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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  June 9, 2018 1:00pm-2:01pm +03

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after sensors picked up an increase in volcanic activity hours before the eruption everybody i mean to the mirror all of the communities received warnings and obviously we don't have the authority to order an evacuation we make recommendations and it's the residents who decide whether to evacuate or not. but residents who escaped the gases and volcanic mud said that only those close to the highway heard the warning we had on the real war is will be if we would have received a warning we would have left our house earlier and many people's lives would have been saved i don't know about the others but they didn't warn us we didn't know about the eruption until the lava was coming down. the volcano erupted again on friday expelling large quantities of pirate classic material an ash nearby homes were evacuated authorities hoping to avoid another disaster david mercer al-jazeera squint laura what
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a mama. i said ahead on al-jazeera the death of celebrity chef anthony bourdain sheds light on a disturbing trend in the u.s. and in media the man who has protected an australian landmark for half a century now is saying good bye. i. mean the weather sponsored by cattle and always how i once again welcome to another look at the international forecast we got some showers in the forecast for parts of the middle east but not many parts of the truth be known we'll see some wesley weather just sliding out of the black sea towards the caspian sea so could always see one of two of those the lively showers bring up around georgia media as a by maybe want to see showers to into the far north or around spotting of rain there over towards eastern side of the region so if it was coupled you could see
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a little bit of wet weather little further north tashkent sandown mattie again could see some wet weather over the next day or two as hots for many karate at forty celsius hotter still for baghdad at forty two degrees rather pleasant twenty nine the four of beirut with the winds coming in from the mediterranean sea ought to across iraq in peninsular here in doha we're getting up to forty five celsius six or seven degrees above the seasonal average and that cane wind continuing to blow easing back a touch as we go on through monday losing that smiles a little less in the way of lift of dust and sand little bit of cloud down towards the gulf of aden so chance of one of two showers here shouldn't be too heavy having said that just isn't right making its way into cape town as we go on through saturday much of southern africa does they find it rather dries up around the western cape as we go through something afternoon. the weather sponsored by the time i always say. more than forty thousand africans are facing deportation from
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israel is awarded more than ninety percent of their gender except those reproduced so why. almost zero point one percent of civil liberties to have those in danger of being thrown out of the country in which they sold refuge. at this time i really still liberated as a journalist was. going to choose a little i would close with those killed people. welcome back our top stories on al-jazeera u.s. president donald trump wants the g. seven to become the g. eight again trump i suggested russia rejoin the group of key industrialized nations he said this before diving in canada for the annual summit where trade friction
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between the u.s. and its allies is expected to dominate talks for palestinians including a fifteen year old boy have been killed after israeli forces fired live rounds and tear gas at protesters near the gaza border israel says the action was taken after kites carrying explosives were flown near the fence six hundred others have been injured. and more evacuations are being ordered as volcanic eruption which has now killed at least one hundred nine people volcanic material and contaminated water from mt still threatening homes five days after its rice erupted about two hundred people are missing. now the international criminal court has overturned the war crimes conviction of the former. vice president of the democratic republic of congo's m.p.r. bemba supporters of denver celebrated in the capital kinshasa after hearing the brawling and majority of judges found bemba could not be held responsible for the
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atrocities of his militia which he sent into neighboring central african republic in two thousand and two mariana honda reports from the moment well crimes allegations were liberal to gainst him jumpy have been banned sisted he had done nothing wrong he maintained that stance even in two thousand and sixteen when the international criminal court unanimously found him guilty of two charges of war crimes and three of crimes against humanity he was sentenced to eighteen years in prison the longest ever handed down by the i.c.c. that court decision has now been overturned the appeals chamber by majority reverses the conviction of mr bin bin but showed little emotion as the presiding judge delivered the appeal ruling but the public gallery reacted enters and it quits all because the air are strong too with respect to necessary and reasonable
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measures extinguish its responsibility in full the judge was forced to pause. the registry to restore. the crowd in the courtroom bimbo was accused of failing to stop his private army known as the emelle sea from waging a campaign of rape and murder and pillage against civilians in neighboring central african republic over a five month period from october two thousand and two he was a rebel leader the in and had seen more than a thousand fighters to help put down the coup in the cia. the lower court judgment described a series of sick and sadistic rapes and murders and some cases where entire families were victimized but then but never actually issued an order to rape and murder on appeal a majority of judges held that being the could not be held responsible for
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atrocities carried out by troops under his control and that trial judges failed to consider if it's he made to stop crimes once he became aware of them the decision overturns what had been hailed a landmark ruling been but was the first ever to be convicted for crimes committed by others under his command and it was the first time the i.c.c. focused on rape as a weapon of war speaking to al jazeera in two thousand and seven before his arrest bin baron assisted he had nothing to answer for you will know that the international criminal court does. not of course are involved in the of this ng's i rested in two thousand and eight a convicted war criminal in two thousand and sixteen he's now won his appeal but bamber hasn't been freed a separate panel of judges continues to consider his punishment for interfering with witnesses during his trial maidana honed to zero. a u.s.
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special forces soldier has been killed in somali after an ambush by the school about shabaab it happened at a joint. military post in the town of to mommy for the u.s. troops were in jets along with another soldier crossing jordan has more from washington on friday a u.s. soldier was killed in the southwestern part of somalia during an operation where u.s. forces were providing logistical and aerial surveillance support to somali and kenyan troops trying to clear the area of al shabaab fighters the military is saying that the combined forces came under attack at about two forty five pm local time in the town of ju mommy one of the u.s. soldiers was killed four others were injured as well as one other soldier but it's not clear whether that person was with the somali forces or with the kenyan defense forces at any rate this mission was being carried out as part of the federal
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government of somalia as ongoing efforts to retake control of the two thirds of its territory that are under and other affiliated groups control this is a long running support operation on the u.s. as part about five hundred u.s. special forces and other members of the special operations command have been deployed to that country however that number could drop in the coming months that's if the white house and the pentagon agree to reassigned some of those special forces troops to other countries where they believe that there is more of a security threat not from groups such as al shabaab but from russia and from china . the afghan taliban has now agreed to a three day ceasefire put down arms hearing aids between june the fourteenth and june seventeenth at the end of the holy month of ramadan this follows the afghan president's announcing
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a ceasefire until the twentieth. security forces will not attack taliban fighters but will respond if provoked the united nations is warning a quarter of a million civilians could die if sounding that coalition forces attempt to take the many city of what data they're now within twenty kilometers of the red sea port it's going told by who theoretical is and is the main entry point for food and humanitarian supplies for the war torn country seventy that has more yemen was already one of the poorest countries in the world before the regional proxy war took over the country the saudi led war on yemen is now into its fourth year and hospitals are struggling to cope three hundred model a monologue the numbers we're in the good hands of god people are sick for years we have done nothing to be in the situation we're just citizens here we have nothing but god this hospital is in the city controlled port city of her data vital to getting aid and supplies into the country but fighting nearby is threatening to
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close the lifeline to millions of yemenis the. military coordinator in yemen is grounded says that a military attack or siege on her data in part hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians humanitarian organizations have rushed to develop a contingency plan you know cruel long worst case we fear that as many as two hundred fifty thousand people may lose everything even their lives the u.s. is war in the united arab emirates which is part of the saudi led coalition against attacking the port city these pictures are said to show military vehicles belonging to the u.a.e. that have been captured by the who sees all sides keen to showcase their victories in what is just as much a propaganda war. some aid agencies such as the red cross have sensed off home because of security concerns leaving millions at the mercy of a political war with no end in sight and aid agencies describe what is happening in yemen as the world's worst humanitarian crisis stephanie decker al-jazeera and
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many journalists has died two days after being released from detention by hoofy rebels and why cain was abducted a year ago his family told the association of yet many journalists he was tortured . has called for international organizations concerned with freedom of expression to condemn what it calls a crime against booking. the u.s. president's former campaign manager is facing new obstruction charges home and if it is accused of tampering with witnesses as he awaits trial on charges related to his foreign lobbying work special counsel robert miller has also filed obstruction charges against one of man a force longtime russian associates alan fisher has more from washington or pomona fortnight faces two additional charges of conspiracy to obstruct justice and two cones of obstruction of justice the usually back to a case that we heard about a week ago when paul munna four was allegedly trying to tamper with witnesses
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people who had given statements to the f.b.i. and he was allegedly trying to get them to change their story now also on this indictment is constantine kill minnick who's an old friend of paul man of course what does his political pollster his political fixer his translator when pomona for what in the ukraine for the best part of ten years and he becomes the twentieth person indicted by robert rulers investigation into possible russian collusion with the trump campaign this all comes under that umbrella pomona ford is also facing charges of tax fraud of bank fraud and of money laundering and all of these charges you have to remember that paul says he is innocent. actually viewers have been paid to the celebrity chef and writer anthony bourdain who has been found dead in a hotel room in france but he say the sixty one year old took his own life and gallagher has one anthony bourdain is career spanned continents but his love of the restaurant business had humble beginnings started out as
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a dishwasher before becoming a chef in new york his best selling memoir about the underbelly of manhattan's restaurant business changed his life and launched a t.v. career i went from a guy you know broke. always ben had been broke never insured never owned anything perpetually in debt. hard working god overnight the guy with the best job in the world with the freedom to travel around the world doing anything he wants and get paid for it the sixty one year old was filming a series in france for c.n.n. network says anthony bourdain committed suicide and released a statement his talents never cease to amaze us and we will miss him very much force and prayers are with his daughter and family at this incredibly difficult time ordains death comes just days after a fashion icon kate spade apparently took her own life spade's husband and business partner said the fifty five year old suffered from depression and anxiety for years
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suicide rates across the u.s. have jumped dramatically over the past decade in two thousand and sixteen there were nearly forty five thousand suicides more than twice the number of murders among the young suicide is now the second leading cause of death for dane one dozens of awards for his work in two thousand and thirteen judges for one prestigious award on a dem for expanding our palates and horizons in equal measure and a gallica al-jazeera. now after half a century the longest serving staff member at the sydney opera house is calling it a day thief so callous migrated to australia from greece in one thousand nine hundred sixty eight in soon began work on the opera houses construction just weeks from retirement he reflects on his many years working inside while the world's most famous than once my name is the scholars and i'm great king in might nice of the sydney opera house that i've you know starry night the sixty four i was nineteen years old and i come to work quarter past five every morning for the last fifty
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years i was in love with the opera in eighty six the heat i started on this beautiful building the icon of the of struggle i come from as malone sort of grips my face when i started here you were seeing the drama theatre when they finished that i started on the scaffolding we had to a lot of greeks a lot italians have a little time made my wife and we may be late it's sixty in the same year i start here of course we go to the opera heroes i was in love with the opera. three quarters of the bill they see on the water machine in the material they put the time there was not last for long i saw the call good. to suffer with the cancer and the homes to change the color and i remember my
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grandmother the used to do the floor with a casting solar i say to my wife get me a packet of baking soda and i have a little close the congress or the slowest so then i thought i was thinking of building bros my grandmother used to have a coup they were bronze cubes they get the rake where the only boy. i make assemble they was very impress you come to work not to pass your time you come to two you joining the beautiful building peace card to put in my mind are going to leave the job i'm seventy three no good three grand charles there waiting for me in that i. wish we find the right people to be good to you to protect the
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billy gently with the love because i love this ability. and the golden state warriors have marched to a third n.b.a. basketball title in four years this wife's aside the craven cavity is one way to eighty five to win the best of seven series for nail seth carey top scored with thirty seven points for the warriors while kevin durant's was named the most valuable playoff the finalists this is the warriors' second straight title. well again i'm fully back to go with the headlines here on al-jazeera u.s. present donald trump wants the g. seven to become the g eight again he suggested russia rejoin the group of key industrialized nations trump said this before arriving in canada for the annual summit where trade friction between the u.s.
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and its allies is expected to dominate talks just in is agree it could all be terrorists and the world trade barriers is that between canada and the united states a very empty right the left is in good shape we are actually we're going to we are actually looking good our relationship is very good we are actually work you know including making it all very fair for both countries and we've made a lot of progress today we'll see a little work we've made a lot of progress for palestinians including a fifteen year old boy have been killed after israeli forces fired live rounds and tear gas at protesters near the gaza border israel says the action was taken after kites carrying explosives were flown near the fence six hundred others have been injured more evacuations are being ordered me it got to minus volcanic eruption which has now killed at least one hundred nine people cannick material and contaminated water from mt faygo is still threatening homes five days after that first he wrapped it about two hundred people on the scene. in charge criminal court
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has overturned the war crimes conviction a former vice president of the democratic republic of congo. supporters of bemba celebrated in change after hearing the ruling majority of judges found he could not be half responsible for the atrocities of his militia which he sent in to neighboring central african republic in two thousand and two. the afghan taliban has now agreed to a three day ceasefire that were done on east between june fourteenth and june seventeenth at the end of the holy month of ramadan is follows the afghan president's announcing a ceasefire until the twentieth a u.s. special forces soldier has been killed in somalia often ambushed by the armed group al-shabaab it happened at a joint u.s. somalia military outpost in the time of jamal mean. and brazil's most celebrated tennis player who has died of cancer at the age of seventy eight make name the tennis ballerina for a graceful sign in
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a one thousand grand slam tournaments in the one nine hundred fifty s. and succeeds. is up next. history is so often told through the eyes of leaders but in amritsar india just thirty kilometers from the border with pakistan where 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 nine eleven museum was there and they are now numerous called museums is not beautiful a museum so countries around the world have walked a memorialize 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
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shared history. you can. see. for many years people have been fleeing eritrea. a steady stream across the border into sudan but unable or unwilling to stay there they move on. many end up in europe. others have made it across the sinai peninsula and managed to get into israel. today approximately forty thousand people from africa have made it into the country. and having rejected most of their asylum applications
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the israeli government now wants them out a new program has been announced except deportations to a third country such as rwanda or uganda or end up in an israeli prison. that's here in pockets of relatively deprived southern television but thousands of africans have made their home over recent years we'll hear from some of those who now stand to lose that here until trial just. tekhelet and eden have lived in tel aviv for about ten years now both of them say the reason they fled eritrea was to escape the military it's a familiar story. according to a united nations investigation based on interviews with five hundred refugees around the world the military is in fact
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a recruitment tool for forced labor tracing its role to the country's long running conflict with its neighbor if the o.p.o. . eritrea gained formal independence from ethiopia in one nine hundred ninety three after a thirty year long armed struggle but since then the situation along the border has remained tense with frequent violent clashes. as a result the military here plays a central organizing role but beyond defending the country it has become an instrument of oppression according to retrain refugees. young men are forced to serve for many years but not just to execute military duties the issues relating to eritrea as military and slash national service programs include their arbitrary and indefinite duration the use of conscripts as forced labor including manual labor the inhumane conditions of service rape and torture often associated
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with service and their devastating impact on family life and freedom of choice for the individuals. overall the un investigators concluded that quote the commission has reasonable grounds to believe that crimes against humanity namely enslavement imprisonment in force disappearance torture other inhumanities persecution rape and murder have been committed in eritrea since one nine hundred ninety one. it's also recommended referring the situation to the prosecutor of the international criminal court. and natural way out of the country is north to sudan but that country is hardly a long term solution. not too far away israel and many managed to cross into the country before israel decided to build
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a barbed fence along its border with egypt in the sinai peninsula but now the government here says it's time for the refugees to go. or come here to live in ski garden and so on until of it's a park here where years ago many of the asylum seekers were simply brought on a bus and left and now it's become something of a central point for this community. tekhelet came here in two thousand and six for a while he worked in a restaurant. he works for an engine advocating on behalf of the african community here. he didn't came here ten years ago with her husband and two kids since then she has given birth to a daughter who is now in kindergarten she also works for an ngo let's start at the beginning of your story how and why did you leave eritrea and how did you end up here in israel when i was a nurse there was an athlete and there was also a student without any reason there are three of them between me and forced into the
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army and i trained as a soldier and then ask them to give me a chance to return back to my studies and my training to become an ugly it was an athlete we did some stronger and they refuse it me that it may claim go back to where it came from and as i point out i left my country because i've become hopeless in my own country i've become dreamless in my own country and it's my country on so i don't see it was. a way to cross the border and run because me my country's military border guard this and they ask me where i'm going and i told them i'm leaving my country because of all the stuff that happened to me and they asked me what was the prison i thought of them i know a prison what's it like so i can't do both prison and a start drawing away from them. three times to kill me may scare have been
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done for all so that's a good given number two thousand and seven and the same thing happened in sudan this is government starting to in two hundred over. there and i don't always from that and they came. cairo and the same thing happened carol so the only place is close to me was israel so i came to israel on the endorsed of the seven rule of law. commenting on israel's new policy prime minister netanyahu had this to say on january twenty first we are taking actions against illegal immigrants who came here for work purposes israel will continue to be a shelter for true refugees and will eject illegal infiltrators now the israeli government's argument in all of this is that the vast majority of the eritrean sudanese asylum seekers are not asylum seekers it calls them infiltrators and
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people who are here for economic reasons i mean how would you respond to that what what would happen do you think if you went back to eritrea first of all they never took over us and claim properly happening and right now though so they have no reason to work or for him to enter into the record right because they never give us a chance in some is there are asylum applications systematically they brought oz to some of our claim even those who are climate sooner again we didn't get it and so forth sometimes they reject automatically out of fun for no reason without checking their claim so it is completely a lie it's not completely right why they're sane especially in the world more than ninety per cent of air tran get accepted as refugees in the sudan is are the same number of get accepted as refugees so why is there is zero princes almost zero zero point. one person to get upset if it's almost there is ten people who get there if it is you see in the last ten years so you can understand is completely baseless it
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completely completely lie and in your own personal case what are the stakes i mean you you left because you deserve the army he was shot at crossing the border if you were simply to go home you obviously view yourself as an asylum seeker if you were to go there now what would happen to most of all if my country because there were no set up my country so my country i am sure there would be imprisonment because of the border illegally. i think they're going to terrorism and they're going to trial so if i work my country but not just me every transport of the country would be in danger because we know now when we were in our country we know nothing about it. but know we now everything what do you mean my country and to our people. for eden the military also played a critical role in her and her husband's decision to leave every train ten years ago so why did you leave what force you out of eritrea because what is a man on is
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a man that the from that it was most of them was in saddam's and women. even if the man is really from the army the government came they took all his addresses a family especially for wife was a kid s. i don't want to be. in prison because every time prison is the prison like his underground prison it is so difficult you can eat one time in a day it is sleep you can sleep on the floor this is your own personal experience when your husband fled the armenia you were imprisoned for tumultuous for two months i was with my delta now my daughter now is eleven years old as that time she was like one in the have and so you both ended up with you and your husband and your two children and it up in sudan in
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a refugee camp. what made you decide to come here because there is not. so then is also the same situation like like everything because if you sit in the feed to come that is a smuggler as maybe they kidnapped the deal maybe they can now but the kid just to get the money. when i so when i listen some see it happen for someone my ring my husband telling me let's try to leave to get a safe place and then he decided to send me to israel and i came. and so you you're here you've been here for nearly a decade and you've been trying you say to apply for asylum. what's happened how far is your asylum application i tried for four days. to apply that silent.
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feagin status but i didn't get any china sting because that is a lot of people and has immigration they don't want to meet. at a feeding asylum apparatus because we decide to deport us to little one that if someone applies at a fee just status it is. to save us from the deportation when you first arrived in israel nine years ago you didn't apply i didn't know i don't know no one contacted me this i don't know because before i was in my country i don't know how to do about the fetus i don't out up like any was the owner and he came in to say hey we're just. going out and we've been using for whom. you can get used to go on being a weekend go through one down. and what about the environment here in
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southern tel aviv how do you get along with local people here are the other major problems all of that if you just had him and they suffer from the people and for them never miss some neighbors that blame was after in a moment. go back off a coffee shop hold khushi like this. i don't get abodes us. the. chocolates and eden and their fellow refugees are not fighting for their position alone who came to demonstrate against the book dushan. we disagree with. the decision of our government especially as jews. we are people off refugees for simon seekers for the thousand years and we're here to say now that we are in
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a sovereign state we have to deal with other asylum seekers worldwide who all over the was the in the last few weeks and months we've seen a real groundswell of israeli voices kind of advocating on your behalf we've seen local survivors rushing to the government people even talking about sheltering people in homes and frank to prevent them from being deported what's that been like to witness from your perspective actually it was quite interesting. for me this is not into life is enough like surprise because the last ten years i know these people are fighting with me but their voice never here in the media as in they keep fighting for my father and for the future for the picture of the country as a for the value of the country. is not a deuce of value even like was a gun in. the image of the country it's not just best of both me as
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a country because the current government is very working very hard to destroy. to destroy the image of the countries of the last ten years not the government system as if it become my savior because my family become part of me for the last ten years i survived because of these other people and probably but this is them is completely made to quote to break me and met just to kick me out of the country and take me down. many eritreans and others have already been transferred out of the country but the circumstances are murky and hard to verify as a result there is a lot of speculation a common story is that refugees are sent on to cover to rwanda or uganda with some cash and that the governments dare look the other way possibly in a deal with israel in the meantime refugees are staying in an open detention center
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here in israel called toilet they are free to leave during the day but have to return by nights. the policy that is being now advanced by the prison or a third country which is widely thought to be a wonder there are some arguments that perhaps uganda could be involved as well that policy when it comes to that choice if you were presented with that choice personally prison or forced deportation back to an african country which is not your own what choice would you make it is better for me to see your side is what is waiting for me in rwanda already one hundred there is no system created or waiting for me to give me a shelter or a security you have to understand that there is no system at all for me or for us sense of community and this country's because we know in the last two years those people who are forced into with countries where smugglers to other countries they were victims often months they were victims of human trafficking they didn't they
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did him a turn see they did in libya instead of the soul so for me it's like i can do that i can't the govt is countries because they know and asking protection in israel i never ask protection in one or uganda and secondly it's a good thing for me he said to level up my home which means it's better for me to stay in prison than to go to another one are you worried about your physical safety in either of those two countries or what is your main concern about being sent to one of those places most of them as a person i have a dream to grow and to become him being after here for ten years from scratch. actually you know the longer you know the culture and of the country i can survive now but there push me to start from scratch again so i'm human being and do i need to create my future it's all from start point again to go back to
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standards as you said so for my physical protection i'm not perfect at all in this country because as we saw last you free use a lot of people who are different from you so i don't be killed over how people are feeling at the moment how seriously are people taking this threat that is coming from the israeli government that they're going to be forcibly deported to a country which is as i think i was saying the menace i wear it now because. they know it when it will happen and there was also a lot of men that now in holland they get rejected a lot as there is the detention center and yeah so what was a visitor to get to get done so far that is and so you think that this is going to target single men in particular and that they are under very realistic threat of imminent deportation. and you yourself you have a family you have three children one of them will was born here what is it been
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like bringing them up in this environment when there is a lot of uncertainty and fear about what might happen what's it been like for the kids i don't know if it will be happen for as far as a kid is i'm not going to the one that i would i would say is again in prison it's better to sit in prison that's that's your view yeah because africa is africa is the same situation and your children i mean are very conscious of what's happening yes or no what is happening. i want to visit my doctor she's talking about the lunda she said what is the one. i don't think the one. she said why is the government of israel decided to do like this say home on being . says she said. why is the government gave me two.
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to chose a country like the kind. i told her that is not under history's she said i don't think to go to london because i don't know the language i don't as a country is told to me if you need to board cause. everything i have a question tell me because we have a family and it. is better to do like the same don't decide to. let your eleven year old and you have a younger daughter as well in kindergarten i mean what was the situation. she done about that prosthesis is almost small but it is difficult because they could have. like her. in that or that of them so it's like literally going to the store you can see for refugee on laser is no any sally kids learn together in the pin that about them it is
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also until one eleven pm there is no longer any chance to put her hair like after school i pay for her. until i came to tech. and your own situation i mean if if you found yourself on a plane heading to rwanda what would that mean for you what would the prospect of life. be like for you i'm not going to london i would sit in the in the prison no matter how many lonely attacks why is that what are you worried about that would happen because the wonder is the same like i don't africa if i go to one. they can pick all the papers document to say no and i know that in the higher court also i'm afraid. to get like a slave trade like in does that happen in libya i and i don't want do you think that the israeli government is really going to do this or do you think they're just
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trying to scare people. maybe they need to scare people because. you can do like buy for us if somebody scary if they will put in unlimited prison. maybe someone they decide to go israeli government says that's the vast majority of people here who come from sudan eritrea the african infiltrators as they call them are here for economic reasons they have to get better jobs to get a better lifestyle i mean how do you is not it is not it is wrong it is not. for the job because when i was in eritrea i was working as a bank accounting because i did. i don't want to walk in claiming. better to walk in bank or better to continue my education
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but i don't know if his. and your young daughter finally who is who was born here. do you think that she has a future in this country there is no future for her. even she's one and there's that isn't a future because she's from medicare. and so your your aspiration your hope is to stay here and for your whole family to stay and live in israel permanently what is your hope my hope is. i don't know. my hope is if i get a chance i want to go out on the side because i can't continue kind of this life it is not a life. if i get the chance i'm trying to get the sense. that . i'm so happy. i was going to.
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quit the only long term solution points back to retrain. he wants nothing more than to return to what he still calls his country but first the situation there has to change. and your own future of the next few years i mean what do you think what do you hope is going to happen to you. i believe in god. to give me a good future and those are the first and i know i have to fight back and work hard the ten. bodies of the government lied to me looks like you're on so i have to become stronger and to be say there is something up and.
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it starts in coral communities with the promise of a prosperous marriage. but countless young indian women find themselves jean commodifying saul and sold again. to toil by day. only to be violated by night. slavery a twenty first century evil continues with bridal slain. announces iraq.
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al jazeera. where ever you are. a new series of rewind a care breyer people back to life i'm sorry and brian you updates on the best of al-jazeera documentaries in libya i was the first and the like and the other student rewind continues with kosovo by fear of fear and hope this was my return to kosovo and the little village of but one decade on i've come back to find out what happened to those hopes and dreams we want on al-jazeera. we understand the differences. and the similarities of cultures across the world so no matter how you take it al-jazeera will bring in the news and current affairs that matter to al-jazeera. a. very big story it's
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generate thousands of headlines copper each with different angles from different perspectives we. this is the only evidence that russia was responsible for this separate the spin from the facts that's why on god's states or the misinformation from the journalism the issues here go far beyond one data mining company and one election with the listening post on al-jazeera. smiles for the camera but disagreements over trade and russia's membership loom over the g. seven summit in canada. and i'm fully back to watching al jazeera live from doha also ahead there's another summit taking place on the other side of the world xi jinping welcoming his best
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friend a lot of mapleton. five days after montoya go erupted in guatemala evacuations continue and the death toll is still rising. all told. and the ramadan tradition that suddenly at risk in jerusalem's old city. thank you for joining us straight fiction between the u.s. and its dominating thomas said the annual g. seven summit donald trump's tone was conciliatory after meeting his counterparts but the majority of the bloc rejected his suggestion to readmit russia john hendren has more from quebec city. leaders of seven of the world's wealthiest nations made a show of unity in a fractured family pleasure to have you here just and it's been really great hours
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earlier after leaders of the g seven annual summit in canada complained the u.s. tariffs trump was less diplomatic. like well we're bored with you with the war three they don't mention the fact that they have trade barriers against farmers isolated on trade trump appeared bigly hopeful in meetings with french president emanuel mccrone and the summits host canadian president justin trudeau their relationship is probably better as good or better than it's ever been. and i think we'll get to something very beneficial to canada and to the united states believes hours before the summit ends on saturday that makes it unclear whether the u.s. will sign on to an annual g seven agreement usually a formality or if it does whether that agreement will mention trade of the situations on the positions of a clear the president of u.s. things the u.s. have been treated in an unfair way by you about those who don't want to negotiate
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on the trade trump also proposed allowing russia back into an expanded g. eight after russia was the jek did for the two thousand and fourteen invasion of ukraine italy's g.'s f. a conti agreed but canada's foreign minister voiced the view of the rest of the g seven canada's position is absolutely clear and that there are no grounds whatsoever for bringing russia with its current behavior bat into the g seven the diplomatic drama inside the meeting is not matched on the streets two hours drive from the summit in charlevoix nine thousand well armed police outnumber the few hundred peaceful demonstrators john hendren al-jazeera quebec city canada jacob carrier god is an economist at the peterson institute for international economics he says trade policies would only further isolate the u.s. in the global market. it's obviously those sectors and those people in the in the
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states and parts of the country that supported him that are going to get hurt by the tariffs that other countries are levying now against the united states that a lot of agriculture or other export items coming from red republican states they're going to pick up the phone and tell look mr president this doesn't work for us you had to change it so he's not going to be convinced but he's going to be compelled it's important to recognize that when someone says a global trade war this isn't the one nine hundred thirty s. where everybody levied a lot of tariffs on everybody else this is the united states levying tariffs on everybody else and then everybody else retaliating against the united states so what this will look like in twenty senior and potentially beyond is a more and more economically and politically isolated america but the rest of the world pretty much carrying on to the best of its ability just without the united
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states meanwhile russian president vladimir putin has been in beijing announcing trade and investment agreements with his chinese counterpart put in was given a medal by xi jinping who call the russian leader his best friend florence we report something. a friendship medal for russian president vladimir putin awarded for what china says is putin's outstanding contribution to china's development it's a sign of ever closer ties between the two men and the two countries both announced several business deals including a joint investment fund in projects in china and russia the closer relationship comes at a time when tensions with the u.s. have increased both the russians and chinese have been sidelined from tuesday's planned summit between trump and kim jong il despite that both are keen to show they retain influence over north korea. but i see. we've talked about the
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korean peninsula issue russia and china both want to see the korean peninsula and north east and asia enjoy the peace we are happy to see that the current negotiation process between the d.p. r. k. and the u.s. is in the framework of the roadmap initiated by russia and china in recent communications pyongyang confirmed to us it will carry out constructive corporation in the denuclearization. a closer lion's benefits both russia and china russia's accused of meddling in trumps election and faces sanctions for annexing crimea. chinese and american negotiators are trying to avoid a trade war and china has been criticized and challenged by the u.s. for its increasingly aggressive moves in staking territorial claims in the south china sea the meeting between china and russia displays of friendship between she and put it all in the words of the russian president in the spirit of overarching
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strategic partnership a partnership between country u.s. calls economic rivals the agreement signed on friday go a long way in strengthening that partnership florence. beijing. the u.s. says chinese government tankers have stolen large amounts of highly sensitive data about its submarine technology the washington post reports the breaches took place at the beginning of the year the hackers are believed to taint secret u.s. navy plans to develop a supersonic anti-ship missile by two thousand and twenty the news comes as e.u. trumpet ministration seeks china's support in persuading north korea to denuclearize in other world news four palestinians including a fifteen year old boy have been killed after israeli forces fired live rounds and tear gas at protests near the gaza border the palestinian health ministry says more than six hundred others have been injured in the violence israel says the action was taken after kites carrying explosives were flown near the fence israeli forces
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have killed at least one hundred eighteen palestinians in demonstrations which began in mates march hamas leader ismail haniyeh says protests will continue until the israeli blockade ends and. we are ready to deal positively with any real initiative to end the siege completely on the gaza strip but not at the expense of the palestinian cause our resistance is related to the march of return and to breaking the scenes the marches will continue until we achieve our goals firstly breaking the seizure on the gaza strip. iran can has more from the gaza israel border. as you can see the palestinians are burning tires just over there close to the israeli buffer zone now every so often the israelis fire off a volley of tear gas they're using this in two different ways firstly coming in from jeeps to give them a height on the take gas comes down into the crowd trying to spurs them clearly it's not working the crowd are still there but they're also using tear gas drones
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as well which is a fairly recent development however the palestinians figured out a way of dealing with can you see the kites just up there they're becoming a bit of a problem for the israelis there affectively a toy but the palestinians figured out that they can in tangle a drone into those kites they've actually done that and they've managed to bring down an israeli take astro and so that's something the israelis are going to be concerned about now this protest has begun slightly earlier in the day than the regular friday protests that's because of our could state that was started effectively means jerusalem day but it was started by the iranians after the islamic revolution in one nine hundred seventy nine but it means something quite a lot to the palestinians as well and that's why they come to this border however the protest organizing committees did ask the protesters not to go too close to the border to the buffer zone as they have done in the past and they've said stay away from border we want to try and avoid casualties however the palestinians have turned up as you can see in great numbers not only to commemorate could stay but to
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tell you to show the world that they are against the israeli siege israeli led siege of gaza the palestinian ambassador to the u.n. says his office is working to ensure a u.n. resolution is passed to give palestinians protection from illegal use of force and imagine secession of the un general assembly will discuss the situation in gaza on wednesday. we would love to relent in our quest to try to find ways to provide protection for the civilian population because it is our duty it is the right thing to do and it is the thing that the palestinian people including those in the gaza strip in occupied east jerusalem they need and we are determined to do everything that we can in order to provide them or to contribute to providing them with international protection in afghanistan the taliban has agreed to a three day cease fire though put down on each between june the fourteenth then
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seventeenth at the end of the holy month of ramadan this follows the afghan president announcing a ceasefire until the twentieth ashraf ghani says security forces will not attack taliban fighters but will respond if provoked. more evacuations are being ordered me a guatemala's volcanic eruption which has now killed at least one hundred nine people volcanic material and contaminated water from mt waco are still threatening homes five days after erupted david messer is not far from the site. as painful as his burns might be gar knows how lucky he is to be alive he his wife and father in law were at home in a moment one of mollusc where the volcano erupted that didn't his wife managed to escape but the memories of that day will haunt them forever. was falling inside the house when we were running out my father in law was swept away the ash was boiling mud mixed with people were running in the hardish came
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down on top of them killing them people were trapped inside their houses and couldn't escape they were cooked inside. six children with severe burns were airlifted to the united states where pediatric burn center offer state of the art treatment not available in guatemala. and now one of all is national disaster agency is coming under fire for possible negligence public prosecutors have ordered an investigation into whether evacuation procedures were properly followed is a little bit of the official say they warned the public after sensors picked up an increase in volcanic activity hours before the eruption there for you i mean to the mirror all of the communities received warnings and obviously we don't have the authority to order an evacuation we make recommendations and it's the residents who decide whether to evacuate or not.

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