the wettest of the weather is in the southwestern parts of india more very heavy downpours there lightly during the day on choose day also plenty of showers across sri lanka and for the northeastern states of india through bangladesh. in nepal for the northern parts of india though in pakistan it does look a mostly dry it's also pretty hot day new delhi they're getting to forty four degrees.
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unpack it for us what were you here and what were you seeing whether on line horrendous things you misunderstood as i was looking for doubt about that or if you join us on the sanct a lot of the major countries in the commonwealth have far bigger fish to fry and chips to eat bass is a dialogue. about some of this success if perhaps everyone has a voice what happens when the robots themselves are making the decision to join the colobus conversation amount is iraq. and i get the top stories here on al-jazeera jordan's prime minister has resigned
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following days of protest against planned attack tax rises king abdullah accepted the resignation after a meeting at the road palace bookies expects to be replaced by the education minister. at least seven people have been killed in a suicide attack outside kabul polytechnic university in the afghan capital more than two thousand religious scholars meeting there for the earlier urge the taliban to accept the government's unconditional offer of peace talks at least thirty five people have been killed in guatemala in one of the most violent volcanic eruptions in decades thousands more been forced to leave their homes as the volcano spews rocks hot ash and smoke several kilometers into the sky a lot of flows have buried at least one village. hundreds of bodies have been found in mosul almost a year after the iraqi city was taken back from i saw they were buried in ruins and along the banks of the tigris try just tigris river the shell strafford reports now from baghdad. it's been eleven months since iraqi prime minister hydrilla body
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declared victory over eisel in mosul much of what was iraq's second biggest city lies in ruins the fighting was described as the most intense urban combat since world war two. the search for bodies goes on civil defense search and rescue teams are concentrating on areas close to the banks of the river tigris it was here that the iraqi government forces supported by international coalition airstrikes flushed out and killed most of the last remaining myself fighters in the city i saw bodies that were covered around seven hundred these bodies were all i still that used to hide in these houses are obstacles and clearing these bodies out of the unexploded munitions hidden bombs explosive vests and rigged houses with i.e.d. as we are trying our best to overcome these obstacles. to the remains of eisel
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fighters are being found close to dead civilians who were on able to escape it's estimated around ten thousand civilians were killed in of a province in the battle against isis most of them in west of mosul. we have been polling buddies for eight days already from. within this quarter alone we have found two hundred bodies on the day four hundred on the second day and around one hundred on the. we have difficulty getting heavy machinery aside all city because of the. more than two million iraqis remain displaced across the country including approximately seven hundred thousand from mosul the rebuilding of the city has yet to start families like these facing many more months if not years living in camps the delay is primarily because of questions about who will foot the bill. at the donors conference in kuwait in
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february iraq asked its allies for help with the eighty eight billion dollars cost of rebuilding this country including mosul but only thirty billion dollars was pledged the iraqi government faces having to cover the majority of rebuilding costs itself for now almost a year since the battle against leisel in mosul was one the search for and recovery of the dead continues john strafford al jazeera bike that israel says that it's going to take money from the taxes it collects from palestinians to compensate israelis for fire damage to their land it says that palestinians protesting in gaza carried out awesome attacks damaging forests and farming land one hundred twenty one palestinians have been killed by israeli soldiers since protests at the border began in late march. gaza's on the brink of a mental health crisis that's the warning from the charity save the children which interviewed one hundred fifty palestinian kids it found two thirds of them
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experience nightmares isolation or aggression due to the conditions that are a force that reports. in gaza sundown truly is magic hour a time to turn eyes to the horizon and other days hardships fall for a while into the shadows. during ramadan it's also a time to break fast with a simple if tar dinner on the beach but get talking to some of the parents here it is clear that such moments of meeting everyone worries about what kind of future their children face about what life here is doing to them or when i don't what's going on what are going to look at how can i meet my children's needs when everything is so expensive and our income so limited. the future is difficult and even if i can provide my children a good education i can't give them jobs that's the main problem that's waiting for them. to hit india has lived all of her eleven years under the israeli blockade a childhood of blighted by three wars with israel during the last in twenty
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fourteen she became too scared to sleep alone started bed wetting becoming terrified by loud noises the symptoms persisted for years she became withdrawn at school her father's joblessness adding to the stress as sad because of course i will be sad with all these catastrophes especially when my father can't buy me clothes or help me to continue my education i feel sad when there's no food at home and i'm hungry i feel sad too for my father who is struggling without an income. the last year dor has been getting treatment so-called resilience training building her confidence her ability to cope with stress new research by the charity save the children suggest such help is needed by hundreds of thousands more children in gaza save the children interviewed one hundred fifty children for their research ninety five percent of whom reported at least one of four key symptoms hyperactivity depression aggression or a wish to be alone experts tell us that anxiety is the overarching problem prompted
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by conflict the poor economy and the continuing deterioration of life in gaza. gaza's deepening poverty is deepening despair the u.n. says two hundred ninety thousand of its children are in need of psychosocial support but a fifth of twelve to seventeen year olds have suffered psychological violence more than a third have experienced physical violence when that is possible of their family always the father is an employer and cannot provide them in our need as they said to the family of course it will be reflected on the children for example that even it over the father in somehow an unconscious way to the wives of their would be nervous in the wife will displace it on their children so that children will be by themselves and healthy and not behaving well he says some of his young patients still suffering post-traumatic stress from the last war have been taking part in the recent protests at the border for some he says it can exacerbate the symptoms
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for others it brings a rare opportunity for self-expression such is the torment for so many in gaza but among tear gas snipers bullets and death children can find moments of solace for sit out zero gaza the president of the philippines is being criticized for kissing a filipino worker on the lips while stage in south korea. would. god. god would would trigger the tape was an amazing little great event and so when he picked one out of the crowd thirty invited him on stage and kissed her on the lips in exchange for a book he told the crowd that it was just for fun but he's being condemned by rights activists for degrading women and the fact that you thought that kissing the woman would entertain people as well as says something about how you view women
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women have their day man that you can express or exercise your authority over another person especially a woman is entertainment that's something really think. being what was there there are certain rules of conduct when it comes to public officials especially a president in a formal gathering in a public gathering and what i thought i don't feel is the correct or proper demeanor for a public official at an official events eight days from now the eyes of the world will be on singapore the city state will host the historic summit between donald trump and north korea's leader kim jong il and what excitement builds secrecy surrounds much of the planning scott heiler reports now from singapore one of the smallest countries in the world is about to host a summit that could very well be the biggest diplomatic event in decades. u.s. president donald trump and north korean leader kim jong un are due to meet at last
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and potentially diffuse one of the world's most dangerous flashpoints versing. because of the dramatic back and forth mystery over the location and the personalities involved the summit is in gauging people who previously had scant interest in dio part of. singapore has a history of hosting top level high security events including two critical taiwan chinese meetings and the annual shangri-la security and defense summit the whole security apparatus is very robust there's a lot of surveillance around the island as significant control of dissent as control of the media such that any events that may be deemed unhappy unhelpful can be quite tightly controlled and put down trump meets kim is a big story in japan to cutter's network has had teams in singapore since it was first named as the summit venue a great deal of the time playing cat and mouse with the north korean delegation to do that we have covered news in singapore
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a lot before this time the security is strict and more difficult for us to work with the police presence is heavy news underlying the interest and excitement for the summit singapore newspaper the straits times conducted a readers' poll asking singapore and where they felt the summit would take place most healthy would be at one of the large hotels here that can be locked down for security singapore will reportedly pay some of the expenses of the north korean delegation people here are proud to host the summit but maybe not to pay for some of it if we had neutral he just makes it be peaceful to thank you that i'm posing to eat but i don't think we have to be free to be doing is singapore is good for us because. being a small of the country but we are able to host such a big event it's good for us the government says so much preparations are moving forward smoothly but with it intricate maze of protocol to. navigate from the proper amount of doors in meeting rooms to making the delegations from one of the
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richest nations in the world appear equal to one of the poorest singapore certainly has a tough eight days ahead a task they say that was happily taken on it's got harder al-jazeera singapore. it is good to have you with us hello adrian from going to here in doha the top stories now to syria jordan's prime minister honey al maliki has resigned after nearly a week of protests against tax rises king abdullah accepted his resignation after a meeting at the royal palace he's expected to be replaced by education minister. at least seven people have been killed in a suicide attack outside cobbles polytechnic university in afghanistan while the two thousand religious scholars were meeting there and they just issued a decree against the war in afghanistan and urged the taliban to accept the government's unconditional offer of peace talks at least twenty five people have
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been killed in guatemala in one of the most violent volcanic eruptions then decades thousands more have been forced to leave the homes as months ago spews rocks hot ash and smoke several kilometers into the sky lava flows have buried at least one village and i was their investigation has found that saudi arabia played a bigger role in causing the gulf crisis than previously thought the report shows the cell that hacked the castle news agencies website in may last year worked from a saudi government ministry in riyadh packer's posted fake quotes attributed to count as a media misled saudi arabia the u.a.e. bahrain and egypt to cut ties with cassava and impose a blockade the us is urging china to release a full account of those jailed or killed during the tiananmen square massacre twenty nine years ago the chinese government has never given other official number of how many people were killed during the student led protests and nine hundred eighty nine estimates though from human rights groups range from several hundred to
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several thousand. here with the news grid on al-jazeera a little over twenty five but it starts right after the talk to al-jazeera people in gaza next. june on al-jazeera. with media trends constantly changing the listening post continues to analyze how the news is covered it's the most widely viewed sporting event on the planet as russia prepares to host the football world cup we'll bring you stories from on and off the field from afghanistan one o one east investigates why so few girls are in school despite billions of dollars of donations one year since the imposed blockade of al-jazeera examines the political economic and human impact of the crisis unfold provoking documentaries witness brings world issues into focus for personal stories june on al-jazeera.
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it is time to officially recognize jerusalem as the capital of israel. in december two thousand and seventeen u.s. president donald trump recognized jerusalem as the capital of israel. it was an act considered by many countries around the world as irresponsible and deeply provocative because for palestinians it indorsed israel's illegal occupation of
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their land. gazans have protested only israel bolder every friday since angry at trump and demanding for the rights of palestinian refugees to return to the areas they were forcibly expelled from by zionist militias in one nine hundred forty eight. unveil this as the us president's daughter an advisor evancho trump inaugurated the new us embassy in jerusalem made a fourteen we welcome you officially and for the first time to the embassy of the united states. israeli soldiers shot date sixty palestinians and wounded more than one thousand two hundred others along with gaza border. palestinians now describe the mounting fury and desperation in gaza over israel's ten year land air and sea blockade but there is also increasing frustration with the failure of policy. indian politicians to come together and more effectively act
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on behalf of their own citizens. today on talk to al-jazeera residents in gaza tell us about their lives in their own words. israel occupied gaza in the one nine hundred sixty seventy. in two thousand and one during the first palestinian uprising known as the intifada israel began making it even more difficult for gazans to work in israel in two thousand and five following
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the israeli government's so-called disengagement plan to separate his radius from palestinians eight thousand israeli settlers were evicted from the gaza strip. a year later hamas beat fatah in column entry elections in gaza. efforts to form a unity government between fatah and hamas failed and in two thousand and seven fighting between the rival factions broke out. in the end house took control of the gaza strip and a period of the whole permanent split between the two palestinian polities began leaving the fatah dominated promise to needle forty in control in the west bank. israel responded by enforcing a land and sea blockade on the gaza strip gazans were banned from working in israel . egypt in coordination with israel closed its border with gaza as well effectively
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sealing the strip from the outside world. hamas has fooled sri walls with israel since then the first in two thousand and eight. the last in two thousand and fourteen resulted in more than two thousand palestinians being killed at least half of them were civilians more than five hundred fifty of them with children. sixty six israeli soldiers and five israeli civilians including one child were killed. enough is a die as family have owned bakeries for generations like thousands of palestinians their businesses and homes which taken over by israelis during what the palestinians cool the nakba catastrophe in the one nine hundred forty eight the last launch. on the phone in your city it's an item and i wanted it.
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and i wanted it off no seven gun but got in a ford fiesta with see the biggest second for the ford fiesta for a lot of them. in the dugout get up again i see about i've gotten out of the bug got enough for on the left but they. have. to stop what i did you know what could lead to stone what i did i would do. this how do you know my friend let this in they are now going to deal with before being. my dear union i do a sun a bottle do you know what to do come on i'm not going on at the foot of the guy didn't feel safe must say been up. i say been a high live beyond of. you on i'm a fish on is but that will not get on. and on in a sword. janish with that would look under the sword i see in asia and will. be the saloon much more pleaded. guilty sure.
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showed it on and see on that one had john about to do it. to bug ice shelf and no one. saw but going to shit got to investigate i see him but human and bob again and could not eat them couldn't i just the on budget the knesset had bob look at the nuts it would bug bug at the nose the un itself must see on is a human while the. down and well the. limit that is the one that get the numbers on but the job and the but the jumma seven. not the hammock when it must and i fear my son not a job i'm a sudden i for one see the almost an island that. you him how the wind got to ween but got to mean but at the end in this is we on enough of that book on the how does i mean on but go me none but go me none but go a little late to real missed out i did i would do that with good luck i'll be in.
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and out of the omen when one of the of it but i'm off as a on into buffets to in of the amount of money in the common hannah on issued do me i'm in. it should be do me a min. as i'm in the how to do a suitable unshod but hubby units are going to know you had the idea of sort of going to the nation with them in yemen not one but not a rwandan one but not a war not he says that he can't simply create open during the two thousand and fourteen war with israel he says people bring their food to be cooked by him because they cannot afford to gas and there's only a few hours of electricity every day across gaza build it up all the animals like get us. about in a second all of the wood in the us the deficit i would put away. just adds them a good this. and a lot of mfi and the know how do you deal with it. aslan for this
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is simple but i'm all for them and they're with us in the end of the deal be on of the just of it when one on in i just think if you on when one in on in the but. in on it your machine doug i go. and it's not up to nothing for the going to get a minute get into boma fish muslim and a whole woman it issue. a whole woman. on a street that wouldn't know what i was like a month so you. know facilis you will know what a mess of an. underage girl and that was you or bust your butt god did it got to be on them for us. in i'm not going to look much about. physiognomist.
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show with my son. when us while the high so you're on the. i don't know what the no for you on deck notes must we do on them but that doesn't about give up the idea of what was the body got on the fish and the love was what i got the. third of. that little slip that that for another no fee musta been but i'm off as a low female thought a few sick on the album of that mission on the line up that i don't need to been to but. in the two thousand and fourteen will entire neighborhoods in gaza were flattened and millions of dollars worth of water and sanitation infrastructure destroyed. gaza's two million people had already suffered seventy years on the israel's land sea in a blockade when war broke out almost four years later gaza's continued isolation
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has devastated diseconomies impoverished its population and if sixty percent without jobs. aid organizations say around ninety percent of gaza's will to isn't safe to drink rule sewage is pumped directly into the sea because there's not enough electricity to power the sewage plants no how lucky to have a job delivers drinkable water to people across gaza he says many can't afford to pay him. kind of the kind of i have been in the commission of and i'm officially the governor comes i she said oh oh that is senate gun well the you muffled the line mccloughan. almost on the phone or those ever look like what i see that. and i'm a fish of rose and you know what this didn't give a billet on about it mentally emotionally but it doesn't say. and your mother she. went out with the. couple of sock. i was the one that if you know what oh
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well very easy of an adult. you know and i visited him. then let me have your down that is does go down there as you want to that is going to get in the south. almost. all the seven s. measured them without limit enough this hollywood publicist idea over there how we're going to develop the other this is you have been a. second father say you saw us what. international human rights organizations have repeatedly condemned israel's blockade and related restrictions saying they claim triveni international humanitarian law united nations investigations have also criticized both the israeli government as well as hamas for war crimes and possible crimes against humanity during the conflicts in two thousand and eight and two thousand and
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fourteen. israel says the blockade is needed as a counterterrorism policy against hamas he denies specifically targeting palestinian civilians killed. but health services in gaza are at breaking point daily power cuts affect hospitals and primary care facilities across the strip there are severe shortages of medicines and medical supplies. both israel and egypt often delay or deny permits for palestinians who need to travel abroad to get life saving medical treatment. no he says his sister in law has cancer and each treatment in israel. is ready and out but it's not exactly in such a good muslim second and i doubt a lot of things or somehow came out of the plot of the woods werman how does any of . that how does a double game oh yeah not to say. that that isn't good for muslim and also has a law. about how do we apply i am or you would
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i am get him cable but i can get those i would love a good law god would see him get him can order without the eyes or the way that the . other guy he would have the guy you know that either got emotional as a mother was allowed or that when i came get a book about the closet i will going there plus the how he wanted. the day i get over it what's. well that's a good the first book is still valid but it. was a shock. the war mediterranean waters along gaza's coast used to be a major source of income for palestinian fishermen. under a truce agreement following the two thousand and fourteen war israel restricts palestinian fishing to an area within six kilometers from the shore. but fishermen say the israeli navy target their boats even if they are well within that area.
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according to the palestinian department for the documentation of ease really violations against fisherman two fishermen were killed twenty one wounded and thirty nine arrested by the israeli coast guard in two thousand and seventeen. it is nine fishing boats were partially or fully destroyed and thirteen boccia confiscated. the israeli human rights group but selim says that israel's blockade on gaza has led to ninety five percent of fisherman living below the poverty line. he see has been a fisherman in gaza for almost fifty years so i don't have a one hundred thirty something going on but i haven't done it with that's a horrible. can my name again mina. and i to salute. the holy. father come. in was said to have seen long as there were you listed without
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a he said not to sell it. jani now put to the sea. to say you're the in many you. will come to live. as innocent. and had. seen. a lot of. southern little. sucker i don't about that he. said. they're going to have a lot more through it. than you can unless some of. our. men had a harness a shot. at the head. god
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a. little mite. where you mcginty in the rush hour you could pick it up hallo. but they'd be good the buddha had to fight them. to get to the left and i learned a lot but then when i got on my. own i get the out of. the head length of the force and. misquoted it badly i let the guys give out battle. in addition to israel's blockade the factional fighting between the two main palestinian political parties has made life for the people of gaza even more difficult. they've been repeated reconciliation efforts between fatah and hamas since hamas took control of gaza following their election victory in two thousand and six or failed. in october two
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thousand and seventeen deal was supposed to see hamas hand over control of gaza to the fatah dominated palestinian authority so unity government could be formed in exchange president abbas and the p.a. promised to lift crippling sanctions that they themselves had imposed on gaza these include payments for electricity and paying the salaries for out of work p.a. employees. how much says it is handed over administrative control to the p.a. but refuses to disband its twenty five thousand strong military wing or give the p.a. full control of internal security. is a journalist living and working in gaza she says local journalists often self censor when covering issues criticizing hamas the palestinian authority as well as the israeli government. i know you've also been
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a. canuck as i mean that's about a full of thought and. some of us left a little if you had. a minimal all the. time in the fall of up and fall asleep. and that's the one i'm out of. a lot of thought about. how well as opposed to father's up at the. bottom of a lot more quantum of food the well i'm about. as close to the. african i felt without of that the violence that i'd been conditioned by one. hundred i learned. as i worked at that equipment a lot of the law did when and how i got a softly. softly and almost won a lot of money and
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a lot in accounting of. a how to balance a list but it was i. love the thought of the hope of softly with. my house is how much stops demonstrations that it doesn't. sort of have been totally one and all a and i. can. look to. what can i let kind of that problem. i've been out of what is what the whole one can of the lot of those of us in me when i'm sad that such an effort is a palestinian like a heinous crime and that has to end. of course him a lot of left home going on to other than all that i left the last thing is that if
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obama was that the government must have that hand i have fear that if i walked one man i saw what had. gone was a hawk or with one. of them all but a little more well a seasoned and on the bottom a lot of those that were going to the left and i was like he went done a. lot of the duff and all that but if you does that mean i thought what is inside me i was the one with a lot of my c a one of this all the you know well. to that i thought i love that for how that but yeah i want to but that isn't what i'm talking about all that's on here how can a little but i look to you as a ballad. and that imho i live in. the soul less of because that hamas is officially sanctioned the only going protests every friday at the gaza border un human rights chief says israel used holy disproportionate force against the protest which has left more than one hundred palestinians dead. hussein
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said the gazans were effectively caged in a toxic slum israel's ambassador to the u.n. says hamas have deliberately put people in gaza in harm's way. for twenty year old palestinian authority hartopp life in gaza often described as the largest prison in the world got too much he was on employed and had reportedly asked his friends for money to help support his eight family members including his new green baby on the twentieth of may he poured fuel over himself and set himself on fire five days later he died. we do not and will not tolerate with people who fund terrorism unity is less this
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area we need to achieve in one year into the gulf crisis al jazeera examines its political economic and human impacts join us for special coverage on june the fifth . the i.m.f. said riyadh's breakeven although price twenty eighteen is likely to be around eighty eight dollars a barrel why is argentina again turning to the i.m.f. for help now we bring you the stories that are shaping the economic world we live in counting the cost. we understand the differences and the similarities of cultures across the world. so no matter where you call home al-jazeera will bring in the news and current affairs that matter to you. al-jazeera. it would remove any vestige of barack.
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that israel has come to stay a people dispossessed a state established whatever i was able to do it from the start there was fresh bribery greater international peace organization the united nations a momentous event which lies at the heart of ongoing conflict to this day seventy years on al-jazeera tells the history of what palestinians call the catastrophe. history is so often told through the eyes of leaders but in amritsar india just thirty kilometers from the border with pakistan this old building is being transformed into a new museum malika a wall here is the driving force behind sars partition museum it's really shocking because if you think about the fact that within a few years of nine eleven happening on nine eleven museum was there and they are now numerous holocaust museum this is not beautiful a museum so countries around the world have walked
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a memorial lives these events that have shaped them by dition is not about the political events that led up to partition it's about the impact on each person who went through it it's really important that we highlight the stories of humanity hopefully one outcome on this would be that we remember our shared humanity and the shared history. this is al jazeera and live from studio fourteen carat al-jazeera headquarters in doha i'm come all sons of maria welcome to the newsgroup jordan's the protests claimed their first political victim prime minister has resigned as jordan's
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leadership tries to defuse the anger over proposed price hikes but the crisis doesn't go away with just one resignation and the protests is a still demanding the government listen to their concerns also on the grid a massive volcanic eruption this time it's in what dozens of people have been killed as the way go through rocks and ash kilometers into the sky and fast flowing love a one hundred correspondent is heading there and we're going to have an update from what and as nearly fifty people die trying to cross the mediterranean by boat from tunisia we are revisiting the european market crisis because it hasn't gone away and now there's a new push to block the route through that will probably only make things worse. and i'm sure he'll let mohamed but how do you help people in malaysia taking mathison into their own hands to help the government reduce its billions of dollars of debt to show these in the hash tag.
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you with the news grid live on air and streaming online through you tube facebook live and at al-jazeera dot com and jordan's prime minister is gone resigned after the biggest protests in years demonstrators have been angry about planned tax hikes they want them scrapped but we wonder will have a resignation be enough to satisfy them well the austerity measures were proposed because jordan's o'connell maze been struggling it's relied heavily on saudi and usa both of which have been greatly reduced the war in syria is cause major problems with trade so the government turned to the i.m.f. for help it recommended the measures to help jordan balance the books but understandably people on the street have not welcomed this plan. the government must step down the tax law must be withdrawn these are our demands we don't want government to implement the same policies. we congratulate the jordanian people for
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the resignation of prime minister hani who exhausted the jordanian people with these taxes and with this law we want the new prime minister to have a program and development plans to serve our people because the jordanian people deserve the best. regardless of who is going to be the new prime minister our demand is for them to withdraw the income tax law whether it is honey on lucky or omar this is our goal and this is a victory for the jordanian people who are demanding the toppling of the government so what next for jordan now the prime minister step down we're going to talk about that joining us on skype from singapore james dorsey he is a syndicated columnist and a senior fellow at the s. rajaratnam school of international studies there's a dosey thank you for your time actually before we get into what next for jordan can you explain to our viewers the difference between the monarchy the king abdullah and the prime minister have been clashing who makes the big decisions in the end because felt there was
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a little confusion over some of that. but quite. a. problem. or we want you to have been hit by on the one hand on the other hand. the prime minister. but what can. we get. right and so these two men had been clashing or disagreeing on how to move jordan forward. i don't think it's because they've been. going between a rock and a hard place so with other words it's always a lonely. after really it's
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political. really good as well as the complicating. factor is one of the influx of millions. initially. and the fact that. the drop market in the gulf and. the. gulf states why try to become less dependent on. so. sorry to interrupt and where then do you see it going from here because as i pointed out i mean the i.m.f. has actually recommended that these measures are brought in to help the jordanian economy but by the same token the people that we see the people out protesting they're not going to take. what you're seeing in really a more fundamental problem. with across. social contract are
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being. written by government and. the i.m.f. . package being imposed. on. painful and it involves both great. but the population the. real trick is going to be to. basically growing both economic reform with little or and that's something i've been thinking a. pleasure talking to you getting your thoughts on this topic thank you for joining us. were here as we looked at those pictures there nurse it's almost time protests isn't it is this because of ramadan people are coming out after they brought their false exactly as that's why you know it's usually a twenty four hour cycle before we get all those details online and our pictures as well but we have been seeing nearly a week of protests which effectively pushed out the prime minister and continue to
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see people talking about it online many are happy with the latest developments using the hash tag jordan strikes and this uses says apartment as the honeymoon resigns i am so proud of my beloved jordan extremely happy and optimistic for the choice of the new prime minister well then you have removed says when you feel that sense of pride of how jordan's use protests in the most civil way claiming their rights for a better economy and future but lynn says that it's not just about the resignation it's about making radical change and rewriting history well we've been speaking to jesse mogs he's a fulbright research fellow based in amman. represented in the protests you had labor unions businesses accuse farmers and beyond well the income tax laws largely to be is likely to be withdrawn along with gas and electricity increases these are only banded solutions that do not solve the deeper grievances fueling the protests those being systematic problems within the government including corruption taxation
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without proper civil services. as jordan gets the government gets more money from loans in the international community the money does not trickle down to everyday jordanians. even even replacing wilkie does not solve the problem that is largely systemic in the elected government now another thing is that some people are drawing comparisons between these protests and the arab spring but already doesn't agree she says that she's never seen one jordanian activist on social media who compared the georgian strikes to the arab spring many jordanians do not view the arab spring as a positive event but rather an event that led to chaos and the rise of political islam and radicalism well if you are currently in jordan we do want to get your thoughts on all of the latest developments taking place on the ground such way to us is the hash tag. and only yesterday it was the inside story team discussing this one because it is one to keep an eye on you know jordan doesn't have unrest like
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this very often so when we do see it we know it's for real and it's one to watch for the balance of i was hosting that edition you can find as always inside story in the show's section at al-jazeera dot com. and maybe you'd like to get in touch with us as well content details coming up on screen already had a question from farhad on facebook live you say what's the take of the king on this front hopefully you heard james dorsey our guest explaining the difference between the monarchy and the prime minister and how the two have to work together and perhaps haven't been saying eyes of us so much over some of these reforms that was from facebook dot com slash al-jazeera the live stream as we say plus seven four five one triple one four nine what's happen telegram to send in your questions and comments stuffer has said this resignation is the first stop to a real solution here in jordan get you comments coming through to us hash tag. now one of the most violent volcanic eruptions in decades it has been quite incredible it's forced thousands of people to flee their homes in guatemala already it's
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thought dozens of people have been killed as a massive rescue operation is now underway the volcano one of the most active in central america but this eruption really it was on another level fragments landed more than forty kilometers away david murray is in guatemala he's heading to the disaster area we're hoping to speak to him during the news good first though his report. scenes of devastation in guatemala after sunday's volcanic blast houses near the base of the volcano were buried by a mixture of mud and lava dozens were killed and many have been injured survivors expect the death toll to rise. you know not everyone escaped i think they were buried we thought the lava pouring through the cornfield and we ran toward the hill . more than three thousand people from several farming villages near the volcano have been evacuated from their homes rescuers say their operations will continue
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through the night and they hope to be able to reach areas that have been cut off from help what a mollusc president has put the country on red alert. that we decided to call for a cabinet meeting we're going right now to the presidential house to issue a declaration of a state of emergency we believe based on a legislative law that we can declare a state of calamity in at least three departments volcanic ash spewed into the sky six thousand meters above sea level and fell more than forty kilometers away in guatemala city authorities were forced to temporarily closed the city's international airport that i was sort of. we shut it down as a precautionary measure for the planes because volcanic ash is harmful to the turbines right now we are carrying out inspections and we have found a lot of. the flag a volcano is one of central america's most active volcanoes this is that second eruption this year and the biggest in decades and experts say the flag of volcanoes
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theory might not be over yet david mercer al-jazeera guatemalans now the cell signal is a little patchy but we're going to try to talk to david mercenaries on his way to the disaster zone david tell us about where you are how long it's taking to get there bring us up to date ok so i actually. pretty certain around here right now they might be in the top tier i'm not sure how public and land basically i'm on a highway that connects the event people to it because i was and that put it. right across the phillips was. because she really had the secret for convex out trying to clear the world to allow the vehicles emergency vehicles to get closer to the area that suffered the worst. destruction and i could see those
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