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tv   NEWS LIVE - 30  Al Jazeera  June 29, 2018 8:00am-8:34am +03

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they want now add a black person that remind. you of it that if you're black you can't eat your. heart and soul just written about. even worse thought well in effect oh i don't people people of color are religious minorities oh many different groups it would have been faster. and so we have been hearing and i talked to one of the member who's from a rural colorado a very different. and i know well i don't think your own people you never showed me what this bill would allow you to allow people to hate allow people to discriminate and i don't think that's who you are i don't think that's who i am out of colorado in and i ask you to come with me maybe even to name our house where you know dinner and let's have a conversation. and i got it how you want it and he is changing in about how to be
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right now as we speak and i think that's so important when we're there we're not only able to work on our own l.g.b. we're actually in the world of earthly connect with members who may bring out people well and tell them who we really are and how this really impacts i think that if you. want to show you this picture here this is of a governor candidate for maryland not far away from the stream studios and this is him and his family campaigning he made news for being the first politician to kiss his husband on a political ad i'm wondering if you will seeing globally a change in attitudes to lead l.t.p. teens q activists who are out say who are leading the way leading their communities and the way the public reacts to them. yes indeed and. a lot of very very and i don't. think i mean we're going to bend but i did next
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then i got a picture. that. it's not you know you. would a picture. on the front page. very laughs. but. yeah there was very shocking for me that they could do that and it was going to break that i think that there are challenges but more on the representation. many people get to the board needs to be very upset make you. we have to recognize. well i haint maybe not but you break your go right to see unless one tomorrow thank you for being part of african house a conversation going down online leka i think it's an interesting challenge for some communities and for others they feeling there are more advances a conversation that she has always online and you can look at twitter feeds and
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continue the conversation that finale can i thanks for watching. demain the intersection of reality and comedy and post revolution to news yeah. mission to entertain educate and provoke debate through satire how weapon of choice. and intimate look at what inspires one of his most popular comedians to make people laugh. my tune is yeah hang on al-jazeera. i'm. a value. some other like. a new series of rewind a can bring your people back to life i'm sorry and brand new updates on the best of
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al-jazeera documentaries the struggle continues book from the till now is distance rewind continues with alfred's free press. i am the money they didn't talk we know from the public of what's happening in the rest of sites they have been some changes over over the years you know rewind 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 you al-jazeera. as it simply takes a tougher line of migrants organized crime is making vast profits from their misery . people in power investigates the state funded perception centers where the
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helpless are reduced to commodities ripe for exploitation. currents. the european union reaches a deal on the migration crisis aftermath talks through the night in brussels. some as a band this is al jazeera live from dollhouse so coming up the search for answers after a gunman opens fire fire killing. people at a newspaper office in the u.s. . newly uncovered e-mails show down trump's aides were willing to exchange inside
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information with the u.s. ambassador joining the presidential campaign. and why cigarette logos must go to world trade organization banks australia's plain packaging of tobacco products. e.u. leaders have reached a deal and that controlling the influx of migrants and refugees into europe they made the breakthrough after negotiating through the night to the e.u. summit in brussels under the deal the bloc will increase funding and italy and greece have the option of setting up large holding centers to process migrants italian prime minister says his government will decide later whether it's prepared to do that. let's take a closer look at the deal then as well as those processing centers in italy and greece the has also agreed to consider setting up centers in countries outside the
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e.u. within the block e.u. leaders plan to crackdown on secondary movement and step up the return of on documented migrants a number of refugees will be shared out among members on a voluntary basis and they've agreed to share responsibility for migrants who arrive after being rescued at sea another round of e.u. funding will go to turkey to cope with more than the three million syrian refugees living there and north african states who also get funding boost to help stop the migration to europe it will just continue just a word to say that after nine hours of talks and work a deal has been reached and it's good news for france it's the proof of combined work and its european cooperation that one as opposed to a non deal or a national decision that would have been neither efficient nor last in. this country positive conclusions and most of the around what the united kingdom has been encouraging for some time which is taking more action upstream in countries of
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origin so that we can ensure that people aren't having to make now making these very dangerous journey is often traveling many miles often at the hands of the people smugglers and making the dangerous trips across the mediterranean where we still see some people dying lawrence there has been covering the summit in brussels he has more details on the deal. both of these countries now will be able to host voluntarily holding census it's a bit difficult to imagine exactly what these places would look like but the idea i suppose is they would they would be very very large centers where everybody who arrives is putting them in process and then has decided that those places who might have any chance of getting any sort of asylum system playing. one who doesn't and presumably the ones who dozens are then they need to be sent back and what happens the rest of his is is a bit unclear but the main points of this is to try to stop what's been happening
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at the moment which is when people arrive a major relief those countries into sars a canon child a lot on foot all but by whatever other means with you suggesting some western europe at least in those places where the pressure was coming because austria and they part of the german coalition the sides we won't accept this anymore and that the person is going to benefit clearly the most in the short sentence of this if it's if it's as good as what they say it is now is the german chancellor angela merkel because this is obviously threatens her inside premiership in germany you mentioned the use the word voluntary is there an obligation in fact upon the members to share the responsibility of dealing with the migrants and refugees well no it doesn't it doesn't look like it and you know from the dull problem that they have with this that the dooms so-called closest system countries are supposed to share refusing migrants ause was one of the reasons why they started to fall the
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thoughts in the first place because so many countries said. to look after anybody it's all and so it was it looks like this is probably going to have to run well i haven't really been specified yet hand in hand with some source of reform of the. the so called dublin regulation where refugees as opposed to seek asylum is the first country that the go to greece a signal that it might be prepared to take back people from germany under dublin in order to shorten the merkel it's really a contrast that said it's not prepared to do a little because it believes it is shouldering too much responsibility in things the refugees should be shared out more. as one of the countries that refused to let in a rescue ship carrying more than two hundred migrants the lifeline eventually docked in malta off to being stranded at sea for six days on now is the subject of an
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investigation police have questioning whether it was assisting smugglers john psaropoulos reports from valid. the lifelines volunteer crew spent the day washing down the boat taking out rubbish accumulated during its six days at sea mission lifeline which owns the vessel has a more complicated cleanup of its reputation it's interactive accused of colluding to smuggle people to europe after it refused to hand over two hundred thirty three rescued refugees to libyan authorities we picked up them on the twenty first of two in. about eighteen and twenty two miles. from the libyan coast so in international waters. you can coast guard boat approached us and told us to hand out the migrants to them they wanted to bring back the migrants to libya where they put to jail so we said well there's no way
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for us to hand outs of migrants. refused to the lifeline a safe port in italy preferring to send refugees to camps in libya what to do is illegal so we think that italian is breaking international law because libya is not safe and the people are crowded in in such prisons and. face monitress and and tortured and raped so we are sure that this is not a solution and should stop very very soon the plight of the lifeline embodies the broader european debate about whether to rescue refugees at sea and bring them to save points in the european union or ship them to camps in so-called safe countries stablished humanitarian practice is that of bringing them to europe but there is disagreement on putting sharing and
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a growing chorus of hardliners supports outsourcing humanitarianism to others. the lifelines refugees are now at this processing center in walesa lucky to have their asylum interviews in europe from their balconies they can see the freedom little weights them unemployment television and dominoes in this ship breaker's yard is safe but not a life and some european attitudes are hardening against freelance search and rescuers who would help bring others here mulder's prime minister a liberal compared to some e.u. leaders holds this against them the captain of the said that so who went against international rules and ignored directions being given by the italian authorities who were coordinating the rescue it appears that european search and rescue has become a political not a humanitarian act. al-jazeera valetta. the military offensive in southwestern syria may have ended at least for twelve hours russian led talks in jordan have resulted in
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a temporary truce with the free syrian army the break in fighting and that comes after the deaths of at least seventy eight people on thursday poll challenged jan reports. a bloodbath in the southwestern syrian rebel stronghold of daraa russian and syrian government judson helicopters hit an estimated one hundred targets on thursday dozens of civilians were killed in the twenty four hour barrage of barrel bombs and rocket fire. the u.n. says tens of thousands of newly displaced people have fled to syria's borders with israeli occupied golan heights and jordan peele goes to jordan one of the most generous recipients of refugees on earth that they keep border open for people fleeing south there is no there is no other place to go but jordan says its border with syria will remain closed the kingdom
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already has six hundred fifty thousand registered syrian refugees. the u.n. says the fighting has also cut off vital cross border relief and aid supply routes it's asking the warring parties to stop fighting immediately. the u.n. the u.s. u.k. and france have condemned russia's role in the offensive for you years ago the u.s. russia and regional powers had agreed that i was one of the so-called deescalation zones of humanitarian access this done agreement designated there are three other regions as places that would be free of hostilities between rebel groups and forces fighting on behalf of bashar al assad's government the day i mean the day that this unprecedented air campaign by the russian jets adopting the scorched earth strategy is in gross violation of the deescalation agreement. but russia's ambassador to the united nations says moscow will no longer uphold the deescalation zone saying it was among the last strongholds of al qaeda syrian branch and i sold we urge the
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again the russians the americans and git to damien's were able to to to do it last july they can do it again today. they have all influence in this in this area there is nothing inevitable about. this escalation of fighting for our side taking the rebel stronghold of down especially important after all this is where the uprisings against his rule began seven years ago. on. us police say they've captured and identified the man suspected of killing five people inside a newspaper office in the city of annapolis maryland investigators say the shooting specifically targeted journalists. castro reports. police say the shooting that left five people dead on thursday was a targeted attack on
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a local newspaper the capital gazette journalists caught in the violence described the scene as a war zone with one crime reporter tweeting there is nothing more terrifying than hearing multiple people get shot while you're under your desk and then hear the gunman reload police say a lone suspect was responsible they captured him inside the newspaper office and have searched his home there was no gunfire exchanged between officers and the suspect since we were able to get here very quickly but just something for you guys to get to know. you know we have a unified training on how to respond active shooters and that's would be one of the major things that made this a huge success police say the suspect is linked to a social media account that has made threats to the newspaper staff as recently as the day of the attack they say he also deployed a smoke canister to create confusion as he forced his way into the building a sign that this attack was meticulously planned this person was prepared today to
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come in this person was prepared to shoot people his intent was to false or exactly why he targeted the local newspaper a staple of day to day life in maryland's capital city for more than two hundred years is still unknown asked to comment on the journalist slayings president donald trump who earlier this month labeled the news media the country's worst enemy he walked away but tweeted his condolences meanwhile his press secretary offered a stronger condemnation writing a violent attack on innocent journalists doing their job is an attack on every american as a precaution police deployed to guard the entrances of the new york times and other large u.s. media organizations an ominous site to mark uncertain times hi joe castro al-jazeera and apple as maryland. still ahead an al-jazeera.
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be increasingly desperate search for a football team stuck in a flooded tiger cave plus. mexico's presidential front runner is promising he rescued the country's impoverished population but it might not be that simple i'm john homan and i'll tell you more. hello and welcome back as we look at weather conditions across the levant and western parts of asia we've all but lost the showers across find there and down thirty degrees.

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