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tv   Al- Nakba 2013 Ep 4  Al Jazeera  June 7, 2018 9:00am-10:01am +03

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huge concern across the country at the moment i mean how do you assess thing the situation as you see it where we are in in my now watch the last couple of days have been a lot more quiet of course that changes once we lose those daylight hours like now a lot of the neighborhoods experience of experience attacks by these pro-government paramilitary groups but the majority of the bylines that we've encountered that we've seen that that that continues to be reported is concentrated in some of the smaller smaller cities the city of messiah for example about forty five minutes away from here has become the sort of symbol of this resistance against the government and what we're hearing from contacts on the ground there doctors volunteer doctors that have been treating the wounded when the demonstrators they tell us that every day they're seeing some around five individuals who are shot and killed by militias by pro-government paramilitary forces we can confirm at least one individual young man that was killed during clashes this afternoon but with these doctors tell us is is that they're prepared to treat even more critically wounded people in makeshift image emergency rooms that they've set up in in the
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city and even tonight there's a sort of sense that something is going to is going to happen their spirit kate that are being set up there's there's there's a call to remove the police force the local police force remove the local government from that area again that city is sort of become a symbol of this resistance but the doctors have been telling us is that they expect more dead this evening they expect more critically wounded and the expect this in the in the days to come as well so help of worrying development but we'll keep an eye on it with you meant well for the moment things are staying in the region homes are still being evacuated in guatemala volcano continues to erupt at least ninety nine people are being killed and hundreds have gone missing since sunday as of option rescues have been sifting through in the search for survivors in time villages surrounding the volcano have also been destroyed. phil gellman is the regional advisor of the office of the u.s.
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forward disaster assistance he joins me now on the line from guatemala city good to have you with us live on al-jazeera but how do you coordinate your efforts with the authorities in a disaster like this you know. the u.s. agency for international development office of foreign disaster assistance we have a longstanding relationship with congress which is the national disaster coordinating agency wants to any relationship in training and technical assistance and support. they are doing a good job in coordinating with international as well as the numerous national domestic private sector actors who have come together to offer their support in this circumstance. trying to get as much information as possible.
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as you mentioned earlier. to new situation is still but with respect to the door itself in the end you continue to be in constant ordination i mean if that is that's a scenario that at the moment i mean we're seeing horrendous images a volcanic dust covering hectares of land and the emergency services battling to locate rescue and save those affected i mean how would you describe the situation so far not just for those foreign aid workers that are coming in but for the domestic security and rescue operations. but certainly the continued activity of the volcano coupled with the enhanced risk of the hard core or avalanches of volcanic material that's been deposited on the flanks. of the volcano. interrupted on several occasions over the last several days work
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the rescue team in trying to get to some villages that are still. with very limited access in fact just a couple of hours ago there was one of these lot harder we are. the rainy season is beginning in this part of the world and today in fact there were actually several very significant downpours and as a result there was some of this material coming down a avenue of material that comes down off the side of the mountain. and so these are these are major issues that. that restrict the ability of teams to get to the communities to look for survivors indeed do along with all of the authorities rescue a whole number of civilians obviously some of them children we all have reports that some children needed medical treatment and were evacuated to the u.s. can you unlikeness any morning suckley what type of injuries that facing. yeah in
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that particular case these were children who were severely burned in the initial eruption on the third of june and the u.s. department of defense was asked who are specialized transport assistance to get those children up to galveston texas where they will be receiving the kind of again specialized medical attention that they require so we're very pleased that we're able to to make that kind of support available for the moment. from us and we'll leave it that we know that your time is very valuable and thank you for speaking to us live on al-jazeera still ahead here. we'll tell you why the word syria is creating tension between russia and iran plus a new wave of destruction in hawaii as the killer whale spews out.
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the weather sponsored by cattle. welcome back the main feature across southern eastern china is this tropical depression which is giving a lot of heavy rain across hi nancy wards hong kong macau and i think is enhanced seeing the frontal boundary which is usually across this area which is getting heavy rain across food i think of the next twenty four hours further towards the north it's generally confined for wu han and the heading west was towards change do it should also be fine unsettled conditions across indochina not slight if you continue as we head on through into friday young gone a mere mother looking at highs of thirty degrees so that is friday's chart there still running very close to hong kong still running extending all the up towards the yangtze river valley though shanghai should probably stay dry as we head down into southeastern parts of asia here are likely to find some heavy rain affecting
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central and northern parts of the philippines in particular further south was a few showers across borneo but generally a family of bright weather looking quite good here. much as you'd expect climatologically at this time of the it should be dry and fine showers few and far between up through the main principle once you get towards the gulf of thailand then some heavy rain in bangkok could be fairly wet across into south asia some heavy showers dance through the western ghats further north let us hope as it has been highs of forty in telly the weather. territorial. ethnic divisions. the daily reality piece in some of france's underprivileged communities. zero world here's first hand account from suburban president.
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paris. divided city. welcome back you're watching after their arms the whole rama reminder of our top stories iraq's parliament has ordered a manual recount of every vote cast in last month's parliamentary elections after he's ations of widespread fraud there comes a day after prime minister hyderabadi said there had been serious violations and banned high ranking election commission officials from leaving the country also the president of argentina's football association has apologized for canceling a friendly match with israel saying players' safety was at stake palestinians have
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protested against the games being held in jerusalem which is a contested city. and more homes are being evacuated as a volcano in guatemala continues to erupt at least ninety nine people are being killed and hundreds of gone missing since sunday rescuers have been sifting through hot ash in the search for bodies and survivors. tens of thousands of people have rallied in cities across north agrees that protesting against a possible compromise in the country's long running naming dispute with macedonia. one of the main demonstrations in pella. the protest here in pella has run for two hours there's been enormous enthusiasm from the crowd even though it's been a fairly small one of one thousand or so people but they are all entirely agreed in the basic message here the message that's being conveyed in twenty three other rallies across greece tonight as well which is that there should be no use of the
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word macedonia by the former yugoslav republic of macedonia that that country should choose an entirely different identity and therefore these people reject the basis of the ongoing negotiations which started in january and that basis was that they would be a composite name one that included the word macedonia but also a qualifier such as you will all north and the location of pella is significant because this is where the ancient macedonian kings had their capital this is where the palace is this is where alexander said how from to conquer asia and it is here that excavations are uncovering a vast four hundred hectares city that represented the glory of the world of the engine macedonian kings and the greeks believe that that kingdom is their cultural inheritance their historical right they do not believe that there is any basis any
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legitimacy for anyone else claiming that heritage or asking to share it with them the people north of here they say are ethnically different they speak a different language they speak a slavic language the ancient macedonians spoke greek and therefore we have no coincidence we have no kinship we shouldn't be discussing this and saying in europe spain's prime minister has. veiled his new cabinet and it's dominated by women headdress on chairs appointed eleven to top posting thrilling deputy prime minister economy and justice six men have been chosen including a former astronauts assigned to minister sanchez was sworn in on saturday after ousting his predecessor money on iraq and a no confidence vote over a corruption scandal and the forward chief executive of cambridge analytic has refused to answer questions about the extent of its use of people's information on facebook and speaking to a u.k. parliamentary committee alexander nix blamed the global liberal media for the
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collapse of his data consultancy firm cambridge analytic and is accused of mishandling the data of more than eighty million facebook users out when the plate election results in several countries and they include the twenty sixteen us presidential vote and the u.k. bret's it referendum. i'm sorry if members of this committee are unhappy with the outcome of the referendum i'm sorry it was its committee on happiness but we didn't see with donald trump being president of the united states but you can't simply. put forward your prejudices onto me and make sweeping assumptions about. our involvement with particular campaign simply because that's what you want to believe because if that narrative suits your view of the facts then the gist is there is no evidence to support your position all giving the ones you feel like
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a conspiracy theory but. seven years of war in syria have created a complex battlefield and strolling global and regional powers russia and iran are both allied to president bashar assad but a russian troop deployment is creating tension between tehran and moscow zaina explains now from beirut in neighboring lebanon. the region straddling lebanon's eastern border is an important supply line for hezbollah syria is the land link to iran for the lebanese armed group russian troops briefly took up positions here the russian military didn't comment but its troops were soon replaced by syrian army soldiers in russia trying. to iran in syria that the russian troops the military police are ready to deploy wherever they want in syria it wasn't the first message russian president vladimir putin told syrian
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president bashar assad that foreign military forces will leave syria once a robust political process gets underway his envoy later clarified this included iran. days later the russian foreign minister sergei lavrov echoed the same thing and said the syrian army should be the only force deployed along the border with israel iran's initial reaction was that no one can force it to do anything it later said it supported russian efforts to bring the south of the country under syrian army control and that iranian military advisers are not present in the area. received a strong message from israel had with the stepped up airstrikes that it's won't tolerate iranian presence in south syria that's why iran withdraw from solving syria the iranians know that engaging in a war with israel in syria is not its benefits and it's not to russia's benefit either an iranian israeli confrontation with threaten the assad government's hold
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on power and moscow's achievements it has been a difficult balancing act for russia which enjoys good relations with iran and israel israel doesn't just want iranian and iranian backed troops away from its borders it wants them out of syria altogether israel sees them as a strategic threat and wants russia to ensure that their military influence doesn't grow. it's not just israel's demand other regional international powers want to limit iran's influence moscow to wants a strong syrian government to help broker an internationally backed political settlement not interested in. increasing. the russians interested more in. russia and iran have long had different goals and agendas in syria their alliance save that the syrian government but now
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that the war is winding down many actors will be jockeying for position and influence in post conflict syria iran and russia included. beirut. india's ruling party is under pressure from hundreds of thousands of farmers who are demanding officials help them get more for their crops the. farmers in northern and western states are in the middle of a ten day strike spilling milk and vegetables to block roads and highways farmers want the government to intervene by waving loans and delivering on promises to ensure that they're paid more order. of the mayor because of them and the businessmen are getting richer and farmers are losing guard the middlemen are cheating poor farmers and as the prices are going around the number of farmers committing suicide is going up in the united nations has signed an agreement with me and maher that could lead to the safe return of running the refugees from bangladesh it outlined steps towards the voluntary and sustainable repatriation of
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some seven hundred thousand refugees and bangladesh agreed to the move in november but refugees feared their lives would be at risk without international monitoring they fled a crackdown by me and mars army which the un has described as ethnic cleansing hawaii's kilauea volcano has been erupting for more than a month now but experts say the past twenty four hours have been devastating lover has reached the big islands coast swallowing communities and destroying at least eighty buildings and a small. plumes of toxic gas rise off the coast of hawaii zbig island as a landscape succumbs to the power of killer whales for more than a month a volcano has been spewing lava consuming hundreds of homes in its path and changing this unique community for good many residents have lost everything you got a pretty good sense of loss and bad and then you know. are you can do is pick up on
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your wall experts say there are at least twenty four separate fishes each venting toxic gases and larva up a whole beach one of the island's most popular destinations has been all but wiped out this once picturesque bay is now filled with molten rock most residents of evacuated but officials say some are refusing to leave you still have some people. who. make up their own minds in decide that maybe they don't need to evacuate when civil authorities tell them that they should evacuate so far around two and a half thousand residents have been evacuated to the way or is showing no signs of slowing down and they gallacher al-jazeera. georgiades their homes the whole rom of these are our top news stories iraq's parliament has ordered a manual recount of every vote cast in last month's parliamentary elections after
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accusations of widespread fraud comes a day after prime minister hyder said there had been serious violations and banned high ranking election commission officials from leaving the country the president of argentina's football association as apologize for canceling a friendly match with israel saying players' safety was at stake palestinians have protested against the game being held in jerusalem which is a contested city also business owners in nicaragua as capital are calling for a national strike to pressure the government to end its violent crackdown on protesters nearly one hundred thirty people have been killed since demonstrations began in april and will repel oh has more from the capital managua. where we're really seeing the biggest impact to the economy here and you get out is when it comes to the tourism sector because the guy was been working for years trying to build up this reputation as the same country as this popular tourism destination for holiday travels all around the world if you look around the city now when if
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you look to to some of the more popular tourist cities like that now then later on there's been a lot in uptick in violence in these cities and there's just no tourism that compiled with the travel warnings from different from from different governments and you can really see that media impact on on the on the tourism sector here and you get out the homes all still being evacuated in guatemala for hugo volcano continues to erupt at least ninety nine people are being killed and hundreds of gone missing since sunday as eruption rescuers have been sifting through hot ash in the search for survivors spain's prime minister has unveiled his new cabinet and it's dominated by women petra sanchez has appointed eleven to the top posting treating deputy prime minister economy and justice six men have been chosen including a former astronaut a science minister and india's ruling party is under pressure from hundreds of thousands of farmers who are demanding officials help them get more for their crops now farmers in northern and western states are in the middle of
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a ten day strike spilling milk and vegetables to block roads and highways those were the headlines about with more news in half an hour next on i which is there it's inside story stay with us. stop separating migrant children from their parents that's the warning from the u.n. to the u.s. government that says entering the country without proper documents should not be a crime bob that will that mean for a president who wants to build a border this is inside story.
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and welcome to the program the pride of the u.n. has the trumpet ministration to immediately stop separating migrant children from their families at its border with mexico it said on tuesday that the practice was a serious violation of international law but the us is the only country in the world that has not ratified the un convention on the rights of the child and has recently adopted as zero tolerance policy with undocumented migrants hundreds of children who cross the southern border have been held in custody since october and followed an executive order issued by the president the u.s. defends its policy by saying it's a way to stop illegal immigration most of the people who arrive at its southern border are from guatemala el salvador and honduras the violence and drug trafficking a common well this is what the un's human rights office had to say there is nothing normal about detaining children as
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a detention is never in the best interest of the child. and always constitutes a child rights violation. on this being a criminal offense as i said this should be you know entry into a country without the right peepers should at most be an administrative offense and it certainly does not warrant jailing children or washington has reacted strongly it's un on war nikki haley said once again the united nations shows it's hypocrisy by calling out the united states while it ignores the reprehensible human rights records of several members of its own human rights council while the high commission his office ignorantly attacks the united states with words the united states leads the world with its actions like providing more humanitarian assistance to global conflict than any other nation neither the united nations nor anyone else will dictate how the united states upholds its borders well let's look at some of the more controversial points and president trump's immigration policy is pledge to
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build a wall along the mexican border to prevent illegal crossings and drug smuggling he rolled back and immigration program introduced by former president barack obama known as dhaka or deferred action for childhood arrivals at the texas around eight hundred thousand young undocumented immigrants from deportation and provides them work permits trampas banned nationals of six muslim majority countries from entering the united states of what he said were security concerns he also increased the arrests of undocumented immigrants and the president has signed an executive order for a review of the so-called h. one b. visa program that brings highly skilled workers to the u.s. . well let's bring in our guests now in new york is and you know civil rights lawyer of the center for constitutional rights and washington d.c. catron film a spokeswoman for the u.s. department of homeland security under the obama administration and joining us by scott from fort worth texas is jennifer managing attorney at the refugee and
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immigrant center for education and legal services thank you all for joining us mr casado attorney general jeff sessions has said if you'll smuggling a child we will prosecute you and that child will be separated from you as required by law is separating these children from their parents legal no it's not. under the due process cause the supreme court has said many times that there is a fundamental liberty interest in keeping the family integrity of float i think that under the law there is only a few instances in which a child can be separated from the parent the government has to show that the parent is either on fit that the child is endangered or that it's absolutely necessary and the government can't show anything any of those here mr howard do you think the law is being upheld and if it's not how far she's getting away with breaking it.
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you know it doesn't appear that. being. it's just it's the law hasn't required that you must be separated as you know that trump administration previously wasn't separating. degree it was going on but now it's been rammed under the stairs. and. it's cruel and in here humane and. we should and this is just. the catron president trump has said put pressure on the democrats to end the horrible door that separates children from their parents and that the democrats are actually responsible for this policy you work for the department of homeland security under the obama lead democratic administration what do you make of that well there is no law that that's just
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false it's a lie and they have and they meaning the trumpet ministration has instituted this new policy which seems like a knee jerk reaction to make their base happy but it absolutely was not well thought out and it's going to have serious repercussions what we did in the obama administration was focus our resources on the worst of the worst felons not families this policy that the obama administration hasn't acted on their own is their own fault and is really not well thought out it's it's horrible this is a new low in border policy well the obama administration did deport many more people and it's a few years than the trump administration has how is what's happening now different to what happened to president obama. that's right what is happening now is they are going after the lowest hanging fruit they are just rounding up
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everybody they can get their hands on and that's not the way to do things what we did under the previous administration was go after the worst of the worst murderers rapists you know the people who have actually committed a felony and that does take a time on resources and but what they're doing now is just like throwing out our net and catching whoever and that's not the way to do things it's actually public safety threat to do it this way when we focus on the the criminals you get the criminals out of the country and i think that everybody can agree on that line but when you go after the dreamers those who are serving in our militaries those who are going to school and going through the immigration process the right way that's that's just not the way to do things it's inhumane and it's not in line with our american values mr how are you in texas who is arriving at the border they asylum
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seeker economic migrants or is that a more sort of complex mix of social and economic effect is what are you seeing. we're overwhelmingly saying that these are asylum seekers our families playing for next year and violent countries these we have clients who are being threatened daily by gang members teenage boys threatening to be chilled if they don't join and against family members being kidnapped eaten at chelsea and we have people playing to mr i want their countries cannot justice systems aren't equipped to protect them from domestic violence so they really have no return they are really in life or death situations and they're seeking our protection here in the united states and this policy cast is individuals as criminals that united states needs protection from but really if the reverse is assam's out and the sickness out
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of what are the u.s. government's obligations to protect asylum seekers how should they be going about doing it. the united states has a long required and had an obligation to process asylum seekers at the border. the congress passed the immigration and nationality act which codified at length the statutory rights that the government has to take when someone asks for asylum stating a well founded fear of persecution moreover under international law the united states has a duty not to turn people away into a country that they fear the united states' policy here of turning people away is really unfortunate it's a human rights violation and instantiates the racial animus that is so prevalent within the administration must catch on to all those crossing that us mexico border
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genuine asylum seeker has is this administration determining giving them a chance to put the case for would as asylum seekers as it determine and you know what cash agree they fall into before dealing with them. we don't know but we do know that there are push factors in central america that are causing the arrival of these immigrants and they do deserve to be heard if they are in fear of returning to their home country they should be provided asylum and go through the judicial process what i'm hearing now that happening at the border is everyone is going through these mass proceedings before the court so they don't really have the opportunity to present their case the way that the sessions policy has been enacted just doesn't allow actually allow them to be heard and what we do need to do is provide asylum to those who are seeking and have
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a credible fear and and that is in line with our american values mr how we've seen videos all of you know many trials taking place with people in shackles children or their parents made aware of the legal protections and options and then native language is that something that's happening and i certainly hope so. i'm not. can be confident that that is happening but i should hope that the public defenders are giving a guy's ols to immigrants and their native language. you know we have not only stance speakers but also indigenous languages and so those needs should be met as well. but it does seem that there is a lot of confusion and people don't understand what is going on what's happening to their children whether they're going to be able to apply for us and we're hearing
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reports that c.b.p. customs and border patrol are discouraging immigrants for vocalized their fear and saying you're not going to win your case or yeah. you know this is it possible you can apply for that so we don't think that there is good access to justice and peace situations and it would be a very confusing picture especially for children mistake this out as of april of the seven hundred children seized from their parents and the six months previous to that more than one hundred were under the age of four what happens to them where the under four was being sent. first i'd like to highlight the psychological damage that the government is causing these children as you correctly noted many of them are toward learners wrestled away from the arms of their parents and i mean them literally. customs and border protection will separate parents from children per policy whether they come with
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their parents at the port of entry or if they cross by foot these children are then sent to or are custody in the interim fair put in basically glorified dog kennels which have inadequate bedding showers pediatricians anything a child who had survived one of the most horrific journeys imaginable could need from there they're sent to waiting facilities i don't know if you saw recently senator jeff merkel from oregon tried to visit one it was in an abandoned wal-mart in brownsville texas customs and border protection didn't let him in because they don't want to see what's in there a picture of the inhumanity would really undermine what the administration is doing here which again has no penal logical or child welfare purpose but again is only meant to be punitive yes absolutely terrible conditions at least the children once
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they're separated from their parents must be also heard last month from a government official that the this is from the department of health and human services that has agency had quote lost track of nearly fifteen hundred immigrant children who had been seized after crossing that border and some of them it was feared had been turned over to human trafficking is how do you lose track of fifteen hundred children do we know what's happened to them. we don't but let me go back a second just to what that gentleman just said to be clear c.b.p. or border patrol they do not hold children in their facilities we don't have those facilities that's not what they're intended for when a child crosses the border the first thing they do is go through an immunization check and identification and then they are turned over to health and human services or h.h.s. which has the capacity to to take care of the children and place them in the hands
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of a relative or a sponsor now h.h.s. asked should be keeping track of all of these children and doing their best to be in touch with the sponsors or the relatives that they've put them in in their care right be the welfare of the child should be their number one priority so i do understand that those who have been entrusted with a child's care may not want to talk to the government right now because they are so scared that this administration if they are you know in any way here illegally that they will be deported as well so they may not be answering the phone they may not be answering the door when these representatives comes to call because this administration has shown we can't believe what they're saying and we can't be trusted we just don't know what they're going to do to us they maybe taking their child away when they call so i think you know it's horrible all the way around
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so fifteen something like fifteen hundred children who can't be traced shows that the system that is in place might not be working and as well as that mr her the american civil liberties union and the human rights clinic at the university of chicago north school have also said that u.s. border guards have been beating and abusing migrant children and have threatened them with sexual violence i mean have you heard these reports. so we know. the service will certainly take liberties and interviews immigrants and we are not satisfied that. children or adults are being treated fairly at the border we have heard about minors being abused. and we screen our our children clients thoroughly to
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see what is happening and what rights are being violated and you have a challenge here hersel without an adult it's a scary confusing process after this long journey trying to get to safety and then to show and have the government officials treat your child that way i just don't see how that is happening in our country right now that's because how do i believe that you are working on a class action north of the moment and the american civil liberties union has father class action suit challenging this policy of separating children from their families what are its chances of challenging the practice do you think. one clarification of our lawsuit alleges that c.b.p. customs and border protection is unlawfully denying individuals the right to actually access the asylum process one of the ways in which they do that and did do that even indeed before this april policy was threatening parents that we will take
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your child away if you try and access the asylum process and now that's a threat or an intimidation they still use a lawsuit more directly challenges to child separation policy i think it stands a very good chance and i'll tell you why the government has a very weighty burden to show justification to separate parents from children again under due process under cases such as some tosti and troxel the government needs to show that there is either child endangerment or an unfitness of the parent they can't show that here the government has actually changed its position on a number of times and actually other government has never taken the position that the law says that you need to separate children from families actually for the past five to ten years children have been sent with their parents to family detention now that in and of itself is a whole nother heinous set of circumstances but it's still prefer rable to the
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utterly unnecessary and frankly inhumane holocene of tearing children away from their parents miss katherine will the government be able to show that this policy is working in deterring migrants because before being implemented it was piloted in new mexico and according to immigration officials in the last half of the last year the number of families attempting to cross without documents decreased by sixty four percent so if the government if this is ministration can show to the country to its supporters that this is working will it be able to continue with it. absolutely not you need to address illegal migration two for one is the g turns factor and the other is actually addressing the push factors which are causing people to migrate here in the first place under the obama administration you know they requested a billion dollars to be sent to central america to help address those problems we established programs within those countries and we worked with those those
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countries directly i think that you will see a decrease for a little while and then the numbers will spike back up again because of those push factors you know the conditions as mentioned previously are so horrible that they are willing to make this track through the united states and and to try to get her to seek asylum and to seek a better life for themselves and their children but the address of those push back does is along to game is going to take a lot of time but in the meantime what's happening at the border is not is not legal in america what can these families do now you know who's fighting for their cause. so clearly there are a lot of amazing organizations that are fighting british families and it will generate he says we've made a commitment to accepting representation pro bono who are the parents who are
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detained at to facilities and text is why i'm here is close to or were not granted texas about forty miles away because we know that that being detained is a huge barrier to accessing legal services these are places in remote locations and it's hard for her attorneys to get there it's hard to schedule what minutes to see and it's hard to you know get documents evidence go rank so we we're putting that you know as one of our top or earnest is providing legal representation and we also call on others if you see if this is happening in your fresh traded reign kurdish people to contact their legitimate is just to get them to share their story and don't just accept this as one more thing that trump is doing. you know stand up and do something and mr posada on the so that's on the national level what about internationally because of this is illegal under
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international law or like various organizations a saying what can the international community actually do here. i think the u.n. was right to condemn the conduct the united states has taken a deplorable approach to migration which is indeed a fundamental human right the united states should recognize that it installing right wing governments and central american countries in the eighty's and ninety's is actually responsible for the root cause of this the united nations and other international organizations would be correct in joining a chorus of condemnation for this utterly asinine policy but as we've seen from the u.n. representative the u.s. representative to the u n nikki haley the condemnation has been met with equal condemnation from miss haiti miss catron what did the democratic control of congress if they are successful in the upcoming midterm elections change this policy do you think i hope so we should do whatever we can to put pressure on the
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trumpet ministration that this is just this is abhorrent this is not what we will stand for as americans you don't separate a child from his or her parents especially in their most traumatic moment so whether it's from the public or from these up and coming members of congress or other countries i really hope that everyone learns or voice to this and most of us how do i just like to give you the last would as well as you know the condemnation and everybody lending their voice what needs to happen to stop this and soon. well one i'd like to acknowledge the amazing work that individuals and organizations are doing on the border the keno born edition of ballot or law though in the women's refugee commission are fighting for the rights of migrants every single day i think people rightly are joining and becoming louder and louder to condemn the united states policy that being said the united states has had a long policy of separating children from their families going back to the slave
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trade and going forward to native americans who were taken away from their parents on tribal land and sent to american christian schools i think this is nothing new i think the administration's animus is now instantiating itself into an unlawful policy and i think people should take to the representatives and rightfully condemn this practice or in this to go to thank you very much for that and thank you to all of our guests that is angela in new york marsha catron in washington d.c. and jennifer and forth with texas and thank you too for watching you can see the program again any time by visiting our web site zero dot com and to further discussion to go to our facebook page that's facebook dot com forward slash a.j. inside story you can also join the conversation on twitter at a.j. inside story for me it is a problem and the entire team here i found out. a
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year was possum's the start of the blockade. qantas foreign minister talked to al jazeera about the impact of the crisis on regional politics. and how his country is coping with. the. volcano kill way erupted explosively last thing boiling clouds of steam and ash and
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rock high into the atmosphere scientists say it's not unusual for eruptions to stop and start up again later as for kill away a it has been spilling love of continually for more than thirty years native hawaiian spiritual beliefs say eruptions reflect the mood so of the goddess pale a . us as native hawaiians to the penny is always nice to us whether she takes our home or not we accept this type of event. incarcerated in russia's toughest prisons stripped of their liberties. an unexpected creative opportunity. less. of a singing contest like no other office a chance of redemption and hope for the talented few. the. tale of singers and murderous witness on al-jazeera.
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al-jazeera is swift every. you're watching algis there i'm still robin here in doha these raw top news stories iraq's parliament has ordered a manual recount of every vote cast in last month's elections now it comes a day after prime minister hyderabadi said that there had been serious violations
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parliament prove the cancellation of overseas votes and those of displaced people in some provinces and it sacked the election commission charles strafford has more from baghdad. allegations of voter fraud have been mounting since the may the twelfth parliamentary elections but no one expected this iraq's parliament voted for a total manual recount of all ballots across the country and to cancel results gathered strew the electronic voting system that was used in the poll there are fears for the political stability of the country if the recount is vastly different to the original result and to have them up when i learn to read up here i believe we are about to witness my changing dynamics and variables it could also be dangerous some political blocs might agitate the iraqi street and the country what plans are not restricted to the government alone there are proofs of frauds according to reports . by the warnings have been clear from prime minister hydrilla body in his weekly news conference on tuesday he banned all high ranking members of the election
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commission from traveling abroad he said a ministerial committee had found what he called dangerous violations jurong the election yet it did criminal charges might be brought against those responsible on wednesday parliament voted to freeze the work of senior election commission members nine judges will be delegated to oversee the manual recount instead. prime minister hyderabadi has blamed the electronic voting system for this crisis he says that it proves that the system was not properly tested before the vote now it's believed a manual recount across this country could take at least two weeks and that means the process of forming a new coalition government will be delayed child strafford al-jazeera baghdad now the president of argentina's football association is apologized for counseling a friendly match with israel saying players' safety was at stake palestinians have protested against the game being held in jerusalem which is
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a contested city business owners nicaragua's capital are calling for a national strike to pressure the government to end its violent crackdown on protesters nearly one hundred thirty people have been killed since demonstrations began in april and will repel oh has more from the capital managua where we're really seeing the biggest impact to the economy here and you get out is when it comes to the tourism sector because the guy was been working for years trying to build up this reputation as the same country as this popular tourism destination for all the travels all around the world if you look around the city and if you look to to some of the more popular tourist cities like that now they lay on there's been a lot in optic in violence in the cities and there's just no tourism that compiled with the travel warnings from different from from different governments that you can really see that it immediate impact on on the on the tourism sector here and you get out. homes all still being evacuated in guatemala as months ago volcano continues to erupt at least ninety nine people have been killed and hundreds of
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gone missing from sunday's eruption rescuers have been sifting through hot ash in search of survivors spain's prime minister has unveiled his new cabinet and it's dominated by women petra sanchez has appointed eleven top to top to the top posts. including deputy prime minister economy and justice six men have also been chosen including a former astronaut a science minister. and overcrowded smugglers boaters capsized off the coast of somalia with forty six people confirmed dead the un's migration agency says the group was on its way to yemen hoping to find work sixteen others are still missing presumed drowned more than one hundred people were reportedly on board the vessel when it left a port in somalia on chews day india's ruling party is under pressure from hundreds of thousands of farmers who are demanding officials help them get more for their crops farmers in northern and western states are in the middle of
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a ten day strike spilling milk and vegetables to block roads and highways i'll be back with more headlines now on al-jazeera in thirty minutes we continue with al-jazeera world. paris a major european capital known for its cosine its art fashion famous landmarks
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and french culture. but behind the facade lies a complex multi-ethnic city full of contradictions. i am up to me and i've come to the aid of longs to try and discover what it means to be french especially on the sometimes troubled outskirts of the capital. in twenty fifteen former french prime minister mine will valves spoke of utter at oriel social and ethnic apartheid in france. so what does this mean for the ethnically diverse communities in the sea take in this about us. boom also as a small town in the northern suburbs of paris. on the nineteenth of july twenty sixth seen them at trial ray was with his brother maggie planning to celebrate his
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twenty fourth birthday. and the police stopped bagi to question him a spot of an investigation but adam added in had his id with him panicked and ran away. with the media who. come to work you want a copy of crazy what you and the more they want. you can remove. a couple of those on the on focus on my list really don't tell me to keep our because there's on down. to the public thought of before to click ok for them ok very few of them are i mean you don't want. to see only
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a lot. of a problem if you don't want to tell them what. you want copy you don't repeat the popular or the milage is misinformed you don't. know because of. the munich you people just don't buy that here it was. it was on there was a quick read of. the movie could all be thought. in july twenty sixth the p.c.n. newspaper ran the official version of the story that adam had been suffering from a serious infection and he may have had a drug addiction and coated the local persecutor a saying that no violence had been used by the police. were. his family was concerned after he was taken to the police station so they inquired
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what was happening they were given conflicting reports but in fact. was already. you're the one i do the map in a duffel b. look be in media my damn near on the people who had a modern man is that very few. and there but you know but if it if you. don't want it. to shift you don't. you have a few minutes. if that within a. few
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me. i asked adam a sister asked us for our ray why she had accused the police of hiding the real cause of his death and what evidence do you owe them of care to some kooky. man. if sometime in the contacting the company. hope of course he shall do good to look at it i'm up a bunch of dealing on them to treat. his own. funeral pyre accepted. and they. knew the fix would have.
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been made twenty seventeen parisyan carried the results of a second autopsy that revealed that adam at trial ray had not died of the recurrence of a previous infection. the second autopsy found that the cause of his death had been suffocation. it. begs the. d.c. . city. community. for. the.
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deaths in custody raises questions about french police in which i put to a former. president . he later admitted he's a. space about the. border between. the two free to. report we. didn't see. your decision to who refuse to be with us to join the police or police. because.

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