tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera June 5, 2018 7:00am-7:34am +03
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but he says he was denied care when he arrived at the public hospital. i was waiting for around nine hours without medical attention when i arrived at the hospital that i was fine to be treated with everything i needed they said the bullet and crossed from left to right i was told what happened to me was a miracle doctors at this private clinic see that many who died during the unrest would still be alive if the government wasn't preventing access to public health facilities. we have been witnessing as we've shared in the suffering and pain of the people during these brutal repression these are crimes against humanity that cannot go unpunished. despite the risk doctors and volunteers continue to gather supplies donated by opposition supporters in secret locations police have so far not made any public statement on the response to the demonstrations over one hundred people have died since confrontations with government forces began over one month ago the volunteer medical community says that without an end to the violence
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in cities like messiah the death toll will continue to rise up alone i just needa. all this twenty more still to come on the program including discovering the dead hundreds of bodies are still being the cupboard in the iraqi city of mosul almost a gear to its recapture from ice. could there be a falling of relations between madrid in catalonia following the swearing in of a spanish prime minister. how i was still got plenty of dry weather across much of australia there are some showers around long spells of rain now in the process of spilling across the way some pretty wet and it's a very windy weather coming in here over the next twenty four to thirty six hours that as i choose to you doesn't like quite a brim
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a grim day across the coastal fringes there perth around twenty degrees celsius come a little further race was sixty celsius not by a fifteen celsius there for over a melbourne few coastal showers just hugging the fringes there of new south wales as we go through tuesday and only into wednesday perhaps i shall just sinking a little further south was even that east of victoria could see a little bit of wet weather but for much of the time toward this good melbourne sixty souses adelaide a six day the nearest sixty maybe seventeen therefore as that cloud right starts to push its way a little further east was hopefully becoming less wet over the next couple of days less wet certainly into where the north island off new zealand thing. is improving now after a recent spell of torrential downpours we've got severe weather weather just making its way out of the way process guys coming in twelve celsius there for christ it make the most is that a taste of winter as we go on into wednesday certainly over the high ground the recent snow around christchurch see temperatures struggling to reach a high of seven.
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the wells pollinate says are in decline. in this episode of a crisis we need entomologists on opposite sides of the planet protecting insights of all sizes crucial to preserving food chains. i've come to the u.k. to see how old industrial sites are being turned into bug reserves in an attempt to reverse those who are. fighting insect to get on on al-jazeera.
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our minds of our top stories are continuing against the government in jordan despite the resignation of the prime minister king abdullah has won that the country is it cost us rescuers in guatemala searching for survivors after a volcanic eruption on sunday killed at least sixty two people the most violent eruption of the volcano in more than fourteen years. has been i wage in the us after president all chump tweeted that he has the right to pardon himself from the investigation into alleged russian meddling in the twenty sixth election. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu says iran must be prevented from developing a nuclear weapon he's been meeting german chancellor angela merkel in berlin that now who warned against allowing iran to expand its influence in the middle east and that the nation is a threat to the world the minute kate has more now. when german and israeli heads of government meet there are always expressions of deep friendliness of the
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importance of the relationship between their two countries given the historical legacy the point also to make is amongst the expressions of friendliness there are differences of opinion specifically regarding iran and the deal that was agreed several years ago concerning the nuclear program that iran had and how that could be put to one side certainly iran search for a nuclear weapon coming to this meeting mr netanyahu had made clear his concerns were iran and iran and there were certainly concerns that emerged during the joint news conference given by both leaders iran's calls for our destruction. but it's also look for weapons to carry out its genocidal desires we know that for fact this visit to berlin is the first stop in a whistle stop tour as it were of europe's capitals taking in berlin taking in paris taking in london where mr netanyahu will be meeting with the heads of government heads of state to try to get their support for his view which is that
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the deal with iran needs to be repudiated as it has been by the united states government of president donald trump but so far at least the european leaders have been steadfast have said no they believe that the best way to prevent an iranian nuclear weapon is by this deal being enforced behind all of it is of course their concern that european industries that want to invest in tehran are now concerned about what might happen if sanctions are imposed to glom off we need some kind of regulation we also say we need to talk about their activities and say yes but we think that through tough negotiations through joint negotiations this would be possible that iran's supreme leader says his country has no intention of curbing ballistic missile program and will respond harshly if attacked by its enemies he said iran's missile program is crucial for the country's defense and that tehran will attack ten times more if it's provoked by western nations. hundreds of
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bodies have been found in iraq a city of mosul almost a year after it was retaken some i still hear buried in the ruins along the banks of the tigris river charles traffic reports. it's been eleven months since iraqi prime minister hydrilla body 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 the 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 beisel fighters in the city that was leisel bodies that were covered around seven hundred these bodies were all of i still that used to hide in these houses are obstacles and clearing these bodies out of the unexploded munitions
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hidden bombs explosive vests and rigged houses with i.e.d. as we are trying our best to overcome these obstacles. the remains of i saw fighters are being found close to dead civilians who were on able to escape which estimated around ten thousand civilians were killed in of a province in the battle against isis most of them in western mosul. we have been pulling up bodies for eight days already from near the river tigris ponds within this quarter alone we have fallen two hundred bodies on the first day four hundred on the second day and around them hundred on the field we have difficulty getting heavy machinery aside all city because of the normal alleyways. more than two million iraqis remain displaced across the country including approximately seven hundred thousand from mosul to rebuild. at the city has yet to
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start families like the space 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 february iraq 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 a recovery of the dead continues john strafford al jazeera back that it's in the city and foreign ministry has summoned they tell a member of their response to comments made by a series new interior minister on sunday met me said the region would no longer be what he called you were some refugee camp in the chin is he ascends over at comdex far right media made the statements in puzzle one of the main rival points for
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refugees and migrants making the illegal crossing from north africa. well as well as the divisive issue of immigration and italy's new coalition government so also facing major social problems many impoverished areas are suffering with the rise in organized crime one such time as the deeply divided seaside community of all see where sonia got to go reports. the sun and the mediterranean sea provide a welcome distraction from italy's recent political dramas this is also a popular resorts on the roman coast. and this is also. the one. we are marginalized you know that. we're living in a bellow the image i'm dying of hunger and living in a garret it is a deeply divided place where people feel politics has failed them in its place
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organized crime has filled the gap through drug trafficking and extortion. the local five star movement who took control of the council last year has promised to crack down on the gangs and rebuild the area so the problems are very real it's a marginalized place there are drugs there's crime but people here have been forgotten and it's a neighborhood such as this one here where people feel they have really been abandoned let down by governments over the years and while a new set of politicians is promising change there's very little faith that will actually happened. without political support those living here have had to take it upon themselves to make it more habitable including creating spaces for children to play with and once was nothing the local councils responsibility assumed by those who weren't supposed to serve. can get. everything that's been done here.
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and it's not because we do not want to work but there's always been a wall between the citizens and the operatives. and the problems here have also been acknowledged by the head of the roman catholic church during a visit on sunday the first in fifty years by a pontiff pope francis condemned the organizations that have turned austria into a power center of mass violence. jesus wants the walls of indifference and silence to be breached on balls of oppression an arrogance torn asunder and call skloot for justice civility and legality. it is a stand simply a new era in italian politics everyone here knows there is much work to be done to take an immense effort politically and otherwise to wrest ostia away from the stranglehold of the local mafia gangs who wield it more must power so new guy i go
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out zero last year the president of catalonia says he will meet spain's new prime minister kim torah says he's exchanged messages with pedro sanchez on the cat language and future following last year's unilateral declaration of independence which was declared illegal david chaytor reports literate. the new socialist prime minister pedro sanchez started his first day in office by welcoming the ukrainian president petro poroshenko to madrid. it was a long standing gauge went on the former prime minister mariano rajoy diplomatic diary close aides for both leaders must have had a long night storing up new briefing notes after i lost the vote of no confidence. but the real focus of the day was on a prison compound deep in the countryside outside madrid the newly elected president of the regional government in catalonia kim tara was paying
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a call on five of his former colleagues behind bars awaiting trial on charges of rebellion and sedition but the main question was is the knowledge chance of a new dialogue between madrid and barcelona. we have exchanged messages and agreed to meet as soon as possible it's important for me to emphasize that we are going through an exceptional situation in this country we want to know what type of prime minister we're going to find the one who condemned the independence referendum or a new man with. that statement from the catalonian president now leaves the diplomatic ball very much in the court of pedro sanchez but he's got a lot on his plate already he's got to form a new government but both men realize if they're going to take this opportunity they've got to take it soon. a right wing rally over the weekend in the spanish capital condemned the no confidence vote. as
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a constitutional coup they are calling for a new election with the new prime minister having only eighty four socialist votes in the three hundred fifty seat parliament that a new election could come soon. to al-jazeera madrid saudi arabia has issued its first driving licenses to women ten women who already have licenses and all the countries have been issued with the official paperwork licenses were given early with the ban on women driving not to be lifted until june twenty fourth. eight states have primary elections in the u.s. on choose date to narrow the amount of candidates the upcoming midterm elections nationwide democrats have been rallying around an unprecedented number of women candidates as they push to reclaim the house of representatives come november kristen salumi has more now from the state of new jersey. running back to me i am i guess arrow she is
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a former navy pilot federal prosecutor and first time political candidate mikey rel is also the leading fundraiser in a crowded field of democrats running to represent new jersey's eleventh congressional district a seat that has been held by a republican man for the last twenty four years we see so many women running we see so many veterans running because we feel like it's time for new leadership in washington it's a common sentiment among democrats particularly women who were actually physically being targeted by our president not only here in suburban new jersey but around the country and we have twenty four seats we need to flip in this midterm election and i'm running to flip one where they hope to win enough seats to retake the majority in the house and female candidates are leading the charge on tuesday nearly one hundred women from both political parties many of them newcomers to politics will be on the ballot in congressional primaries continuing a year long trek an unprecedented number of women are taking part in state and
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local elections and often times winning and what some have described as a. mobilization started the day after president trump's inauguration when women marched by the millions expressing concern about last reproductive rights and immigration. experts point out there's now a lot at stake here who controls who is she who controls the house of representatives will control the purse will control the investigative power will ultimately if necessary control the impeachment process this election is over. president tribe is also working hard to rally his base in two thousand and sixteen more white women voted for him than hillary clinton i think people were surprised that right about that outcome and so now i think of this thing and not like too much and it's time for a change many voters say this year women are more engaged and outraged by the president's alleged mistreatment of women you can't be to visit you need to be
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a unifying leader and that's my biggest opposition to the trump attacked the biggest hurdles for women candidates are yet to come in the general election this november but if the primaries are any indication women candidates and voters will be making their voices heard kristen salumi al jazeera new jersey. we can find out much more about the stories on our website go to. al-jazeera to call. top stories here on al-jazeera thousands of people have been on the streets of jordan for another night of protests despite the resignation of the prime minister king abdullah has warned that his country is at a crossroads of the demonstrations in amman and other parts of the country since last week against i.m.f. backed austerity measures jordan's king abdullah earlier appointed
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a former world bank economist as prime minister after honey resigned in a failed move to end demonstrations. rescuers in guatemala is searching for survivors after sunday's volcanic eruption while somalia's national forensic sciences institute says at least sixty two people have died the country's disaster agency says two million people have been affected by the massive explosion is the most violent eruption of the way go volcano in more than forty years it is really. the. middle of the rainy season here everything is washing clean and yet they're on the ropes for the for you ok don't think it's is actually already everything is progressing. through there i think we're going to differ on that there's a lot of right now trying to get reclear to allow some of the markets to be equal to get a little bit closer to the epicenter of why there's been i wage in the u.s.
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over a tweet from donald trump u.s. president posted that he has a right to pardon himself from any charges arising from the investigation into alleged russian meddling in the twenty sixty minute but he says he has no reason to do so as he's done nothing wrong israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu says iran must be prevented from developing a nuclear weapon had a press conference with german chancellor i'm glad markel in berlin netanyahu warned against allowing iran to expand its influence in the middle east meanwhile iran's supreme leader says his country has no intention of curbing its ballistic missile program and will respond harshly if attacked by its enemies ayatollah ali khamenei said iran's missile program is crucial for the country's defense and the tehran will attack ten times more if provoked by western nations do hope you stay with us next it's earthrise and of course you can check out the website at al-jazeera dot kong to get all the latest news on the stories we're
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following season by. it's been one year since its neighbors imposed a blockade not caught on by land sea and air. a move that shattered the region's two political landscape alliances have shifted and qatar has grown more self-reliant. but what caused the rift between g.c.c. countries is there and insights and can the gulf ever be the same ago the siege of qatar on a just zero. insects make up eighty percent of the species on earth through over two hundred million of
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them for every human they play a critical role pollinating crops decomposing waste and supporting food chain. but a german study from twenty seventeen has caused worldwide alarm showing that in some areas flying insect numbers of food and by over seventy five percent in the last twenty seven years and humans are to blame if development and pesticide use continue we could soon face what some experts are calling insect to get in the ecological collapse of the insect population whether to how can it would change life on earth as we know it. i mean our beloved home in new zealand where an enterprising group of scientists are bringing a dinosaur era insect back from the brink of extinction and i'm guillory to robbie in great britain to see how overlooked industrial wastelands i'm being turned into
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a bug reserved. new zealand is rich in wildlife and because of its isolation there are hundreds of plants and animals that evolved here that are found nowhere else but human introduced pests have threatened and even wiped out many space it's one of those in the native where congo it's one of the world's heaviest insects and has been around for one hundred ninety million years even outliving the dinosaurs they used to be found although the new zealand but now big close to extinction. these amazing aging creatures play a financial role in the coast system and without them other native plants and wildlife could also disappear forever. the o'loghlin zoo has launched a set of programs to save the. starting with
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a new interactive exhibition that aims to excite the next generation of bad in six . was like a bad. featuring a giant trade in sex with educational games and puzzles shows just how fascinating each episode. so let's talk about. the t.v. series to these are really cool. these children have never seen a way yet had they did several generations ago they would have spotted them in the garden. reading center guide coast to explains why we should all kids born in six there was some made up and people just dismiss them and the idea that they're really really important for the environment is how everything works together like that and six will be here how
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important is it to take its young people about insects that write for other ones are going to have to be helping her to keep and fix and stop her coming back into the bike and really connect with them fix it and i didn't and for not with the my view that kind of a bright extra i was. exhibitions can be great for raising awareness for causes but it's just on the other side of the zoo that some really significant work is being done to protect and row by the threatened what a pungo i'm meeting ben goodwin an entomologist at oakland's breeding program hey ben paid by you. this is where i want to. talk to you. this is one of the world's only industrialized insect conservation programs providing the optimum light and temperature conditions which upon. so these are the ones that you bred so some adult would appear in here it's incredible.
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they one of the heaviest and six in the world this is an adult so they don't get too much bigger than us which upon the can weigh up to seventy grams that's the equivalent of three small mice to think i can hold. the hopes of a child. that's incredible do they do they fly not so they're totally flightless they've got really good camouflage they're nocturnal so they are very very well adapted for. predators mammals and just now in the mount says that when i started to die out they were considered really common and to the middle part of the eighteen hundreds and the humans extremely disturbed misreads a new zealand and one to a century and i scraped stamped her aside from one island for the birds the factor being incredible why would you say. they have all functions to play in the ecology so it's foliage does mess up players and i was the ground. for
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a species which i read about in books as a kind of star i feel privileged to be where. the breeding program started in two thousand and twelve with only twelve since then over three and a half thousand in six have been released onto a few key islands which still provide the ideal conditions for them to flourish today bends readying a batch for transport. so they will be the easiest ones because it allows us so this whole thing comes out they like to harden these little choose to rule and this is the size that you want to be taking to the island yeah once they've got a bit of sauce on them they're a little bit more a boston but if you're going to choose to decide to just pump you're not sure with your. rights that's the first female so just to. here. what's the success rate of writing programs up to about eighty percent of all right which is
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really really good. to see me upset everybody in the i'm sure. that's what it was going to counter my. sense everything which we're going to release and it's yet here. we found three hundred eighty five ways have packed and ready to move it's time to head to the docks. we're off to a private island in the how to keep gulf one of four still hospitable to west. it's a one hour boat journey from the mainland. right ensuite go royd to the islands owners are avid conservationists who have given their land over to the protection of native species and. yeah yeah right and.
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so have you always been involved in the releases as much as possible in two thousand and three broaden soused finally breed the island of invasive mammals like rats stoats and feral cats making it a safe home full weight of hunger. we've never really looked at their cells as i don't know as but more as guardians of this wonderful place that we privilege of growing up and how does releasing the one upon going to the island actually fit into all of your plans sorry they're critical to the health of the island nothing exists in our selection so when a punk or a bit of one of the missing links for them how many guises and is your heart of a jigsaw. even though a row crucial piece of the landscape here the young in sixty will need to be handled carefully. selecting the perfect spot for the new. how do you choose the fights where you release wes's yes so this is one of our
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early starts here and so we want to look for a place that's got lots of audience votes and someone that's got lots and lots of good food plants as well. for this is incredible hello how old is this tree just need to be about eight hundred years old . you can see the pellet from one of the wood a plant that's not so good way to sometimes to take it presents if you can actually find them and that's all this is really important for the ecosystem and yes so that's one pixel in the tree and so they just recycling will be eating and that's good for them in the soil help finding these droppings is entirely a sign of a healthy environment but also evidence of an old lady thriving population that will surely go could you come with this this is kind of the ideal spot for the best place in the wall and for them to be released into heaps and heaps and heaps of the
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holes for when opponent has one of their preferred food plants they can go from this tree industry this ride across the whole forests here because of the huge crown on. the west who will be released at night when they are based active this peak tafe will help us find this spot in the dark later on. i can't believe they have trusted me with things what are. our eyes it's the start of the release like here yeah. you can see a much more active they're winning. this one i'm going to release more on this trial now with more.
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so how important is it for you to reestablish what a pond a hero it's often because of just giving back something that probably would have been here years and years ago hopefully the droppings well into the forest. and not on. your skin in a real soft touch on the back. so how much longer do you think you're retiring may fourth of releases for all but a few more releases today and then after that it's mainly just monitoring the populations. which upon the now exist on four islands as invasive predators us to be removed from other locations that number is expected to rise the hope is that one day later punk could return to the mainland they want thrived. there is certainly the bill for change here in
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new zealand while people and institutions are taking action in support of native species the government has even committed to rid the country of human introduced pests by twenty fifteen there is still a way to go but at least the future is now looking optimistic for the. plants reproductive cells are found and it's pollen. when an insect visits a flower to feed off its nectar pollen rubs off from the male stayman on to the insect and sticks to the has on its body. as insect moves on to another flower grains of pollen are transferred to the female stigma that's when pollination happens so that seeds and fruit produced. around seventy five percent of all crop species through.
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