tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera July 3, 2018 5:00am-6:01am +03
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when you see tough questions like this what comes to my how do you respond to people how global of all could you see out using music award winning programs take you on as jan he found this. and. this is al-jazeera. i know i'm right matheson this is the news our live from doha coming up in the next sixty minutes. heard rigor rescuers in thailand finally locate a youth football team trapped in a flooded cave for ten days. scenes of joy outside the cave but officials say it could take days before the trapped boys are
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brought out safely. mexico's new president says he's proposed a plan to reduce migration a phone call with u.s. president donald trump is. really for i'm going to mark up after a key a coalition partner withdraws his threats to resign. and in the football world cup five times world champions brazil see off mexico two nil to set up a quarter final meeting with belgium. in thailand a youth football team who've been trapped in a flooded cave for ten days have been look at it rescue workers struggled for days to drain the waters in a bid to reach the twelve youngsters and their twenty five year old coach food and medical supplies have already been sent in because the mission to bring them out may take some time while in haiti has the latest from shanghai. after
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a long search that at times seemed hopeless the first signs emerged that twelve boys and the football coach were alive the british searches were the first to make contact deep inside tunnel one cave. what. confirmation outside came from the man who had the job of delivering what little news there was about the fate of the missing this time he was able to say what everyone wanted to hear. more about the thirteen missing people the latest report from the seal unit which went in and managed to reach party beach
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they found the beach flooded but then they went further about three hundred to four hundred meters to another area of high ground they found a young brothers a safe. it's been an agonizing wait for the families many of whom have been camping near the entrance to the cave since they went missing. are con express how i feel it's stunning and i'm very proud i never expected this day to come out i didn't have any information that led me to believe that my son would come out. for more than a week expert divers struggled to get through the cave system because of the huge amount of water flowing swiftly through it progress was painstakingly slow and at times the conditions forced the searches to retreat getting the boys and their coach out of the cave may be a long and difficult process and the big challenge may still be the water level even though it's dropped dramatically in the last few days more heavy rain is on the way. pumping is continuing around the clock to try to get as much water out of
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the cave before the heavy rains returned the priority now is on getting food drinking water and medical attention to the thirteen while a plan is hatched to try to get them out which once complete will bring to an end a horrific ordeal and a remarkable story of survival wayne hey al-jazeera. well it's a closer look at how the underground cave complex is laid out the belongings of the twelve boys in the coach or first spotted at the entrance of the cave at one point rescuers thought they were trapped several kilometers within the complex near an area known as beach but that area was flooded and they were found a further four hundred meters away closer to the main cave let's cross live to scott in chang right scott really the pressure is on despite the exultation that the boys have actually been found because they were there's an awful lot to do a head of those the possibility that those heavy rains might come back in and i
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understand they might even be trying to teach the boys how to dive in order to get them out. exactly rob it's going to be a very very difficult process to get these thirteen people out well boys in their coats i mean they were known as the missing thirteen here in thailand but now they're no longer missing but they are still trapped and that's going to be the task that's going on right now and for hopefully for hours possibly days to come that they will be able to get them out safely and as soon as possible we know that there's a medical team medical professionals who have gone in. had to dive in as well they are looking at the boys we don't know exactly the condition of the boys just yet you know other than what we can see in that video they seem to be in good health obviously very hungry very tired but we don't know exactly how the medical conditions are now as far as yes what this process is going to undertake it's going to take a lot of technical expertise and you've got a lot of people here a lot of divers who have that expertise but yes one of the possibilities as you
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brought up rob is in this was floated you know eight days ago that the boys will have to maybe learn how to scuba dive basic scuba diving techniques we don't know if that's going to come to that yet obviously many many scenarios are being played out but that is one of them and as far as the water level that is critical critical for that reason alone that you know if the water level goes down then maybe they can wait out or be carried out but one thing that is stunning that is it started to rain it's been raining the last three hours so as they're pumping the water out unfortunately more water is going in and we've got to know more about the state system is that up in these hills water drains into them from many different spots so it's not as though they can plug it in this is a finite amount of water in there and it's being drained out it continues to fill in when we see rain like this rob what's going to happen to the boys in the coach when and if unfortunately if it still exists they do manage to come out of the cave and what's the process for treating them looking off to them off to the.
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yeah that's something that they have been rehearsing the last couple of days here taken by ambulance is probably coming through this trail right behind me taken by ambulance escorted to a local hospital probably a field hospital here assessed in those vehicles their helicopter standing by to weather issues there if they can actually fly and then they'll be taken straight away probably to the prevention capital city hospital that's what it sounded like they were going to do but again. right behind me. there's something interesting that you know when you have the situation where these boys have been ten days in a chamber beyond what we thought. they were an. area it was four hundred meters beyond that that there could be issues bringing them out what was the atmosphere like in that chamber is there something that they can affect them once they're
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finally brought out all those things need to be weighed out and i'm sure that's what one of the things the medical technicians are doing now as they treat them inside but also remember you know you've got this it's a long distance still for all these divers to go back and forth so we're talking about people looking at them the people who found them that. they go all the way in and then have to come all the way out so it's going to be painstakingly slow process and slow meaning that we're here want them out right now but right now the best news obviously is that they're. getting them out rob thanks very much indeed. another mayor has been assassinated in the mexican state of jealous co it comes on the day a new president was decided after a violent campaign that saw more than one hundred thirty politicians and workers killed president elect and last month were lopez obrador has made the countering the violence the top priority of his presidency is also one telephone conversation with u.s. president donald trump to address the border migration issue in latin america and to turn this in human has more. still wearing mexico's football jersey after
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monday's world cup elimination. is nevertheless happy convinced he says that his country has just won something much more important. than what we see a new transformed mexico ahead with andres manuel lopez obrador and his team we expect to see the country we love so much rise up. and like no big sick and president in decades president elect. will enjoyed not just overwhelming popular support but a majority in congress to push through an agenda that includes limiting or eliminating some of the current government structural reforms but he can't completely turn the clock back says this economist you know. there are a series of laws that protect investment especially foreign investment because mexico is a champion of free trade agreements and they cannot be dissolved by the career
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a simple congressional majority even notice of it i thought has named moderate economists to his cabinet to reassure the business sector indeed none of the doomsday predictions have come true the volatile mexican peso and the stock exchange have remained stable and perhaps much more unexpected u.s. president john will trump has rushed to be among the first to congratulate his soon to be leftist mexican counterpart telling him in a half hour telephone call that he is looking forward to quote a very good bilateral relationship. as important as that relationship is that god has a more urgent priority dealing with mexico's terrifying rate of violence that is a killer must importantly pacify and the country is his most difficult but most important task we need very clear signs of a change in strategy to crime to draw a line between what's legal and illegal and to recognize the crimes against humanity have been covered up with impunity oh. god has the mandate he has the
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political will the only question now is if he has the skill to reach the high bar he has set for himself and his country see in human al just see that mexico city. michael shifter is the president of the interim eric and dialogue think tank he says lopez obrador is on bush's plans for ending corruption and violence have yet to be outlined in detail. it's very difficult it's been dealt his predecessor's last year there was a record number of homicides thirty thousand almost thirty thousand he's been asked a lot about this issue and he claims it's one of his priorities but it's a way of attacking it is to try to reduce poverty inequality where the will be able to do that and whether that will be sufficient to bring down levels of violence is unclear so we're really going to need more specifics about what his proposal is he claims that by cleaning up corruption in mexico which is very very complicated and
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has eluded his predecessors as well in fact his predecessors have been involved in corruption that he's going to be able to have the resources to finance some of his social programs that he wants to pursue which is really this top priority to reduce inequality reduce poverty each country has forty three percent poverty and so that's what he plans to do and so by that measure he can begin to create economic opportunities to support small farmers and small businesses and the like but i think it's the practicalities of that i think are unclear and where those resources are going to come from how he's going to be able to underwrite and fund some of these very ambitious socially oriented efforts is something that we're going to have to see it's be very very difficult and of course the relationship with the united states is very critical eighty percent of mexico's exports go to the united states and in order for the country to finance these social projects it has to grow
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and in order to grow it has to have trade investment. the u.n. says more than a quarter of a million syrians have been displaced by the government's offensive to retake that all province jordan is set to hold talks with syria's ally russia this week in the hope of paving the way for a ceasefire opposition talks with moscow broke down when splits emerged between rebel groups within a quarter of reports from beirut in neighboring lebanon. syrians flee as frontlines continue to shift in that our province the united nations says two hundred seventy thousand people have already been approved to join the syrian government's military offensive now in its third week their meaning towns under opposition control are being battered by air strikes and shelling and the fear is an escalated military campaign now that talks collapsed. after one hundred there is a military escalation to pressure the rebel factions to accept the russian military is going dishes to end the assault those conditions are humiliating for the
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opposition they just want them to give up everything after years of sacrifices they can't accept that. the opposition delegation involved in talks with the russian military which were related by jordan formally pulled out of negotiations it's not clear if all rebel commanders support their decision but those who have made separate deals are being called traitors. to the representatives of a handful of towns have been signing so-called reconciliation deals with the government or what amounts to a surrender syrian state television showing people celebrating the return of government rule more often than not there is little choice such deals stave off further military action and prevent more suffering but anyone wanted by the state such as rebel fighters and those involved in opposition activities or who worked in rebel run administrations leave. rebel areas are shrinking more than sixty percent of daraa is now under the control of president bashar al assad's forces rebels
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still hold parts of the provincial capital city and areas along the borders of the occupied golan heights and jordan including then crossing the opposition is in a weak position it has been abandoned by its allies the united states told them not to expect to be back to militarily jordan close its borders to weapons shipments and refugees instead it says it wants to focus on mediating a ceasefire but a ceasefire is not what the process and government camp wants. it is pushing for a military victory a win in the southern corner of syria would follow significant gains close to the capital in recent months then like now it is the civilians who pay the heaviest price. valid move could she see let me we ask every person with a conscience to help stop the shot and why are they shelling areas where there are children helpless elderly and sick people the children are hungry and without food
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we only brought tea and sugar with us please force this criminal to end the shelling. that is unlikely to happen the decision by some of the opposition not to sit at the negotiating table means a stepped up military campaign especially since the government stated goal is to recapture southern syria. beirut refugees fleeing the fighting have been barred from entering neighboring jordan many of them have no set up camp on a small strip of grass just meters from the front here all jazeera as correspondent almost all reports from their. well sam and i said. we have arrived at the strip separating syria from jordan thousands of internally displaced people have been sleeping here in the open air using basic sheets to protect themselves from the sun high over there conditions are catastrophic the pictures are stronger than any words they fled attacks on their villages and towns and eastern countryside and escape toward the border with jordan looking for the safety and security that they have lost since the resumption of the attacks which led to many casualties have
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lost their security and hope they can cross into jordan. plenty more ahead in the news hour including how israel is planning to slash hundreds of millions of dollars from the palestinian authority's budget. we look at how egypt's changed in five years since the overthrow of its first democratically elected president. and in sports roger federer gets his quest for a ninth wimbledon title off to a winning start. germany's interior minister says he no longer plans to resign after reaching a compromise with chancellor angela merkel on migration the disputes been resolved after hours of tense talks on monday horse that often is leader of merkel's main coalition partner the c.s.u. he was unhappy about her migration agreement with the e.u. saying it didn't offer enough protection for germany's borders.
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after intensive negotiations between the c.d.u. and c.s.u. we have come to an accord we have a clear agreement about how we are going to prevent illegal migration in the future between germany and the austrian border i am glad that we have been successful in coming to this agreement we have seen once more that it is worth fighting for what you believe in and we have a clear and very robust agreement for the future. for the us mr foy and us i am very pleased that the c.d.u. and c.s.u. have come to a compromise with a view to managing regulating and where possible preventing secondary migration at the european council a few days ago we decided that we have to take care of secondary migration otherwise there is a risk of jeopardizing the freedoms of the schengen area that is the right to free movement in order to do that we want to take national internal measures why operating in partnership with the countries of origin and other countries' dollar
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carrying has more from berlin. after days of deliberation many meetings not necessarily meetings of minds eventually there was this agreement on around a document which can unite the two branches of conservatism in this country this is that document which effectively creates a new regime at the border between germany and austria the place where the bavarian christian social union believes that migration has become problematic certainly illegal migration into germany stock you meant creates as i say a regime whereby centers will be set up close to the border which will be in effect detention centers for some people pending their return to the countries where they first made landfall in the u. this is been an issue that has divided the conservative branches of government two parties which until recently had been wedded at the hip as it were very successful
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election winning machine but which found itself effectively split in two by the road between angela merkel and horst zero four from the c.s.u. appears as though the two parties have agreed on this question now will be how this can get to a position of being implemented by government the libyan navy says sixty three refugees and migrants are missing after their inflatable boat sank east of tripoli the navy pulled another forty one people from the water in one of three operations on monday the international organization for migration says more than a thousand people have died trying to cross from libya to europe this year on monday the ship with rescued migrants on board was detained by malta rescue groups deny claims by italy's interior minister that there colluding with people smugglers in libya so far this year ten thousand migrants have been brought back to shore by the libyan coast guard. and put into detention so there's
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a big increase by the libyan coast guard in preventing smuggling. at the same time the proportion of the number of deaths is increasing we think this is because the smugglers are getting more desperate and are taking desperate measures and absolutely not caring for the safety of the migrants putting them to sea in unsafe persons israel's knesset has passed a law to allow the government to deduct three hundred million dollars a year from the palestinian authority's budget the money will be taken from taxes and tower of so that israel collects on the authorities behalf israeli politicians claim the authority paid three hundred fifty million dollars last year to palestinian prisoners and jailed for attacking israeli security forces and their families you cannot brand a palestinian a criminal just because he or she is a criminal or otherwise most palestinians are criminals since the sides to label everybody was that its occupation as a criminal it's our responsibility to be fully transparent to be fully professional
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and to conduct ourselves in a way which is based on our responsibilities and we would continue to do that we will not let our people down we cannot withhold any kind of support that assistance from families that have lost great. families that have been led to victimized by israeli violence by israeli criminality seven former u.s. ambassadors to the un have called on the trumpet ministration to restore funding for palestinian refugees the u.n. relief and works agency is facing a major budget shortfall after the u.s. announced its withholding sixty five million dollars the agency provides aid for millions of palestinians across the middle east a former envoy say funding is crucial for providing education and health care to people in need. astray has stopped providing direct aid to the palestinian
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authority fearing the money could be used to support people convicted of political violence there is trillion government provided about seven and a half million dollars a year to the world bank's trust fund for palestinian recovery and development foreign minister julie bishop says the money will be redirected to a un fund it's now five years since egypt's first democratically elected president mohamed morsi was overthrown in a military coup the muslim brotherhood leader had been in office in just a year when army chief general abdel fattah el-sisi seized power just transferred looks at what happens since then. up till fertile sisi was minister of defense and commander in chief of egypt's armed forces when he led the military coup on july the third two thousand and thirteen. that overthrew egypt's first democratically elected government. after months of protests demanding the newly elected president
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mohamed morsi step down sisi said the coup was necessary to prevent egypt slipping into a dark tunnel of civil unrest sisi dissolved the two thousand and twelve egyptian constitution set up an interim government and called for new elections. human rights groups say the coup represented the end of democracy in the important middle east ally for the u.s. and other countries the subsequent crackdown on morsi party the muslim brotherhood and its supporters was widespread and brutal security forces raided camps set up by morsy supporters in the capital on the fourteenth two thousand and thirteen. at least eight hundred people were killed in cairo and around four thousand injured cc's opponents. thousands of muslim brotherhood members and supporters were arrested the government offensive on opposition groups and the
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media has widened in the years since that day i want to. see she was first elected president in two thousand and fourteen democracy international one of the main international observer groups monitoring voting said egypt's repressive political environment had made a genuine democratic presidential election possible sisi inherited a troubled economy apparently needing aggressive reforms i list say things have improved since but egyptians have suffered the withdrawal of certain price subsidies and the devaluation of the egyptian pound against the us dollar workers also began on several major construction projects including dredging a new channel of the su is canal and the building of several new desert cities including a forty five billion dollar administrative capital east of cairo the battle against eisel in the sinai peninsula is a major security challenge sisi ordered
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a large scale military campaign in february after a mosque attack killed more than three hundred people human rights watch says up to four hundred twenty thousand people in four cities in the north of the sinai need urgent humanitarian aid because the military has heavily restricted access c.c. was reelected president for another four year term in march he has support from the us president donald trump and european allies city's main challenger was arrested and his campaign manager beaten up in the run up to the poll all other presidential hopefuls withdrew their candidacies alleging intimidation and harassment strafford al-jazeera still ahead on al-jazeera promises of help for a few days in desperate need after a high powered visit. the treatment of modern children in detention in the u.s. goes to court. and in sports belgium and japan play out
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a five gold world cup thriller touch on is going to be here with the details. and that is wrong. with. the weather sponsored by qatar airways hello there well first of all let's have a check on our typhoon here's a satellite picture as it crossed the ok now islands and gradually ruffled its way towards the north it still giving us some rather ferocious winds but the rain that's the main issue from this system for some of us in japan and south korea we are likely to see more in the way of flooding as we head through the next few days meanwhile towards the west of for many of us in the impulse of china there's a lot of dry weather to be found these showers though are all the lively and a few of them may just cause a bit of disruption they gradually trekking their way towards the north as we head
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through chews day and into wednesday before the towards the south of this plenty of showers here as they have been over recent days the main emphasis of them has just shifted a bit further towards the south now so it's the southern part of the philippines and of course borneo where we're seeing the wettest of the weather for the southern part of our map around jobbers looking largely draw and that's the way it should stay even as we head through cheese day and into wednesday for bali it looks like most of us will get away with a dry time as well out towards the west and for some of us here is being pretty wet particularly here around the northeastern parts of india and through nepal very heavy downpours here recently more wet weather still to come and the rain in the western parts of india is also a role the life. the weather sponsored by cateye always. capturing a moment in time snapshots of other lives other stories. provide an eclipse into someone else's world inspiring documentaries from impassioned
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filmmakers everybody's going to know well what we did circle for as a. member of all. witness on al-jazeera. the story of a friendship between a filmmaker and a seven year old girl what is it would mean. giving it into a refugee family being the syrian war. in the face of deep rooted tension between the lebanese and the refugees. my syrian friend. by setting it up on al-jazeera.
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you're watching al-jazeera a reminder of our top stories this hour rescuers in northern thailand are coming to with a plan to bring a young football team and their coach out of a flooded cave the team was found late on monday after ten days trapped below ground food and medical supplies have been sent to. mexico's president elect says his offer to help produce a u.s. bound migration in exchange for president trump support and the us manual lopez obrador spoke to trump on the phone after his electoral went on sunday. the u.n. says more than a quarter of a million syrians have now been displaced by the government's offensive to retake province jordan is set to hold talks with syria's ally russia this week in the hope of paving the way for a ceasefire. the un's envoy for yemen is in sanaa to meet hooty
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rebels martin griffiths is trying to broker a deal to end the bombardment of the who think controlled city of her data by the saudi emirate he coalition the coalition backs the yemeni government which is demanding the whole thing's withdraw and as modern one hundred ports is sold is deepening the suffering of civilians trapped in the city in a very affluent abdu salim and his family really leave their home everyone else in the neighborhood has gone seeking refuge elsewhere from the bombs being dropped on he data by the saudi lead coalition without any money and little prospect of finding work to make them they simply can't afford to leave. other when we are broke i have eight children we can't go anywhere because of the siege the war planes are always flying above us the will planes began flying overhead three weeks ago as the un was leading another round of talks to result yemen's three years civil war the yemeni. government backed by the saudi led coalition opted instead to
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launch an offensive to retake the port city of who they are the un's envoy martin griffiths is currently in the capital summer to meet who see rebels base there he's pushing to end the three beacon feats of which could include the un stepping in to manage the port something the world body has resisted in the past the port city of who data is the main entry point for seventy percent of humans imports and a price in yemen's long running civil war it's controlled by who three fighters but the saudi lead coalition maintains it will accept nothing less than a full who thought withdrawal and we should hope the militia has yet to change its position the operation continues so as to put pressure on the rebels to change their position that means relief for the people who died there may be a way of it of drammen mohammed an experience trader says times have been tough in the past but never anything this bad people don't have jobs people don't have money
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most in the densely populated city he says just trying to survive are all on the heart of the situation is deteriorating we're trapped by the fighting in her data many people have been displaced by the bombing by the saudi led coalition its indiscriminate yemen civil war has left three quarters of the population in disparate need of aid millions of them on the brink of starvation. ahmed abdul salim is disparate he says he has nothing left but his family and his faith in god medium the hand al-jazeera. police in the western indian state of maharashtra have a arrested twenty three people after five men were bludgeoned to death by a crowd of people on saturday police say the attack came after one of them and was spotted talking to a child it's the latest in the series of lynchings in india sparked by false rumors
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spread on the internet of child kidnapping gangs the u.n. secretary general says he's heard unimaginable accounts of killing and rape from refugees who fled a military crackdown in me and and tony a good terrorist has been visiting almost a million refugees now living in crow over crowded camps in bangladesh he says refugees are living in terrible conditions there because of massive human rights violations in me in my room reports from cox's bazar. the visit to cooper long refugee camp may have been short but its impact on united nations secretary general antonio good terrorists seemed a lasting one in the senate settled. yet these people did not suffer so much. now as to lead into difficult circumstances that these camps in added to the present. witnessing the magnitude of this crisis firsthand good terry's expressed how worried he was for
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a refugee population vulnerable even before this current monsoon season threatened them with flooding and landslides as funding for the crisis has been very difficult to obtain the news from world bank group president jim yong kim was welcomed we will provide an initial tribes of four hundred eighty million dollars in grants for volunteers to support the. family debate whom was one of a number of or hinder refugees who met the secretary general during the visit. her wishes were made very clear and other the. issue was a smart card that identifies us as well but before giving us these identity documents they should give them to the er hanjour who are in jails and the m.r. and to the er hanjour who are still living with them. but many others who didn't meet the delegation also found ways to let their feelings be known. so as we wait for the u.n. convoy to start rolling again i'm noticing on the side of the road you see all
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these we're going to refugees and hold these signs yes to dignity yes to security yes to where his citizenship really showcasing a concern that they have something that many of those who we've spoken with today want to make sure that they get across to the u.n. you see the sign is saying that rohingya should be included in any agreements about revenge or and that any dignified repatriation must include full citizenship rights as a a hinge or ethnic group. that tells us he fled the violence in me and more almost a year ago. that if list will go back if i did to the is given to us otherwise we won't go. but good terrorists agreed much more needs to be done we need to push and be pushing in the right fashion and in light of the principles that have always been the recent polls in the united nations in addition to. the need for every citizen to have a kind of. fantasy to many here it's
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a sentiment that's more than welcome but also one that seems a long way off from becoming reality. at the could to prolong refugee camp and cox is a bizarre. the most senior roman catholic cleric convicted of covering up child sex abuse has been sentenced to twelve months detention in this trailer but education phillip wilson will not go into custody immediately the court has ordered an assessment of whether the sixty seven year old can be put under home detention wilson was found guilty of failing to report the repeated abuse of to altar boys by a paedophile priest during the one nine hundred seventy s. let's get more now from a.b.c. correspondent ben millington in newcastle give us more details of what's been happening in court today ben. to philip wilson was the highest ranking catholic official in the world to be charged with child concealing child sexual abuse he was then the highest ranking official in the world convicted
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and today he's become the highest catholic ranking official in the world to be sentenced to a period of detention the magistrate robert stone today sentenced phillip wilson to a period of detention of twelve months but he stopped short of sending him to jail it's likely that that detention will be served as home detention where he'll be have to serve in his sister's house which is on the central coast of australia is new south wales state of new south wales but this is still considered a pretty landmark case to get to this point it's been eight years in the making from police and archbishop phillip wilson is just one of a handful of clerics around the world that have been charged with concealing child sexual abuse of the cardinal in france who is awaiting trial at the moment but we haven't seen anything go this far up until now which is why the world's attention is on philip wilson who is remaining is still the archbishop of adelaide
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these allegations all these this case for lights to child abuse that was committed in the hunter valley here in australia in the nineteen seventies the archbishop was told on two occasions by a fifteen year old boy paid a cry that he was the victim of a pedophile priest james fletcher but archbishop wilson did nothing and then jury in the course of his career he was the court found that he was told on two other occasions about abuse by other boys during confession he was prevented from talking about that because of the can seal of the confession but the magistrate nonetheless found that that had been proven and all of that he knew of four cases of abuse but that critically in two thousand and four he failed to come forward with that information when. this pedophile priest jim fletcher was brought before the courts now that priest was convicted and later died in jail but this concealing of
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the information that is what has landed archbishop philip wilson with a twelve month sentence of detention and there he is still the archbishop of adelaide he stepped aside from his duties but he's refused to stand down in the church as yet as yet still hasn't forced him to resign so we are waiting to see if this will force his hand in that matter. was extended today so he has walked free of court and he will return to court in august when his assessment for home detention will be complete thanks very much indeed the u.s. says it remains committed to sanctions aimed at preventing iran from exporting any oil president donald trump has faced international criticism for his plan to impose sanctions on countries or corporations doing business with iran particle hain has the latest from washington. here the state department put out a senior official to talk about the status of the u.s.
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pulling out of the iran nuclear agreement saying it's been about two months since the president made that announcement they said in that time they started sending out senior officials across the globe warning countries and companies that if they continue to do business with iran after the u.s. sanctions are put back in place they too could face u.s. sanctions now will there be any waivers the officials sort of hesitated when asked that this is a campaign of imposing pressure and so we are not looking to grant licenses or waivers broadly on the reimposition of sanctions because we believe pressure is critical to it to achieve our national security objectives we are prepared to work with countries that are reducing their imports on a case by case basis so far the u.s. isn't getting a great reception across the globe as a tries to force other countries to follow suit the important dates to watch out for august fourth that's when some u.s. sanctions go back into place but the big ones november fourth that is when the u.s. says it will target iran's financial sector and its oil sector. it comes as
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iran's president hassan rouhani arrives in switzerland for talks on how to save his nuclear deal with world powers the pact was dealt a potentially fatal blow off to u.s. president donald trump pulled out that's left the iranian government pending its hopes on european powers who say they will stand by the twenty fifty agreement the white house says secretary of state my pump aoe will head back to north korea on thursday from pale will meet leader kim jong un for talks on the denuclearization of the peninsula it will be a pump a third trip to pyongyang the u.s. is pushing for a deal on getting rid of the north's nuclear weapons. the man who said he would take a bullet for donald trump has hinted that he may no cooperate with any investigation into the us president in a t.v. interview trump's former personal lawyer michael cohen distanced himself from the president and said his loyalties are to his family and his country colin is under
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investigation for possible fraud and electoral law violations he admits paying an adult film actress one hundred thirty thousand dollars to keep quiet about an alleged affair with trump before he was president. i know over two thousand migrant children separated from their parents has led to mass protests in the united states but the u.s. still holds another twelve thousand migrant children in custody who crossed the border unaccompanied by their parents consent about their treatment has been an issue for rights groups for years now a court is set to hear their case as shihab rattansi reports. several recordings of migrant children separated from their parents have emerged over the last few weeks. and the response has been massive and green but a court hearing on tuesday and the abuse of migrant children by u.s. authorities has been going on for years they handcuffed me and put
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a white bag of some kind over my head they took off all my clothes and put me into her straight chair where they touch my hands and feet to the chair they also put a strap across my chest they left me naked attached to the chair for two and a half days including at night. that is one of many accounts of life at the sherman de-valued juvenile center in virginia sworn testimony recounts routine verbal and physical assault by staff and days of nudes solitary confinement in freezing concrete cells these children when convicted of any crimes they say they were fleeing violence in their home countries their lawyers say they were subjected to malicious and sadistic applications of force both physical and psychological the center denies the charges. since the obama administration latin american boys and girls twelve and up accused of being a gang member await a hearing in facilities like these we don't know if any children separated from their parents in recent weeks have been sent here but a manager says many children are falsely accused the youth were being screened as
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being involved individuals and then when they came into our care. and they were assessed by our clinical in case management staff they weren't necessarily identified. individuals in fact aid groups say these are simply children traumatized by violence in their home countries the reason they sought asylum in the u.s. and that ones they are traumatized for other lawyers say that information children give to social workers and medical staff is used to determine whether to send them to facilities like shenandoah for example a child expressing fear of gang violence may be classed as a gang member it is very troubling that whatever they tell their social worker their caseworker is not staying within that confidentiality and the child is trusting that caseworker and it is very troubling when that information is being shared outside of the scope of why that caseworker and social worker is is helping that child only
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a fraction of the some twelve thousand migrant children in the care of the u.s. government end up at facilities like this but it's hoped concern for children separated from parents will lead to a wider review of the treatment of migrant children held by u.s. authorities shihab rattansi al-jazeera the shenandoah valley virginia. so you had an al-jazeera touch on the sun shows will have all the support of the day including . i'm told in sweden where a strong culture of professional football teams founded by immigrants has helped fuel the national team stand against racism at the world cup.
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al-jazeera. where every year. when the news breaks. on the mailman city and the story builds to be forced to leave it would just be on when people need to be heard women and girls are being bought and given away in refugee camps al-jazeera has teams on the ground to bring you the award winning documentaries and live news and out of iraq i got to commend you on hearing is good journalism on air and online.
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a whole to your. matter was more of second nature of ours to keep going why don't she second team you i said best. is off air out of a i i i stand on leave the school book. and leave a whole year of your piano show i still don't. my most memorable moments without zero was when i was on air as a host in the back shell with the crowds in tahrir square it's working. if something happens anywhere in the world how does iraq is in place with able to
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interference in influence and the move is used to exploit not explained. when journalists access to information is prevented he said at the time but i want us to press. the most of the cost. and just as never sees the light of day no i knew that i bought into it on the weekend. what the show would have been the stories that matter go on told in the press is not. and neither are we. where were you when this idea popped into it whether on line it's undoubtedly. cold all over the inequality in our society today or if you join a sunset criminal justice system is dysfunctional right now this is
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a dialogue what does it feel like bring you to go back for the first time everyone has a voice and allow refugees to be the speakers for change join michael o'boyle conversation on out to zero. oh man you're. all accounted for rescuers in thailand finally locate a youth football team trapped in a flooded cave for ten days. scenes of joy outside the cave but officials warn it'll take time before the boys are brought out safely. home robin you're watching and their life well headquarters here and also coming up
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