tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera June 27, 2018 5:00am-6:01am +03
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know what. you know. then mark one of the big. good it's my bad luck where i bought parish now it's a i mean when i'm. going is it up or were lawyers that are. now here i had bad guy on but i'm there but the board in their own end of the promised me in ways that are all or nothing doing here. about i have a quarrel but let no bad you know that i had a bad moment in my now and i'm like badly by the enemies of our marriage
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because we're the only here i'll share a bit of. from above the course even if you're good little bart or good law. or law is ahead lish the then it'll fall to good luck or not but how to better than up that or not can't been miller's your head then made that is yet another so how dare you sit for how to build a high you hammer in the head mother said the onus of yannick at certain bill mahoney of and imagine for the law on the other that i should think that. hello pussy.
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but. i'm also like you know a lot of the month sort of. brings me to the nursing home i shipped on the stars to tell me about escape from palestine when he was a boy and the beginning of his life in the diaspora. here for a brief closing time the people of that they asked for show me that when they are together they can live a life taken from them so by and. i think. i should done shows the rest of the story in the house i'm at the one month sort of. the head guy that. would be here.
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that is not a boy. and when i do it was him that if you knew it was your own death would. your wife just come to set that up big. or got it dead. on and. just that one but. i want to. be able to pay for. that though for don't you know if they. leave now that would make me just go. is that i'll bore you with zain not a very precious believe no. not so not do not know it like that but this was a big deal oh but what. we. don't know out of a hat. but that he if i'm not being i. thought that you know i'm a chef now all that but i know. in horror i listen to the
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stories of the catastrophe told to me by people who have children then. and have lived with their tragedy for seventy is. the effect of kind of a single. shred of stuff just think if you're what i. was missing it that somehow you know you're going to sell you on. the job done and his friends tell me the sign is coming from europe committed this massacre these indiscriminate killings of innocent people not to native jewish people who had lived side by side with the muslims and christians for over two thousand news it was designed is to store the palestinian homeland and made the people of the nakba homes and nobody in this building this is safe and that witness is still at it and you see it through to him as he lived. it and then what they've been through less has been
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off of the moon the have that man will have let me down and that it will not be. the last of this shit in any event that is going to stand there and it will mine it really has helped me lay in the head that in this instance let me tell my. people thing enough you know and we know on this day here where we go as a fellow student over one of the things i've been did you think i did not and that i'm at the. beginning the amount of money i need to know much like the one i'm in now when i'm not having. the house that i did not have a man of many a set up i live in the compass of those many in a sort of valley and i could look at about the sort of a sort of i live in the neck of national league. but. there. was a kind of a number there was a kind of a hole. yet despite their pain there is
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a hope here the house growing and believeth and strength every year up to seventy years dispy pull of how that has. you know i'm not sure that. there has there not a philosophy in what you know about almost all do and now. i'm putting this new year's eve campaign finance how do you know just how you know me and your job is along. with that number of this week. to kill return symbolic and i realize that a sense of purpose and belief we don't always have looked at them but you have no clue that one hundred of them even if they did and it is. inevitable i think you can look at the peak message yet not.
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leave the center humbled by the suffering these people have endured and continue to endure but also inspired by their greater resilience. and i. know. that. lebanon. is a torn. one though. the beeline for teen prepared food every day they sit and eat as a family and this is when most conversations happen this is their safe place. but the doing afraid that i put it in and leave it there ok. well i don't have many and i have read. through interviews with
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a lot of the event. hope to have it up in a document that you like and this are the best well almost color but have never. sat at the table a long time but here we know that is out there and when the scene with. the highs i used to be fairly sharia law and how you need. would how you and i administer it dukan seeing. it would be in my pin in the house you hear on what we. as you we started our good luck i'm up here to say that me because
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i love you. more of our. so being my second night sleeping here one moment is like a very happy intense emotional moment. then suddenly can be just very depressing realizing where your. old people center felt like a very unique experience. to be would. that are maybe twenty thirty. old palestinians. probably real or most of them who are in palestine for ninety four to right. you get used to it but you
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don't. it's not a normal a normal life to show. ahmed was the one who challenge me to come here i want to know about him i want to see him in his world. and on the strength of a job done comes from his childhood and then expulsion from palestine he knows what he's waiting for why he endures what he does. but i wonder about the generation
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born in the camp. of the shows men are there is many skills one insists on making me a coffee at his local cafe. he has started to be a nurse but is not allowed to practice because he is a palestinian refugee. his friends each of them with holds and dreams and possibilities i also thought it'd every step because there are police tina refugees. there are no i. am and sings now that weddings inside that camp there is only way to provide for his young family. the mill until i can become their cattle although.
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i have it on your. body or. die only. to justify those that that you went into. just. middles fortunate stud many of his friends did not have this chance. that was. i. but i. get that. you know all the talk i deal with shellac. so that. it i wonder what the future holds for these young men how will they screen time and. the dream of another life outside the county. i. this reminds me of our easy it was for myself for my good friend
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jack to get a job. some things become possible for some purely because of where they were born jack job working with disadvantage choosing not to we were laughing at the time when he told us what. was a moment thank god you know it's there but you know it i think i'll get a letter like that way before i know why that she was on the boat it was like oh that was just like just like hot spot i was like when he left the city i was childish everyone else that was if i. was on the teacher i was you would be at united i know you. were that was oh i look at you know what i was. was.
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i am happy for jack but right now remembering a privilege hurts. i . was prevented from realizing his dream of not a single but it does not stop him from volunteering his time with the young people of this town. is making a real difference in the life of these kids even while holding on to such a disappointment in the song. was what.
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a new series of head to head maddie hasson talk of the big issues with hard hitting questions mexico is getting ready for a general election of direction with a country take as it struggles with drug violence and economic instability. people in power continues to examine the use and abuse of power around the world as the world cup in russia nears its end we'll bring you stories from on and off the pitch of the world's most viewed sporting events on television and online the stream continues to tap into the extraordinary potential of social media to disseminate news july on al-jazeera. 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 agreement to draw from lebanon into one of the most realistic civilian massacres of water times women children children children we couldn't believe our eyes chronicling the term story of the struggle
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from our system in a. history of a revolution on al-jazeera. to . such can't. just. i'm joe home in london with the top stories on al-jazeera u.s. president donald trump has hailed a supreme court ruling upholding his travel ban on people from five muslim majority countries there were protests outside the court as it voted five to four to accept the trump's executive order was legal the ban prohibits most people from iran libya
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somalia syria and yemen from entering the united states. is a great critically for our country. we have to be tough and we have to be safe and we have to be secure at a minimum we have to make sure that we vet people coming into the country we know who's coming in we know where they're coming from. you just have to know who's coming here seventeen u.s. states are suing the trumpet ministration over the separation of migrant children from their parents at the mexican border the states which include washington new york and california want to force officials to reunite families who were split up after being detained for illegal immigration u.s. authorities have separated two thousand three hundred children from their parents in recent weeks earlier this month trump bowed to public outrage and signed an executive order that would end the separations but the seventeen states say
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families are still not being reunited and are being denied due process the united nations says it's confirmed over eight hundred cases of children being used in the fighting in yemen some as young as eleven years old a new report accuses both who the rebels and saudi and emira backed forces of recruiting child soldiers it says as many as seventy six child soldiers were used on the front lines most guarded checkpoints and government buildings and brought equipment to military positions. a government offensive to retake one of syria's lost opposition strongholds has forced forty five thousand people to flee triggering warnings of another humanitarian crisis government forces backed by russian warplanes have launched airstrikes and ground battles to recapture draw from rebel fighters most of the displaced syrians are heading to jordan but the jordanian government says its borders will remain closed those are the
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will pick up. this is education for the children of the come this is what school means. i feel like we're standing in a war zone. as we wait for the bus that no one seems to know how long it will be before it becomes how. there is no shelter a bus stop or seat for the children to sit on if their legs are tired. there is no electronic board to let us know when the next bus will arrive. and the only thing
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for sure is that there will be more than six minutes between buses. but. i wonder if i would have had the determination when i was eight years old. was. was. was. was. the lack of schools and means of transport is not the only threat to the young. the hanging tables is a constant danger and according to a fifty in bushes but i was in a camp have been electrocuted so far thirty seven of these lost their lives. only.
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oh. oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh. oh oh she was. with. her oh yeah i wanted to know if this is the only. clinic in the county yes isn't there only one this and this serving twenty thousand people. there are thousands photos for this to. sir or said yes or no yes i yes something official poverty yes. the influx of syrian refugees has doubled the number of people the clinic must now provide for the people with the least have been the only ones opening the doors to the needy. the good news is that
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nothing but hon but those jewels the seventy s. . joints are coming little early out of the left now the ones that knowledge can be of gas have any you know they are not undergone and avoid one day in my home not for. fear of what. name it means two years i wonder how sure may so strong who siblings killed in a civil war and her mother killed by
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a car at the entrance to the camp after finishing her work as a cleaner. a lawyer from them. called my work not so long how that. down in america must soon enough them will supply him down another celestial someone how long the twenty four . it's hard for the parents to see their children growing up here knowing as they do that they would have to face a life without any rights a citizen. up
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until now have seen on the surface how not to stuff for them but for the first time there is a tension in the house to review some something much deeper. what . was the first. miss mar now and how you know yes. oh you know having almost all of his roof and the home of the cologne fossils i modify lawgiver says in sale i love the whole way to me it's an awful less than half an honest i had now. nothing on foot my son. has a mallet infestation is among them that message and also i will say on the log michel you some of them are. one c.n. look at all of us that will. love you many
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good question here now. how your notion seeing can a good many well like girl out there like many. of it at the loss of only oh he. understood here i never thought unaffected murdoch and fucked up a whole lot about all of us fall off my ob well doc knew i thought i was special little duck hold the battle of the lot of that the lot of them especially the. no one the less about the love the look. i don't know what the what about moustache lairs oh look learn it going to pull out the one bottle off then it let it float then the moron mustache will honk you have money. like my thought of a foot moustache from a lack was thought of more like a headline lot of headlines how about other moustache form of auto on the stash
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well now the mama thought it. less than a year for us there and another bit of no i love the death out but i have not seen this hurt the nominee for now i know to what depths of despair existence in this camp can bring a man. the camp is no longer a story for me pictures i can see in a book or refracted to me from the t.v. screen from which i'm removed and can remove myself a tiny moment the cam is in me. i wander through the camp and the
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images imprinted in me forever beneath the deadly electrical wires cutting across the sky lines and in closing the trail of streets. that are. posing much the camp is real and the kindness and generosity welcoming. a child. now. as i was wondering one day i remember my being caught by a house in one dusty street the come into is quite beautiful on the outside it was called in sun human. rooms filled with artistic projects in a way strange at all odds with the stark and harsh reality of the camp i wondered if this were some museum some funded art center for the privileged i learned from naama the chairman of insight on that this was actually a drug rehabilitation center. and all funding came to the center and it was built
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upon the ruins of a prison a remarkably small number of drug offenders live in the community number tells me but for them this center has proved to be the way back to the community. for the young palestinians living in the cam there is more they can do to resist a life despair. in the midst of the crowded streets the kids keep playing football and hubba ensuring their survival.
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what strikes me most is how out of the darkness everyone i meet here is trying to find. was. was. was. music nurtured by volunteer musicians is bringing beauty back to an ugly existence . with. the end. it was. for a brief moment here these people celebrating together and not refugees at all own way. god but are equal citizens of the world i
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feel so lucky to be witness to this. heard. there was. this is. from our people from our. voting rolls for your visit or was it thirty. to big for us but it doesn't ish to come down. thank you very much thank you but. my journey has been a journey of self discovery as i walk home without merit i realize our happy i am to be coming to the door there only six days ago i approached that prevention and uncertainty. i love drinking tea with the family and helping to be alone
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thirteen with the food i love the sound of the children and seen them smile and laugh. i want to be their advocate i want to make a difference they can want everyone to feel what i felt and to see what i've seen. one thing that they kept telling me is that we're just we're just human like everyone else and they just want to live a normal life and. they kept emphasizing that you know to day they will return one day and that will happen and so although they feel that. there is a huge injustice being committed against them but they're still not giving up on an on on seeking this is their goal which is to to go back to palestine and to to live
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it such a depressing situation in just one world now how nastily can it and rattle it it's like a great board of string it's got into such a mess the rest of us. human misery is just a. bunch we're more annoyed with so much that they should be ignored. by international. governments and international opinion and you know it's very very hard to get an airing for this subject and that's why one of the things i wanted to ask from this meeting is. if this in this parliament would be so important if we could have perhaps a debate on the issue of palestinian refugees if we could have. issues being more at the forefront it will be very important to you to the people living in and the refugee camps in lebanon and elsewhere and especially. as a british citizen t.v.
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they reminded me that britain has. a special responsibility it's. the two parliamentarians jenny tongue and thomas shepherd were keen to listen to how should the story and stories from the can but i realised how complicated the palestinian issue is. when ever you meet palestinians in the caps or anywhere else you always get positive messages from men they're always you know arranging things doing things having festivals carry on their lives i think that children the children that education education education that's most wonderful thing that's very positive very positive. we're not going to let that culture die.
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industry where a family is like back to hard to build a shop to print kick ass in palestine who are driven from their homes in prosperous farms seventy years ago and have been living in camps in temperate accommodation in lebanon since then and is he aware that the lebanese government didn't continues to restrict palestinians right to what prohibits them from ending property and refuses access to health care and education leaving them dependent on an roic who have diminishing funds can he really be content to let this continue for another seventy years or will the palestinians be allowed the right of return to their
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homeland as prescribed in international law. how i we should say things such as warming up a touch becoming less culturally sacrosanct a possible strike over the next couple days that's because of a little more cloud just showing up on the satellite picture hey that will help to hold those overnight temperatures up by day we getting up to around sixteen celsius in sydney thirteen degrees there in melbourne who are struggling to get it double figures so that's something of an improvement thirteen degrees that in adelaide as
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well as also some rain that is sliding out to victorians who are new south wales and up towards queensland just isn't right so into the southwest just pushing across southern parts of. the forty back to around sixteen a brighter day as we go on into thursday or twelve degrees there for adelaide and noticed the same for melbourne ship a little dry down towards the southeast and cold of a shower was still in the full cost as shallow as the heading towards new zealand but for the time being a looks fine and strife a little on the cold side just twelve celsius there in crotched as cloud never too far away go on into with tasco was still fourteen degrees in the sunshine therefore all claim as i said it will cloud over but a cloud meanwhile for japan over the next ass clown and right here it comes on way to stay and it's the thing soaking wet for thursday.
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we will maintain the finest fighting force the world has ever known united states army was so reliant on the private sector i would call that dependency we have a mismatch between the way we on the magine work to be and the reality of the twenty first century enough to embody deal for evil and how to fight how many of the persons that you're sending out you should be child soldiers not. child soldiers reloaded on al-jazeera. this is al jazeera. hello there i'm joe to help good to have you with us on this news hour live from london coming up in the next sixty minutes. outside the
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u.s. supreme court as it up holds donald trump's travel ban he's called the decision a vindication of his controversial policy. a mass exodus from dera in syria the u.n. says forty five thousand people have fled a government offensive. a grim report on the youngest victims of the war in yemen children are not only being killed there they're also being recruited to fight. and . all the latest from the world cup and it was all right on the night for. argentina survive a real scare to beat nigeria two on and off the law thanks to. the u.s. supreme court has upheld president trump's travel ban on people from five muslim majority countries the judges narrowly voted to accept the trump was acting legally
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when he signed the executive order barring people from iran yemen somalia libya and syria from entering the united states trump said the ruling was a vindication following what he called a hysterical commentary from the media this is a great big tree for our constitution we have to be tough and we have to be safe and we have to be secure at a minimum we have to make sure that we vet people coming into the country we know who's coming in we know where they're coming from. we just have to know who's coming here was the advocacy groups described it as a warring development. with this. we are concerned that donald trump will move beyond the five muslim majority countries that are in the current version to not only target more countries but even go after us
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and lawful permanent residence. we call on all americans to join with us in standing up to this. policy so what was the successful case put forward for the travel ban shihab rattansi as more from outside the supreme court in washington d.c. the trouble ministration had three main arguments firstly this wasn't the first version of the travel ban that caused such chaos at airports you know after don't trump was inaugurated nor was a travel ban number two incarnation was the result of a careful global interagency review of vetting standards in the countries on this list of potential immigrants to the u.s. and those voting standards are good enough to protect the u.s. national security the second argument this isn't a muslim travel ban there are plenty of muslim countries not on the list and thirdly any tweets from donald trump that suggest towards muslims calling for a total muslim ban to the u.s. before he became president and commander in chief now he has taken the oath of office it is his responsibility to ensure national security for the united states
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it is not up to the judiciary and the majority of justice agreed with him well for more on this let's speak to jonathan smith he's the legal director of the civil rights and legal organization muslim advocates he joins us now from washington d.c. many thanks for your time what do you take away i mean clearly you would have hoped that the decision by the supreme court would go the other way what do you take away from it. well first thank you for having me today's decision is devastating obviously for the millions of people from those five countries who are unable to come into the united states because of this policy but let's be clear this decision is equally as devastated for all of us who believe that the u.s. constitution guarantees of religious liberty and justice mean something and today the supreme court made a mockery of our constitution and also our demining those fundamental values of the
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glue shared and diversity that make our country so great is there a concern that in indorsing reinforcing the president's right and ability to create immigration policy to make immigration policy this may embolden him to go further we've heard talk of u.s. citizens in those countries and others being affected i think that's exactly right you know we have seen since literally day one of this administration how the president has guard after not just muslim communities but immigrant communities communities of color really of our local communities and i worry that today's decision will be viewed as a green light for this administration to continue to adopt those policies and to continue to target people simply because of what they look like or what they believe or where they come from and that you know it's just fundamentally that who we are as an american people of that's fundamentally that the values that the core
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of our country well let's talk about the effect of mystically is it likely do you think to inflame tensions to increase perhaps religious discrimination at home. yes you know we have seen a good sense daryl charge came on the scene a rise of religious motivated hate crimes and acts of discrimination we have seen unfortunately acts of violence and has to lead to rectitude wards mosques and other houses of worship and so there's a real concern that the people will look at today's decision see that the president has not been held accountable for his hateful and bigoted actions and words and they will take away the best it's like it's ok to engage in our conduct it's ok to target people because of where they worship what they look like and so there are real concerns that that this decision will continue to have will tend to pull a devastating impacts on people here in the united states as well as the impacts on
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people all around the world and it will have an effect presumably as well on the u.s. is sort of a global image and reputation particularly other time when the trumpet ministrations immigration policies are so much in the global spotlight and so controversial and i think that's right you know we have prided ourselves on being a country of the united states that is inclusive a country that prides our diversity a country that says we would take those who are born of all who are oppressed who are being attacked and we'll provide the vet refuge for those people and those those individuals this administration like i said before mix a mockery of all of that it's not just this muslim band we look at the zero tolerance policies currently in place along the southern border here the united states we look at the ways that this administration is tearing apart family taking the young children away from their parents all of this is consistent with the the attitudes and the fear mongering as
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a hatred of discrimination that has become far too commonplace in our country under this administration ok jonathan smith we're going to have to leave it with the civil rights and legal group muslim thank you for your time. seventeen u.s. states a suing president donald trump's administration over the separation of children from their relatives at the mexican border the states which include washington new york and california want to force officials to reunite migrant families who are split up after being detained for illegal immigration u.s. authorities have separated two thousand three hundred children from their parents in recent weeks earlier this month from bound to public outrage and signed an executive order that would end the separations but the states say families are still not being reunited in the being denied due process. a government offensive to retake one of syria's last opposition strongholds has forced forty five thousand people to flee triggering warnings of another humanitarian crisis government forces
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backed by russian warplanes have launched airstrikes and ground battles the recaptured there are from rebel fighters it's one of the last rebel held areas along with in the north well this is the situation in there right now pro-government forces of already seized a chunk of territory cutting off a rebel pocket in the north. the province is a strategic prize because it borders the israeli occupied golan heights and jewel in a way most of the civilians fleeing to but jordan says it can't take in any more refugees and says its borders will remain shut. as the battle for debt intensifies pro syrian government forces say they've taken control of the two towns above sort of how do you and me. in the eastern countryside videos like this one purport to show troops many of whom are believed to be iranian backed militia members entering was sort of how do you on tuesday the town has come under
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heavy bombardment and its capture is the first major government advance in this offensive that will allow the syrian army to advance more southwards of. the city of that i take it i think that connecting so wide with that and occupying the valleys of the which we have full of. groups. forget that the group that will allow. me to advance first that first out of the city of that. by cutting off a key rebel supply line in a province more pro-government troops will be able to move in retaking the entire province of that i would give the government control over its border with jordan all the way to the israeli occupied golan heights. and in the extremely complicated terrain of syria's war analysts believe deals have already been made i believe that
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. the americans that we have a good deal with the missions now they are out of this of this of this anyhow and the city of beijing will take control and that will be good for everybody what is the need for the russians for jordan because jordan also although the jordanians actually pretty concerned about any new in flood. of fiji's inside jordan but they want very much actually to open the border crossing with syria because economically this is a very important lifeline port the jordanian economy according to the united nations forty five thousand people have so far fled the violence and headed toward the border with jordan concerns are growing about the humanitarian situation no matter the regime's recent advances rebels say they will continue to fight even as many wondering if this fight may be coming to an end. to his terms lows have of conflict and humanitarian policy at save the children he says the
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fighting in there are will only intensifies syria's humanitarian crisis in the conflict in syria is like a so hollywood horror movie with very predictable formulas and this kind of ever more violent sequels and what those formulas are like are airstrikes and the movement of syrian backed forces into areas rebel control often followed by siege is often followed by a sustained prolonged denial of aid access and that's where the humanitarian catastrophe really comes in and i think it's really important at this stage of this particular offensive to really emphasize that it is the beginning of that we've seen some forty thousand plus displaced those numbers could escalate could spike a lot further and as your report alluded to this was an area of the syria which did have a sort of diplomatic guarantee made by the russians the opinions and the americans and i think it's within their power to find a far more peaceful outcome to the situation there than one that is yet another sequel to homs aleppo and instigator and yes while the borders are closed and countries in the region regional area have got every right to say they've taken
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