tv The Winds of Heaven Al Jazeera June 30, 2018 8:33am-9:01am +03
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italian interior minister salvini and also virginia raji did this it would be better if they go to other camps to see the children there don't go to school and do nothing they are in bad condition they leave the camp like that this camp was in order and they destroyed it they left us in the middle of the road now that european leaders have reached a deal on migration the e.u. summit will turn its attention to briggs that the united kingdom is due to leave the european union in march next year but time is running out to agree on terms of the divorce deal which will need to be ratified by u.k. armed e.u. parliaments one major sticking point is the future of trade over the border between ireland and more niland with the e.u. saying that the disagreement is putting the entire deal at risk. we have made progress but eugen series divergence remains particularly phenomenon the notion of knock. off to bricks if we want you want to in the e.u.
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. partnership. on trade as well and in security but we have to raise these partnerships on our money use time principles. the future security partnership we have with the opinion will be very important we currently enjoy a high level of cooperation with member states of the u. and a number of areas on security that are important for our citizens this is state and i want to see a strong and deep security partnership continuing the brother of russian opposition leader alexina valley has been released from prison. served three and a half years on fraud charges many say his jelling was retribution for the political activities of his brother who got a suspended sentence at the same trial in october the european court of human rights ruled the brothers were convicted unfairly alexina valley as organized large protest against russia's president vladimir putin. just ahead here on.
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the final make up of the last sixteen if in place two huge matches get things under way on saturday france will be without defended benjamin mehndi for that clash with argentina after he was ruled out with a muscle injury then you require take on european champions portugal english fans have to wait until she's day for the game against colombia while his russian made twenty ten champions spain on sunday. fifa says decisions made by referees during the group stage of the world cup of being close to perfection referee bosses told media initial decisions on the field were ninety five percent accurate and this was raised to ninety nine point three percent through the use of the controversial v i os system but today defunct these after forty eight games we don't have a single scandal which is so relevant and very important to football in a very important competition like this so this is even i think that one of the
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important and most important unsaid. the russians have been one of the surprise teams at the wildcard despite the country's richest football history decades of underachievement had followed the team into the finals but instead of making an early exit they became the first team to reach the knockout round and the riches and reports from. the russian football fans only used to feel good about their national team oh god written off as no hopers before the tournament began the lowest ranked side of the finals qualified for the knockout rounds after two convincing if unexpected wills. a last sixteen game against spain now awaits many russians first play football on a pitch known as a corruptor when translated into english it means box and this sort of caged playing space he squeezed into small urban spaces all over the country this thing
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is for me honestly or democracy because everyone is welcome when you come in here you are equal to everyone else it's only human what you show what you do doesn't really matter which is your gender which is your nationality which is your like if you're russian if your is was based on doesn't really matter all you do you play soccer. pavel says a handful of players he's met in moscow have been given trials with professional teams but many talented players don't make it. right i don't believe the way there's no great way for them because i feel like i made a lot of them. but they're not playing professionally so i hope the system will will be a little bit better so those people will get the chance to play professionally three years ago russian football introduced new rules and increasing opportunities for young players top clubs were told they have to have at least five russian
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players in their lineup in an effort to reduce the reliance on foreign imports but instead of investing in a cademy clubs have found themselves paying inflated wages to mediocre but in demand russian players who no longer have the motivation to test themselves abroad the head of player development for russian champions lokomotiv moscow has experienced the failings of the rules at first hand but he hopes this world cup will be a turning point in convincing emerging russian players they can compete at the highest level of russian national team to play for russian players. against egypt against old are over it is the most important if you must believe your. blare for your account and what motivation. maybe after five years in national teams. decades of faltering steps russia is finally getting to watch its own star performers on football's biggest stage and the richardson al-jazeera.
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for argentinians football is a national passion all eyes have been on the men's team at the world cup as they struggled to make out of their group but at the reports from players in the women's team caught up in a battle of their own one of equality. it's training time for the women's football team twice a week they travel to. ground on the outskirts of when a site is nine of them by members of argentina's national squad. including the ten florins one so will know she accepts that the men's team is extremely important for argentina but says that women should not be forgotten that. we are fighting for change in women's football and the clubs in the national team i wish we could get to see that happen so now everyone is focused on the men's team but we would like a quality because we are treated differently to have a woman coach that will be a quality. the players tell us they have never met stars like you an enemy but they
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share the same pride wearing the same national colors on the field even the women's football has grown globally in the last decade in argentina it continues to be largely ignored in terms of investment and support most of this women are part of argentina's national team and yet they cannot make a living by playing football. and that's why some women have gone on strike in the past demanding the argentine football association gives them more prominence it's almost as if you know it well there is no equality not even the least you see the difference in the training that we do in this type as we are seeing if we don't have support to compete in the best way. but the main problem is the culture support of the women's league in argentina is mall in fact most matches attract very few fans. it is difficult for people to get used to watching women's football some are surprised to see good players society needs to change and
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accept the fact that women can play to. the argentine football association says it wants to give women a bigger role. especially after the national team came in third in the america's cup. is in charge of making it happen. the problem is not only with the. yes but also in the clubs that needs to give women's football a place they deserve and give them support in the possibilities they need to grow i believe in five years we will start seeing professional women players in argentina . but most of these players can't wait that long some are considering leaving the country to find somewhat where they can earn a living from the game. they settle. nearly two hundred members of the twenty twenty two world cup organizational team have been in russia looking to gain insight that can be used for the tournament in qatar. is in country
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between russia and qatar is it's quite big all of participants are learning on some processes and similarities one delivering a major event like the world cup and have been really benefiting from this adventure and being in involved in various functional areas whether it's venue operations or staging management or airport operations or atomization they have been really able to leverage on such a unique opportunity away from the world cup and there are multiple reports that le bron james has declined an option to extend his contract with the cleveland cavaliers and will now be a free agent if p.n. and the associated press both say the team has been informed of the decision the four time m.v.p. could choose to remain in cleveland where they would be able to pay him more than any other team but he's been strongly linked with a move to the l.a. lakers. the draw has been made for wimbledon and defending champion roger federer will play serbian does the lay of it first up the draw how did the all england club
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was kind to the big fees with rafa nadal novak djokovic and andy murray also getting comfortable opening round matches in the women's draw seven time wimbledon champion serina williams will face the netherlands in the first round williams missed last year's event due to pregnancy and is controversially feeded despite being runt outside the world's top thirty two wild number one thrown play could mean out of japan in her opening match the tournament gets underway on monday two thousand a champion agni ascot advance guy has been knocked out of the east born international tournament losing to unseated lanka the belorussian winning six three one thick thinks three to reach her third career final. show face top seed. caroline both an iraqi who came from a set and a match point down to beat former wild number one anthony kappa. and that is all
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this ball for now more later that how many thanks indeed catch up with us forces at any time of day the rest of the news to our website set out to us here at the kong that's it from the news i'll be back to update you in just a few moments. every year in pakistan hundreds of women are victims of so-called honor killings one on one east searches for the truth in a case that exposes the growing clash between old beliefs and modern life on al-jazeera. july on al-jazeera in
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a new series of head to head maddie hasson tackles the big issues with hard hitting questions mexico is getting ready for a general election what direction will the 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. we will maintain the finest fighting force the world is ever no united states army was so reliant on the private sector i would call the dependency we have a mismatch between the way we are madge and work to be and the reality of the twenty first century you know today here. for even less and i want to show you how
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many of the persons that you're sending out you should be child soldiers not. child soldiers reloaded on al-jazeera. and. many fatalities feared as a boat carrying about one hundred refugees capsizes in the mediterranean. meanwhile the e.u. finally agrees on a new policy to deal with migrants after its of the threatened to scupper the deal . hello i'm adrian finnegan this is al jazeera live from doha also coming up south sudan's hopes for
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a lasting peace as another ceasefire comes into effect we look at the fragility of the new agreement. and still searching the underground caves rescuers in thailand try to make contact with a football team that's been missing now for a week. more than one hundred refugees and migrants of missing feared drowned after their boat capsized off the west coast of libya the bodies of three young children have been recovered at least sixteen people survived a spanish rescue vessel says that it was told by a tally of officials to let the libyan coast guard respond to a distress call. on the boat witnesses described the vessel as old and overloaded. there were one hundred twenty people on board on their way the front part broke a wooden piece pierced it and then the boat started sinking and the water started
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to rise everyone died women children elderly people mean all of them died. at first i was surprised with this boat because i was told it was eight metres and could hold twenty people when i tried to leave they beat me. i was forced to get on board families with children were in miserable conditions it was full of about one hundred twenty to one hundred fifty people it was very crowded the conductor could not even see in front of him and the tragedy at sea happened as leaders finally agreed on how to deal with those refugees that managed to reach land they'll be a series of migrant processing centers within and outside the block but only if their wanted in each country lawrence lee reports. when the future of the european union may be at stake it's worth staying up all night to save its so that's what they did. emerging we're really at five in the morning the french president suggested they had bridged the gap many thought impossible. europe is not an
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island and we must be able to face up to this challenge was remaining loyal to our values and protect our people and national cohesion tonight we took an important step many predicted the impossibility of an agreement many predicted the triumph of national solutions tonight we have succeeded in finding the european solution and a way of working in cooperation. micron will take the credit for winning the rebellious it's how he and governments around the breakthrough policy is to set up sensors at which migrants and refugees will be screened and either sent home or resettled among countries prepared to have them even if it isn't clear how the italians who would also demanded reform of wider asylum rules then signals that consensus. at the end of this european council we have a more responsible and more united europe italy is no longer alone and keeping the hardliners happy extended to germany as well where chancellor merkel's political
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future has been in the balance the indications seem to be that the right wingers in her coalition seem satisfied that germany will be better protected from mass refugee flows by merkel herself acknowledged the vast rift in europe about humanitarian values this is a group of we have agreed on five guidelines but two are still lacking a common european asylum system but i'm optimistic after today that we can really continue to work even though there is still a lot to be done to bridge the different views other moves like strengthening support for the libyan coast guard will be condemned by humanitarian organizations as europe turning its back on its legal obligations if this were a success it was only in that it staved off the apparent imminent collapse of the european union under the weight of migration but in doing so it gave more weight to the populist right wing in europe a further retreat from the liberal values the european union is so fond of proclaiming. and as ever the final communique was long gone wishes and very short
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on promises about how to accomplish them this may have averted a crisis for now but europe remains a political unit deeply unhappy lawrence li al-jazeera brussels. and the deal helps germany's chancellor on the political home front aguilar merkel's coalition partner threatened to withdraw if she didn't secure an e.u. wide agreement on tackling the crisis stomach cain reports from berlin. on the face of a tangle of merkel has returned from brussels that pretty much what her allies in the c.s.u. the bavarian crystal social union party wanted her to come back with an e.u. solution but also with progress on bilateral deals with other member states specifically with the greeks and the spanish both those governments agreeing to take back people migrants who present themselves in germany seeking asylum but have already done so in spain and greece so that is that is what the c.s.c. was was looking for the idea of controls on borders and people not being able to migrate from one country to another and claim asylum in several places but the
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question will be whether this deal this sequence of deals as it were multilateral deals as well is enough on sunday there will be meetings both of the c.d.u. and separately c.s.u. leadership boards where they will be appraised of what has happened in this summit remember the deadline that was set by the c.s.u. for i'm going to merkel was that if there was no substantial progress to their liking then on this coming monday they would seek to implement returns of migrants on borders going unilaterally now has anger merkel done enough to stave off that threat in the c d u there have been several people some of prominent people saying this is is a success for engler merkel but so far at least a ringing endorsement from the c.s.u. so what happens over this weekend will be instrumental in seeing whether angela merkel's coalition can survive italy's new populist prime minister picante hailed the deal his government is sticking to its tough stance on migrant ships it's part of a rescue vessel from docking at one of its ports the third refusal this month the policy
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is being driven by a far right interior minister matteo salvini as charlie angela reports from sicily . we're here in kenya and this is the last ship that brought in rescued migrants two weeks ago since then interior minister mackay without any has closed italy's ports and at the summit there was no discussion as to what will happen the next time a european boat carrying rescued like men. it's left stranded in the mediterranean instead italy's prime minister just emerged from the summit saying italy is no longer alone threatening to use his veto if there was not an agreement that he did and because of that italians believe they got some concessions but nothing will change if we don't play hardball on gray's our voices we never get anything so long . under the new e.u. agreement italy could host voluntarily new migrant centers that would process all arrivals and determine which are genuine refugees and which are illegal migrants.
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us. this country already has refugee camps the difference is that these arrivals would no longer be subject to the dublin regulations italy would not be responsible for them soley they could be divided up between other member states but again as no one held that would happen and for italians sharing the burden is a key issue. italy's been left alone it's true but of course i don't agree on the methods used by our interior minister i do think europe has to be reformed especially because there is no agreement on this issue the agreement also promises to explore the idea of setting up disembarkation platforms in north africa to try and process migrants before they even attempt to the mediterranean crossing but not all italians are convinced that if trying to fix the problem in africa on the spot and trying to help them here it is really difficult war should always be welcomed
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and not pushed away but pushing away is exactly what italy has done in closing its ports and the new e.u. declaration that asylum seekers landing in italy are actually arriving in europe seems almost redundant. the united nations refugee agency says the number of displaced people in southern syria has tripled to one hundred sixty thousand in the past five days it follows intense fighting in data in a ten day offensive by government and russian forces at least eighty people were killed in airstrikes on thursday omaha is on the syrian side of the border with jordan now no. more here at the border crossing that many syrian refugees have used in the past to cross from syria into jordan today thousands of civilians mainly women and children again others along this border hoping to be able to cross into jordan ever calls his highness the king of jordan to give them permission to
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cross over. these families have nothing left for them but to ask to cross that border to escape death they've been displaced from areas that have been hit by thousands of airstrikes in the past few days and they're now looking to cross to safety we've witnessed the tragic events the civilians have been through and they're only demand now is to go in the direction of jordan a cease fire deal to end south sudan's for a half year civil war has come into force president salva kiir and rebel leader reg masha signed the agreement in sudan's capital in khartoum on wednesday it calls for the opening of corridors for humanitarian aid the release of political prisoners and the forming of a transitional government within four months at least fifty thousand people have been killed and around four million displaced since hostilities began in twenty thirteen al-jazeera is what morgan has covered the conflict in south sudan extensively she explained the fragility of the current ceasefire agreement. this is
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not the first cease fire agreement to be signed since the conflict started in twenty thirty and this is. this is a my think we meant to be signed and it's not clear yet whether it is going to hold a lot of agreements have been violated nearly every single agreement they've been signed between the two parties and several other factions have been violated sometimes in less than twenty four hours after they were signed so it's not clear yet whether this would. i would actually hold because what both sides said is that they do not want their forces to attack and less attacks and is their attack so basically in defense and that's what they've been saying all along you will find a cease fire that is fine and then they will come out and say we have been attacked and we fought back in self-defense and the cease fire so it's not clear if this one is going to hold but people do have cautious optimism that this one would be this could be a little bit different because it has been brokered by sudan not by the regional bloc i gad and that it was signed by the two leaders it was signed by the president himself and the leader of the opposition and the representative of the south
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sudan's opposition alliance so so just because their top figures who have signed the cease fire they're hoping that it might be a bit stronger than the previous. thousands of people have been protesting against capital against the fight for control of the port city of. demonstrators chanted slogans against the offensive which is led by the saudi embassy coalition there's been increased fighting in her day to this month as government forces try to retake it from who the rebels the protesters urge the international community to do more to stop the conflict. garza's health minister says that two people including a thirteen year old boy have been killed by israeli gunfire the boy was reportedly shot in the head during the latest protest on the border with israel more than three hundred palestinians were injured there's been weekly protester the border since march against israeli land confiscation.
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