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tv   Wajiha Jendoubi Hair  Al Jazeera  June 26, 2018 1:32am-2:01am +03

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people that care about whether fish come from and linking them with the called the fishermen that care how because i thought. examining mandatory sentencing in the us if the state of florida requires the rest of my life in here as a tradeoff for my family's life the bargain i'll do it if the defendant goes to trial the judge has no option but to give the mandatory minimum they were complying with this judge gives you five years and this judge gives you twenty years so the legislature acted to make a difference exploring the dockside of american justice the system with job on
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al-jazeera. morales was just ten years old when a devastating earthquake struck mexico city in one thousand nine hundred five the quake damaged her family's apartment and the government moved them to distant shack around seventy families who lost their homes in that earthquake still live in this camp. that the the government raised our hopes and then abandoned us politicians have promised that they won't allow a repeat of what happened after the earthquake in one thousand eight hundred five but the cost and complexity of housing hundreds of people living in camps is a major task and one that many people here think the government failed. the time had come for the p.l.o. to seek a new and peaceful solution. pursuing a path of diplomacy but what was to turn their agreed look strong from lebanon into one of the most distinct civilian massacres of modern times women children we
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couldn't believe this chronicling the term human story of the struggle for palestinian. history of a revolution on al-jazeera. the president is reelected with sweeping new powers as the opposition concedes defeat. no i'm maryam namazie in london you're with al-jazeera also coming up libya rejects an italian proposal to set up migrant centers across africa to stop the tide of asylum seekers heading to europe. algeria denies allegations abandoned more than thirteen thousand migrants in the sahara desert without food or water.
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and labor unions in argentina launch a nationwide strike as the country struggles with rising inflation and a weakening currency. turkey's president. returning to office with sweeping new executive powers he says it's a win for democracy but international monitors of criticize the outcome saying the ruling party had unfair advantages in sunday's polls will now be able to issue laws by decree and make key appointments to the judiciary and the civil service has the latest from ankara. there were stark differences in the messages from red to saber two on the victor of sunday's election and his closest contender his closest rival a hundred injured a one repeatedly said that she planned on being
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a president for all of turkey he said that she would not allow for any person to be discriminated against in this new turkey under this new system regardless of their political views their gender or their ethnic origin obviously this is seen as maybe an attempt by the president to reassure those who are concerned on that this new system a lot of the power is concentrated in the presidency in one person contrast and compare that to the statements from her injuries said that this election was unfair as far his he was concerned he thought that it's like he was now going into a dangerous. new phase where all of that power was concentrated under what she called one person rule and said the president must show that he was going to be a president for all the people obviously had enjoyed himself when he would have shared the same power however he had promised that he would reverse what was a popular demand by the people to change the system from a parliamentary one to
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a presidential one as manifested in the. vote a referendum to change the system and her presidential run a few months ago now international observers said that they had some concerns over the sunday's election it wasn't over the outcome press a it was the media coverage in the build up to that they said that no one in the act party had a lot more airtime than their opponents that the coverage was slanted in their favor it's important to note here that the vast majority of turkish media is privately owned the act but you know i don't will say it's not their fault that those who own those institutions supports them however the reality is even with state owned. institutions like so you are see there was a clear imbalance in favor of the one party in terms of time that was there albeit stuck to the opposition bit have a platform to represent themselves but having said that the vast majority of the
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consensus is that sunday's election was generally a free and fair one with the highest record of turnout you're talking about more than eighty six percent taking part in the ballots on sunday well i do one's main opposition rival her and she is conceded defeat but warned that one's going power is dangerous and its myth takes a look at how things went wrong the engines campaign. it all looked so promising for turkey's center left opposition party in the days before sunday's elections such as here in is me but looks can be deceptive now my heart i mean jay on the republican people's party after work out how they can ever successfully challenge an even more powerful president. and his ak party ambushed. the new regime just takes effects from today only words is a major danger for turkey a single party or a single person becoming the state and at the same time the executive legislative
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and the judiciary is a problem of existence in itself and will continue to be a major danger for turkey. charismatic and crowd pleasing in jay won thirty percent of votes which missed his own minimum target by five percent he'd hoped to force a second round run off with her to one while injured in cheney is the only one to have increased the c.h.p. vote but he copied earlier ones one man rule approach so he lost potential votes from the ak party voters who had enough of that sort of thing he should have sold themselves as part of a team and focus more on the economy the c.h.p. and other opposition parties will need to revitalize demoralize supporters. i'm not quite sure how much worse it should get to increase opposition votes we build up our hopes on the c.h.p. each election we are disappointed in get it done more i mean jay rosen very good but the c.h.p. needs to reform it has school great with other parties and prioritize the national interests another challenge for the opposition parties is making their voice heard
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in a parliament now stripped of much of its power to hold to account a government run by a president with strength and executive powers in this election campaign the opposition mainly tried to persuade voters that have been in power too long they didn't say much about what the alternative looked like the c.h.p. will say that was because calling early elections gave them a little time well now they've up to five years to work out what their vision of turkey would be but it's with al-jazeera anchor earlier we spoke to blent ali reza the director of the turkey project at the center for strategic and international studies based in washington he said a weakening economy is now the most pressing challenge facing president i don't. his killer prove the supremacy yet again over his domestic political opponents now he faces a challenge beyond his borders namely from the international investors in the global financial system that had previously ensured that he had funds for his and
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bush's extensive economic development programs now with growing skepticism on the part of these investors it's not clear how he will be able to change his ways or his his message you know the two sure that they continue to support him and if they don't then this will inevitably affect the turkish economy and down the road not in the immediate future but down the road it may also help his opponents well so what does the election result mean for cuts in turkey the pro kurdish h.p.p. posse posse election threshold to win almost twelve percent of the six hundred seats in parliament they'll be campaigning for grace a kurdish influence but they face ultra nationalist rivals who also gain seats in the assembly. in southern turkey. the skyline of the yard across sunday night when the election results were announced.
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the pro kurdish democratic people's party or h d p celebrated winning sixty seven seats in parliament close to their highest achievement of seats three years ago all of the continual sure we only heard the results are going to be beneficial for our country all the people have made their choice we should respect it in lost or searching by circuit i'm not happy with the result because we're going to remain under one model rule i think he has to adopt an attitude which are nurses all sides should stop marginalizing people and segregating them. the article is the capital of the care dish heartland in southeastern turkey nearly twenty percent of techies eighteen million population are kids and they have long complained of political and cultural marginalization. a peace process initiated by the government of the ruling party resulted in more rights for the kids but it's been frozen for the past three
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years because of renewed fighting with the quetta stand worker's party to take his government says that he k.k. is a telescope and decision. h d p is the most prominent of care display looks can party is its leader salon did not run for president four years ago and was charged with terrorism in two thousand and sixteen he's campaigned to become president this time with one from his prison cell kurdish voters say the election results came close to what they had anticipated but their future aims are much higher they also believe the president of the one needs to do much more during his new attempt to form a response to kaddish political aspirations for the sake of a more united and prosperous turkey how to make that happen is a major question the ultra nationalist party m h p which most opposes kiddish empowerment and to the not is for all it a k party after winning eleven percent. with six hundred seats in parliament the m h p counterbalances the kaddish and peace. discourages
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a new policy over consultation with the kids which could further complicate the peace process kurdistan operations are the election results are a compounded by worries about what the future holds in the new parliament and how much fun and does iraq turkey. the libyan coast guard has picked up over nine hundred african refugees and migrants in the mediterranean they include dozens of women and children they were taken to a naval base in the capital tripoli before being transferred to a refugee camp in the town of homs one of those rescued said an italian vessel had refused to pick them up. interior minister has called for migrant centers to be set up across africa to stop asylum seekers fleeing towards year up an idea which libya has rejected but to sell the met libya's interior minister in tripoli on monday
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pledging to help the country stem the flow of migrants the immigration hardliner also criticised france's minister for european affairs for suggesting a migrant rescue ship should dock initially on the maritime law. used for choosing the foreign ministry ignores the situation of the ship sheepishly flagged him for a mortise to ignored signals by both the charley and the libyan coast guard is therefore not ruled ship as far as i'm concerned where every tens up docking the ship should be seized and the crew detained this is what should happen in any country algeria has been accused of abandoning more than thirteen thousand refugees and migrants in the sahara desert the un says they include pregnant women and children who have been left without food or water algeria denies the allegations saying they're part of a malicious campaign. the reports. disorientated and de
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hydrated these migrants have just been deported by algerian border guards and dumped in neighboring nature and the nearest village is a fifteen kilometer walk in the sahara desert and they have no food or water. the un migration agency says algeria has expelled an estimated thirteen thousand migrants in this way in the last forty months janet camara whose liberian was pregnant when she was deported last month she suffered a miscarriage while walking in the desert she buried her baby in a shallow grave in the sand and also a baby was killed when he was lying. because there's no one. starvation she went. away. another librarian jew dennis filmed his deportation from a detention center in algeria.
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you can see some of together with a group of other migrants they were loaded on to trucks and driven across the border tunisia reporting live from the desert to train accumulated in their fish and these are. can see this is going over there and is a massive massive lead to pull in blood. anything can happen to the women and children into this into destruction. some migrants are rescued by a team like this one from the un migration agency others died trying to make it across the desert. they come by the thousands i've never seen anything like it there are even babies they even expel pregnant women women who give birth one or two weeks later it's a catastrophe. the algerian government denies committing human rights abuses it's
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ratified international treaties on human rights and this was the algerian red crescent last year helping to transfer migrants to their home countries. the european union has asked north african countries to do. more to stop migrants headed north to europe the e.u. says it is aware of the mass deportations and says algeria needs to comply with international law many of these migrants say their experience proves otherwise victoria gayton be al-jazeera. still ahead for you if the o.p.'s new prime minister vows to press on with reforms despite narrative escaping a grenade attack at a rally two days ago and fears of growing tribalism in american politics as president trump divisive rhetoric to black.

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