Skip to main content

tv   NEWS LIVE - 30  Al Jazeera  June 11, 2018 7:00am-7:34am +03

7:00 am
or eight years ago i would have suggested that no such thing could happen because it was the us that was in the lead really creating this post world war two economic order along with the creation of the world bank and the international monetary fund but we're talking now about an administration that is pulled out of the paris climate accord that has pulled out of the iran nuclear deal certainly the president is very much interested in trying to protect and shore up u.s. interests especially u.s. business interests but even though u.s. business leaders may suggest that imposing tariffs hurts their own businesses and their own employees that may dollars stop the president and if he feels that his administration could do better not being involved in the g seven then i wouldn't be surprised if he were to say let's pull out it's probably not likely but anything could happen and. thanks very much talking to us there live from washington d.c.
7:01 am
and overflow of mud and ash from the four a go volcano in guatemala has full submergence it seems to abandon the search for survivors rescuers say there's little hope of finding anyone else alive after last sunday's eruption killed at least one hundred ten people nearly two hundred are still missing and thousands of homes have been destroyed still to come on al-jazeera hands across the basque country demonstrators form a two hundred kilometer chain to demand a vote on independence from spain and human rights groups say saudi arabia has arrested two more female activists who had campaigned for the right to drawing. hello the rain that was falling rather persistently in western australia is still there but you see the cloud is
7:02 am
a little bit more broken than it was nevertheless that's be what should be really falling in the entire month perth is in the sunshine and there's something going on the bite full cost wise i've got nine hundred laid in six in melbourne there's been a slow increase in temperature but the same in sydney although it is circulation the bite by through a shower or two in but we've got the sun actually in perth and probably returning to places like port hedland now in new zealand the picture has been modified weather but in the last twenty four hours or so the circulation is coated in cloud and so wet and windy with two words that work best and i think you see a slightly improvement but it will be that you know condoled monday rather better in christchurch for the still small cloud in the wrist sunshine ten to thirty degrees the range and a little change really on tuesday if you ignore fallen out on the east side you're going to get wet and running up the side of home shoot in this mass here you see a circulation it's a tropical storm so although it is the wet season officially it will be in holland
7:03 am
strain running through tokyo on monday through northern home shooter hawk on tuesday leaving behind a brighter warmer and drier weather. but that's. what it. says the last. of the bottom of the bunch of the baton at the bottom in the first episode of a two part series al-jazeera investigates the world of performance enhancing drugs . sports during the a missed chase.
7:04 am
welcome back our mind of the top stories they are an al-jazeera u.s. president the north korean leader kim jong un arrived in singapore ahead of tuesday's historic summit north korea's state news agency says the two leaders will discuss a permanent peace keeping mechanism as well as denuclearize ation a top white house adviser has accused the canadian prime minister of trying to stab a donald trump in the back at the g. seven summit by justin trudeau criticize the u.s. tariffs on steel and aluminum and the overflow of mother and ash from the four a go volcano got some force emergency teams to abandon the search for survivors a week after it first erupted killing at least one hundred ten. at least sixteen soldiers have been killed as fighting intensifies around the eastern libyan city of
7:05 am
daraa forces loyal to renegade general khalifa haftar say they are taking control of around seventy five percent of the city thousands of civilians are fleeing the fighting though i had has more from tripoli. explosions and the firing of bullets at the main chance to be heard in there in the . street battles continue between forces loyal to any good general feeling for have terror and the dead in their protection fighters the collection of armored groups which are against his control of eastern libya intense fighting is in control of neighborhoods change from day to day. have his forces supported by the egyptian any united arab emirates air forces have seized several districts red cross into stuff in derna say they found nine and identified bodies and buried them in a mass grave the fighting has forced it thousands of civilians to leave the city
7:06 am
some fear revenge attacks if there are no falls that it's christian says eighteen hundred families have been rescued during the last three days. dozens of libyans colluding civilians have been killed since have to receive up the battle for their now on may the seventh for a long two years of see huge moustache. and hospitals are desperately in need of medication first aid kits and blood packs especially after al had a shot spittle was targeted by a rocket or the medical staff left the hospital meaning the wounded people were left without medical care that. is paralyzed schools hospitals and other vital infrastructure all damaged by fighting two years of siege by have to this forces to the city have taken toll on civilians food water and medical supplies are scarce have to accuses fighters in their honor of being terrorists the
7:07 am
night that and say they have defeated eiseley in the area people fleeing down there say they are fed up with the war and want to return home as soon as possible no matter who the city in the future and human rights advocates are planning to file a lawsuit against after at the international criminal court for what they call crimes against humanity. tripoli. iraq's prime minister says a fire at a warehouse where ballot boxes were being stored is part of a plot to harm the democratic process the boxes were holding ballots from last month's election a full recount has been ordered after allegations of fraud ahead of the electoral commission says none of the ballots were damaged in the fire shall stop for the house from baghdad. thick black smoke over the resolver district in eastern baghdad iraq's ministry of interior say the fire started in
7:08 am
a building used to store ballot boxes and electronic voting machines from the disputed parliamentary election a month ago. iraq's parliament voted last week for a countrywide to manual recount of all ballots after allegations of voting fraud one m.p. said the fire was started deliberately and called on the government to better protect buildings where ballot boxes are being stored and imagine how did the brunt of this three warehouses there are important but it's boxes firefighters are inside trying to present the fire earlier in the day nine judges were appointed to oversee the manual recount of votes nationwide. the process is expected to take at least a couple of weeks. the government sank senior members of the election commission which oversaw the vote counting prime minister hydrilla body has banned them from leaving the country and warned that anyone suspected of being involved in election
7:09 am
food could face criminal charges iraq's first election since the defeat of eisel was praised for the lack of violence in the run up to and during polling day on may the twelfth since then much has changed allegations of fraud leading to parliament's vote for a countrywide manual recounts of throwing the transparency of this election into doubt a fire at a building containing potential proof of how people voted will only make accusations of voter rigging even louder strafford al-jazeera baghdad at least seventeen people have been killed in syrian government has strikes on a village in the rebel held province of idlib the northern province is meant to be one of the so-called decker's exhalations those activists say the truth was respected in it for months until friday when a government attack in saddam killed forty four people. hundreds of protesters in
7:10 am
ramallah demanding the palestinian authority lift sanctions against gaza demonstrators called on palestinian president mahmoud abbas to end salary cuts for officials they also demanded reconciliation between the west bank and the gaza strip that is suffering from a shortage of basic goods and electricity nearly two hundred thousand people have lined roads across the basque region calling for the right to decide whether they remain part of spain let's cope and home reports the event may bring new impetus for the basque nationalist movement and i gave it an already turbulent political scene in madrid. the. it sounds a little sweet to be a protest song yet it is a call to vote and before. this demonstration in the basque region marks the start of a new bid for greater self rule or maybe even to break away from spain together. we've
7:11 am
been calling for our rights for years and today is another chance to see that there's a significant percentage of citizens who want to vote and this site where putin. last month the armed separatists organization announced it was disbanding that gives peaceful campaign is the chance to draw a line between themselves that violent uprising which lasted decades these are the last links in a human chain that stretches from here more than two hundred kilometers or one hundred twenty miles away right up to the border with france. it wound along the highways and byways through one of the richest corners of spain the ne basque region already has wide ranging devolved powers over health education and even taxation but some like quantrill of course who came with his grandson dream of having their own country when. there are steps to be taken first self-government
7:12 am
and so for all and then independence i'm not sure what that will look like but it needs to recognise our people's progress an issue moment. some days event comes amid turbulent times the dispute over catalonia is attempt to declare independence from the rest of spain is far from over and earlier this month the central government in madrid was toppled by a corruption scandal the incoming socialist administration has no majority and no room to maneuver on key issues such as greater self rule for spammers various regions but among but organizers except it may be along the campaign on. different factors mean we're closing one chapter and beginning another you must base this new chapter on democratic values and the will of the people is. about us and often first. it's hard to see how government leaders in madrid would ever
7:13 am
accept moves to carve up spain into independent states. but ask these basque demonstrators join together they chant the power in the future is in their hands karl penhall al jazeera victorious spain. u.k. human rights groups say saudi arabia has arrested two more women's rights activists who had campaigned for the right to drive my hours a ronnie published a letter of support for detained campaign a new way and was then herself seized just hours later nineteen activists have been arrested in the kingdom since the fifteenth of may shelob ellis reports. the saudi arabian traffic department releases a video showing women in riyadh receiving their driver's licenses it's been decades in the making with just two weeks before women are free to drive. but some women's rights activists will not be behind the wheel but behind bars have was the first to
7:14 am
be arrested in a government crackdown began on the fifteenth of may. security forces then swept up blogger eman and nuff journ activist and professor as easy use of human rights lawyer abraham moved a mic and one of the kingdom's early feminists. she took part in in one thousand nine hundred can paint to lift the driving ban they could face up to twenty years in prison the saudi state news agency did confirm wrists on the eighteenth of may saying seven suspects were charged as foreign agents reporting they did to violate the country's religious and national pillows and last week the saudi public prosecutor reported coordinated moves to undermine the security of the kingdom seventeen people had been arrested eight were released. the government has not said what threat to security the activists pose. but analysts say saudi leadership want
7:15 am
to ensure the lifting of the driving ban a seen as a gift rather than a concession to domestic or international pressure they are telling the women in message that you should not ask for more rights including you know ending male guardianship this. is the right of women to issue their first or without maid console and so it's very alarming and we are very much concerned about what's going on in saudi arabia. right now the kingdom is trying to modernize but it is come at the cost of a crackdown last year academics religious leaders and activists were detained well riyadh's ritz carlton hotel became a prison for some assad's wealthiest mean the saudi crown prince mohammed bin selman promoting a more modern kingdom globally well neutering challenges at home fellas al-jazeera tens of thousands of women in britain have marched together to create a living artwork to celebrate one hundred years since they won the right to vote
7:16 am
the suffragette movement campaigned for decades for women's democratic rights using protests and direct action and sunday's event was a reminder of modern day struggles to the debugger reports. a river of green going to invite. the first letters of those colors used by the suffragette movement g w v signifying give women the vote one hundred years ago some british women finally got it and these women are remembering their struggle with a unique march in the u.k. so national capitals edinburgh cardiff belfast and here in london community groups have been working with professional artists to create some couch and bonus we commissioned a hundred artists each to work with a growing that could be women imprisoned kids in schools. the muslim women's federation southall back sisters lots of different people you see behind me clean break her prison survivors of domestic violence so lots and lots of different
7:17 am
organizations that we can rate a particular artist to go into back three to work with them to make a banner in a series of workshops they also explored the history of the suffragettes as well as the later fight for things like access to birth control to these women were extremely radical women who were prepared to act deeds not words and make decisions that perhaps nowadays we might like pretty long. many of the themes are obvious. others less so and had a great time to take workshops making the food coming up with things like parents the teacher coming up with the. tendril idea well to stop that oh that's a thing it defies description we're hoping because i think if if things come because supply as we call it controls the more she's also saw homemade efforts and some definitely too young to vote they belong to
7:18 am
a pair of women together doing something together and it's back. and it's great to do something with my daughter i mean you take. the women much in here have come. all over england and the plan is they've made a pilot a whole range of issues but what they're all doing is looking back to the achievements of the software just looking forward to a more equal future. and they're hoping the younger generations will be as bold as those who came before the. ground zero. these are the top stories on al-jazeera the leaders of the u.s. and north korea have arrived in singapore for tuesday's historic summit donald trump and kim jong un are staying in the separate hotel so will not far from each other north korea's state news agency says the two leaders will discuss
7:19 am
a permanent peacekeeping mechanism as well as denuclearization kimberly how close it is in singapore with the arrival of these two leaders in place the work begins in preparation for that meeting that will take place on tuesday there have been teams here on the ground working feverish late not just to get the logistics in place but also to set the right tone for the table the u.s. president we had him while he was on air force one that he believed that this was a one time opportunity he believes the north korean leader will not waste nuclear peace was also at the top of the agenda at the summit of the shanghai cooperation organization in china iranian president hassan rouhani news the meeting to criticize the u.s. for withdrawing from the iran nuclear deal saying it's unilateral policies are a threat to all the twenty fifteen agreements between iran and world powers lifted international sanctions on iran in return for restrictions on its nuclear
7:20 am
activities russia's president vladimir putin told the summit he wants consistent and unconditional implementation of the deal. the white house has stepped up its verbal attacks on justin trudeau with a top of visor saying the canadian prime minister tried to stab donald trump in the back at the g. seven summit trudeau avoided questions from waiting media in quebec adjourning the summit he told reporters that the u.s. president's decision to invoke national security as a reason for his still trade tariffs was kind of insulting iraq's prime minister says a fire at a warehouse where ballot boxes were being stored is part of a plot to harm the democratic process the boxes were holding ballots from last month's election a full recount has been ordered after allegations of fraud the head of the electoral commission says none of the ballots were damaged in the fire the shia cleric there all saw that was a surprise winner of the vote on may the twelfth as of the headlines from may but
7:21 am
don't go away when this is coming up next. al jazeera says it's sweat and for your.
7:22 am
own. home. from. war small hours being very important. it is considered our main staple. it takes a lot of work to dismember a wallers. takes
7:23 am
a crew you know to find that out. takes the family to put it away. survive here it's about family. i know i have relatives there i just don't know very much about them. i
7:24 am
have no connection with my rest russian relatives at all i don't know their dialect so there's a really big there. i've heard stories a long time ago hall their worst interaction between the village just before the ice cream. i think about home my grandparents might have felt when based upon rage at them. that must have been a big grief for them too. that connection a lot of our elders have asked to die made would love to have a reunion. like . time to travel courtney's or for day meet i and minister to all the programs we have all the accounts we oversee. it's like taking care of
7:25 am
to me. the last reunion was you know in the early ninety's. so if this is going to be the first event for a long time. i think it's going to be so special. eight will be traveling to welsh today with behringer weather permitting eight of them will be staying at the school and maybe five or six miles between my house and four picks for that stop the to have that was signed. and. if rather permits. will be traveling to well weeding for the weather to come down to come today we can go depend on the weather here or whether they're going to come
7:26 am
here or whether it's always the thing for me so if it's going to be delayed it's going to be done they'd. nothing really works on schedule. time times dire need it's really hard to live and. they always. remind us when the ice starts to reseat and may you know you could fall through. i lost my daughter my youngest she went to the ice me twenty one two thousand i. sure six years old. just five minutes before she was with me then she was down there and gone. just in five minutes i have lost her.
7:27 am
took me a while to heal from that and when i was going to that process lot of have to do with subsistence be it with food or your sewing skins sure you're making a park or something. you're doing something to keep yourself busy subsistence is so time consuming that it heals you to. hi edward. there's coffee decaf. if you think. yeah for tomorrow i'm going to put in a french. are you know you go with the phone on your i was kind of around it the boat is just there for favored member or favor. my best memories of how our parents raised
7:28 am
a lot of it was subsistence my dad loves hunting and fishing. because he's a lot older is a little harder for him now. in the my parents moved because of medical reasons. there are no the because. i know in their bigger part of them who really wants to be and i mean. they were here six weeks ago and they were so happy. in the. morning.
7:29 am
and i want to be taking care of my parents but i asked my mom her tour de force which she really needs to be here. knowing that they prefer a native foods i'm sending in the stuff they enjoy from guy meat because i worry about their. these are mixture of food in oil this one is baby walrus. this one is breast milk of the walrus. this is. contestants really rinse clean half tried to. pee pee all are. a walrus skin plus
7:30 am
a little bit of the blubber. it's really hard to dig in the barrel your hands free and then the oil is for a reason then you're digging it's hard it's got to be really tough for that. nice. he joked are you keeping those eggs. i should bring a few older as i'm going to make them or egg mike salad. some kind of cap and fever gets you because dime me just so i still eat it those moments i was call my alcatraz time you know. eighty percent it is alcatraz but twenty percent it's paradise.
7:31 am
sometimes i go down this one. pick cabbage and i'm just like come up this way. and then i go down another rich spicy man down. the greens are you there is everything you want here this area is one of my favorite picking area who i found a cabbage. but my mom when she was here she showed me all the picking crap all her favorite spots . you see how i remove it without taking the word. so it can grow another or next year or two. it's time consuming but it's failing. and it also involves the kids help you to
7:32 am
prepare. it kind of keeps the family through shit together. but. you think bubble bubble get it near. and give me a fire. and. kill. me. and i can let you but in a million but leave it you were sick if a good guy. he better remember me but i have poor in your blood sixty seven you're still going birding. great but look.
7:33 am
i got a rather tense coming over. my way of million but doubted that they'll make it out tomorrow. but we don't know who to russians. they're russians are your relatives descendants of our family i say ok two of maybe two i think two and three are side of and. maybe are great.

39 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on