tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera July 3, 2018 6:00am-6:34am +03
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how many 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. it's a whole robin you're watching out is there a lifeboat headquarters here in doha also coming up mexico's new president says he has proposed a plan to reduce migration. with donald trump. and five times world champions brazil sea off mexico to reach the quarter finals of the fee for world cup.
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welcome to the program a youth football team has been found alive after being trapped for more than a week underground in a flooded cave complex in northern thailand rescue workers struggled for days to drain the waters of the bid to reach the twelve youngsters and their twenty five year old coach the search operation now becomes an extraction one that may take some time as wayne hay reports from chiang rai. after 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.
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what a murderer. her. 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. about the thirteen missing people the latest report from the seal unit which went in and managed to reach the beach 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. iconic springs how i feel it's stunning and i'm very proud i never expected this day to come out i didn't
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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 its 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 the cave before the heavy rains return the priority now is on getting food drinking water and medical attention to the thirteen while the 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 hay al-jazeera chiang rai. well let's take a close look at how the underground cave complex actually laid out another
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belongings of the twelve boys and their coach well 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 protégé beach but that area was flooded they were found a further four hundred meters away closer to the main cave. well let's get the very latest now with scott hides our correspondent who's following events force in chiang rai sculp there's a great deal more to do before the boys can be reached and they themselves might have to help themselves to reach safety. that's at least i don't know and you know we're right in front of the mouth of the cave the governor that we saw in wayne story who who delivered the official good news he's here still and he just walked into the cave just a couple minutes ago before we came on air but. the big news is as you were saying you know from thirteen hours ago the boys were discovered but you know yes they are no longer as they became known here in thailand the missing thirteen but it's still
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going to be a very difficult process to get them out and then your question about they might need to help themselves absolutely there's even been the idea floated that they might have to do some very quick scuba training if that water level doesn't go down low enough where they can either wade out or be carried out they will need to learn some basic scuba scuba technique now we're not sure if that's actually going to happen what they're focused on right now is getting them food and medical attention we don't know exactly the details of their medical condition we heard you know early on and we can see from that video they seem to be in good health obviously very tired very hungry but it seems to be that there are no major injuries that would obviously really put. the difficulty on the rescue operations to get them out of the tunnel you need to really think about this you know there are these thirteen people who've been trapped in there for ten days they are not expert divers the expert divers took days and days to get where they are so they have to come out the same way unless as a dramatic reduction in the water level there's going to have to be some training
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it's going to have to be a pretty dicey rescue effort now one good thing is it stopped raining within the last hour or so we had the overnight rain nothing heavy but you know when you look at this cave system there are many ways of that water to get in there so the most important thing is getting that water level down so they don't have to really you know worry about possibly training the months. techniques and just be able to walk out but again we're way away from school so scott from international view is you know we have to tone and to size the issue of rain because this is the monsoon season this hits the region and southeast asia on an annual basis so just give us an idea of how much really the weather is the main enemy in this rescue and recovery operation. absolutely yeah in fact every year the case closed because of the monsoon rains because of what we saw it was officially supposed to close on sunday these boys went missing the previous saturday so obviously it's something that they know about they know that this is
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prone to flooding but yet these monsoon rains will come in and it will rain you know every day for weeks on end we've been seeing that's what they're trying to use like we see today windows when there isn't any rain really trying to pump that water out but again you know when you look at that you know we saw that map earlier how convoluted this cave system is there are so many ways that the water can come in and you're on hills it's beneath hills so water can rush in from many different directions so doesn't have to be a threat to downpour for water to go into the cave and one thing i like that we've been in touch with some family members throughout the week and we actually just heard from a father he was he's here and has been here for ten days telling us that officials are saying that they might take them the family members to chiang rai professional capital ten right city hospital in the coming hours don't know if that means that you know that's kind of pre-positioning the parents where the boys and the coach will ultimately end up going we know what will probably happen when they come out
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but probably come out from this down the staircase just behind me will be put into ambulances and taken to a makeshift hela pad and then we choppered over to that hospital in chiang right provincial capital now the drive is about an hour so obviously helicopters a lot quicker so that's the current plan that's working the current plan is once those boys come out of the cave or leave it that's now scott and continue to monitor events with you through the day thanks will. well another man has been assassinated in the mexican state of holy school it comes all the day a new president was decided after a violent campaign that sold more than a hundred thirty politicians and workers killed president. has made countering the violence the top priority of his presidency he also had a telephone conversation with u.s. president all trying to address the cross border migration issue or latin america editor lucien newman has more. still wearing mexico's football jersey after monday's world cup elimination. is nevertheless happy convinced he says that his
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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 i i am 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 economy as 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 a simple congressional majority ever. thought has named moderate economists to his cabinet to reassure the business sector indeed none of the doomsday predictions
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have come true a volatile mexican peso and the stock exchange have remained stable and perhaps much more unexpected u.s. president donald 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. has a more urgent priority dealing with mexico's terrifying rate of violence that is a killer must important in the country is 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 with impunity. voter has the mandate he has the political will the only question now is if he has the skill to reach the high bar
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he has set for himself and his country see in human as just mexico city. michael shifter is the president of the entire barack and dialogue think tank that he says has over those of bishan plans have yet to be outlined in detail. he claims that by cleaning up corruption in mexico which is very very complicated. and has eluded his predecessors as well in fact his predecessors have been involved in corruption that he could be able to have the resources to finance some of his social programs that he wants to pursue which is really just talk priority. to reduce inequality reduce poverty country of 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
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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 been 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 the social projects and has to grow and in order to grow it has to have trade investment. to the middle east where the u.n. says more than a quarter of a million syrians have been displaced by the government's offensive to retake their province series ally russia is expected to hold peace talks with jordan this week in the hope of paving the way for a ceasefire but it comes after all position talks with russia broke down when splits between rebel groups that hold reports of beirut in neighboring lebanon. syrians flee as frontlines continue to shift and there are problems the united nations says two hundred seventy thousand people have already been uprooted during the syrian government's military offensive now in its third week there are made in
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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 under 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 here relating for the 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 mediated by jordan formally pulled out of negotiations and it's not clear if all rebel commanders support that 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
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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 debt is now under the control of president bashar al assad's forces rebels still hold parts of the provincial capital that are city and the 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
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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 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. still ahead here i'll just sort of buckles migration headache is over the project the coalition is safe after the interior minister withdraws threats to resign. and the way in which by good children are taken into u.s.
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detention it's crucial it's time to call to stay with us. hello there for the southwestern parts of the u.s. it's still rather dry and that's not good news because we could really do with some wet weather to dampen down the flames these fires all from the northern parts of california and see just how ferocious they also no wet weather on the horizon here but elsewhere that has been the north of heavy rain all out of this system here is gradually beginning to break up now but i think for some of us in texas we're going to see a cluster of thunderstorms that's one to stick around as we head through tuesday and into wednesday just rushing track a little bit further towards the west ahead about staying dry and pretty hot with washington d.c. all the way out at thirty three degrees i mean for the towards the south and there's plenty of showers here but also
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a good deal of sunshine but it do you think that the showers are beginning to pull themselves together of a pulse of costa rica and up in tunica regular here looks like the show is going to stick around as we head through the next few days so to say am wednesday both are looking pretty wet for us before the towards the south of forcing one of the reason it's pretty chilly at the moment so a maximum temperature just of nine or ten degrees it really will feel cooler for us here for a say in santiago here the temperatures are recovering but there's more rain edging its way towards us and wednesday is looking pretty words. capturing a moment in time snapshots of other lives other stories. providing attempts into someone else's work. inspiring documentaries from impassioned filmmakers everybody's going to know well what we did here sacrifices that may.
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be some member of. us on al-jazeera. welcome back you're watching al-jazeera i was a whole rob a reminder of our top stories rescuers in northern thailand coming up with a plan to bring a young football team and their coach out of a flooded cave the team that was found late on monday after ten days trapped below ground food and medical supplies have been sent in. mexico's president elect says he's offered to help reduce u.s. bound migration in exchange for president trump support and the smuggler lopez
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obrador spoke to trump on the phone after his electoral win on sunday. and the u.n. says more than a quarter of a million syrians have not been displaced by the government's offensive to retake that a province jordan is set to hold talks with syria's ally russia this week in the hope of paving the way for a ceasefire. said to europe now 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 her say her for it 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 to germany's borders. 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
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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. way it does i am very pleased that the cd un 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 to north africa now where the libyan navy says sixty three refugees and migrants are missing in the mediterranean after their inflatable boat sank the navy rescued another forty one the international organization for migration says more than
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a thousand people have died trying to cross in from libya to europe this year on monday a ship with rescued migrants on board was detained by malta the rescue groups denied claims by its interior minister that they were colluding with people smugglers in libya. well over two thousand migrant children separated from their parents and that's led to mass protests in the united states but the u.s. still holds another twelve thousand migrant children in custody who cross the border with their parents concerned about their treatment has been an issue for rights groups for years now a court is set to hear their cases she have returned seeing reports. several recordings of migrant children separated from their parents have emerged. the last few weeks. and the response has been massive and green but a court hearing on tuesday and then the abuse of migrant children by u.s.
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authorities has been going on for years they handcuffed me and put a white bag of some kind over my head they took off all my clothes and put me into a or straight chair where they touch my hands and feet to the chair they also put a strap across my chest they left me naked and tash the chair for two and a half days including at night. that is one of many accounts of life at the sharp end of valley 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 by 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
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a manager says many children are falsely accused the youth were being screened as being involved individuals and then when they came in charge here. and they were assessed by our clinical in case management staff they weren't necessarily identified as being involved individuals in fact aid groups say these are simply children traumatized by violence in their home countries the reason they sought asylum in the us and that one's out shenandoah they are traumatized further. 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 other social worker their caseworker is not staying within that confidentiality and the child is trusting case parker 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
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child only 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 shell and of virginia. the un's envoy to yaba is in sanaa to meet who thing rebels watching gryphus is trying to broker a deal to end the bombardment of the hugely controlled city of the data by the saudi and the rotty coalition now the coalition backs the yemeni government which is demanding the hoof is withdraw as maria hold reports the soldiers deepening the suffering of civilians trapped in the city. 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 who day there by the saudi lead coalition without any money and little prospect of finding work to make some they simply
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can't afford to leave. when we are broke i have eight children we can't go anywhere because of the scene the war planes are always flying above us the war 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 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 based near 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 new 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 the fighters but the saudi lead coalition maintains it will accept nothing less than
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a full who thought withdrawal and we should hope the militia has yet to change its position operation continues so as to put pressure on the rebels to change their position that if 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. in the past but never anything this bad people don't have jobs people don't have money most in the densely populated city he says are just trying to survive are on the hour 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
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faith in god medium one hand al-jazeera the other most senior roman catholic cleric convicted of covering up child abuse has been sentenced to twelve months detention in australia but archbishop phillip wilson will lot go into custody immediately the court has ordered an assessment of whether the sixty seven year old could be put under home detention wilson was found guilty of failing to report the repeated abuse of two altar boys by a paedophile priest during the one nine hundred seventy s. . oh. oh. oh.
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oh oh geez here. where every. when the news breaks. on the mailman city and the story builds to be forced to leave it would just be 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 the winning documentaries and nightmares. i got to commend you all i'm hearing is good journalism on and on. and that's what's different about whether someone's going for someone's favorite. trick i think it's how you approach
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an official and if that is a certain way of doing it you can just. get a story and fly out. we understand the differences and the similarities of cultures across the world. so no matter where you call home al-jazeera will bring you the news and current affairs that matter to you. al-jazeera. she's one of the oldest women living in this part of mccurdy in the jury essential being with state i mean a guard is her real name and she's hailed as a savior by the other women she sent in goes on by in the local language which means a traditional bridging assistant or a midwife i mean there's been delivering babies in her village for more than fifteen years. you know because you. know going to was a while to come to me the poor they need help sometimes they come with nothing i
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can't refuse them so i take care of them even when they come pay me. but the challenges faced by him you know can be extreme this is what's left of her clinic she says a group of men set it on fire a couple of months ago and she can't afford to rebuild it and. it is devastating not only for her but for those women who rely on her. last. you know who could. throw a rock off before my or. i'm old you can call him
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