tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera July 4, 2018 12:00pm-12:34pm +03
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rights and freedoms and democracy under the congress regime the government hope to ride to storm of protests but the opposition say this is a fight they must win for the sake of future generations. l.s.p. now to david change to who is live for us in warsaw so david it looks like a real standoff is developing now between these judges in their supporters and the government on the other side. doesn't that's right it's a very confused situation of the moment nobody knows quite legally where they stand but the twenty seven judges who are removed from their positions here at the supreme court by the new legislation did turn up for work today they were led by the chief justice and she was saying essentially that under the constitutional law she should have a right to stay in her position until twenty twenty but of course the government
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says that it's their rule of law at that they have passed through parliament which should take precedence the chief justice was saying that essentially this is a purge to fill the court behind me with judges on the bench is that will be much more sympathetic to the government position but the the government say essentially they needed reforms because of the taint of communism and the corruption inside the judicial system and even the. in the european parliament this morning the polish prime minister was saying that every country in the european union should have the right to shape its institutions according to their own traditions so there seems to be no compromise no form of stopping this standoff i think the protests will continue to build the momentum will build up both here in warsaw and across the country as this sticky debate continues. david tate to live first
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there in warsaw thanks to. our german chancellor angela merkel has just made her last speech to parliament before the summer break that's after compromise deal with her main coalition partner the christian social union to limit the number of asylum seekers arriving in germany and the twenty's the backing of other coalition partners along with the e.u. member states if the deal is to succeed alive now to dominate cain in berlin so dominic chancellor merkel has just given a speech what she's been saying. well the point to make here how some is this is an altogether complete debate as it were with all the issues but it's pressing on the government right now being discussed and all the leaders of the main party groups in parliament are speaking so in their turn we've had the leader for the alternative for germany party the leader of the social democrat party group
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in parliament speaking but merrick when she spoke touched on lots of different areas but on migration she returned to a theme which has become pretty much constant in her speeches over the past few weeks the past few months indeed when she says that no asylum seekers should be able to choose where it is that they claim asylum because let's be clear the position has been that follow the dublin regulation in other words the first place to make landfall in the e.u. is where you claim asylum because the problem of the german government seizes the secondary migration issue in other words those people who claim asylum in one place then go somewhere else and claim it elsewhere because hope of varian conservative allies have been very hot on this topic saying we don't want that to be allowed to continue we want these centers where people who we consider to be illegal immigrants can be can be basically detained and then moved on the point also to make is that although she has the agreed this deal with her main conservative coalition partner it's still not agreed with the social democrats partners in
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government and they are the larger party compared to the varian conservatives are still very much all to play for concerning migration. and dominic where does where do things stand right now on the migration route. well right now we have this as you were alluding to in your introduction as in we we have this conservative side agreement she needs social democratic reman to for it to be enacted for it to become policy as it were but we also know that the austrian government which. woods have a very clear interest in this idea of detention centers on the german side of the austrian border as it were an optic usually happy with this idea and they want clarification urgent clarification with the interior minister is desirable for from the bavarian conservative party about what exactly it will entail because they've said the australian did this with the austrian government who said that they might
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well have to strengthen their borders to the south and to the east in other words a sort of ripple effect where borders are being tightened up but controls are being imposed along the lines where migrants present themselves on borders but for the moment here in germany at least we wait for what might be a decisive moment in this migration route that will take place on thursday all right dominic kane live for us there. are many unions in the us are expecting their incomes to go down drastically as a result of a us supreme court decision it ruled the public sector unions can no longer collect fees from workers who choose not to join the country's largest teachers' union say this won't stop them from political advocacy john hendren reports from minneapolis . the largest teachers' union in the united states says it has a secret weapon in its campaign to boost school funding a lot of our own teachers a lot of educators have said we've spent so much time trying to convince
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politicians to do the right thing maybe we should be the politicians. unhappy with political leaders on capitol hill and in state houses across the u.s. national education association president lilly is skills and garcia says the union is turning teachers into legislators we had over one hundred. educators just at this last go around on the ballot in the primaries seventy percent of them are successful and they will be on the ballot in november the move was planned ahead of a u.s. supreme court decision last week that found public unions like the n.e.a. can no longer charge fees to nonunion members who are covered by union agreements the n.e.a. says that ruling is likely to cut its income from dues by fourteen percent over the next two years it has silenced my voice and has really. taken away my ability to have some collective power on behalf of my students and my colleagues in
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my profession unions are the last line of defense that's what this was about the move was praised by republicans including president donald trump who called it a big loss for the coffers of the democrats supreme court who said that the asians can make unlimited political contributions but the court has limited the sources of union contributions nevertheless these teachers seem enthusiastic determined to make a difference. the high court ruling will not affect states like florida with so-called right to work laws that already bar nonunion workers from paying dues but it does affect public union workers and twenty two other states that don't it is going to make us be more strategic and how in what races we can go after a waste. races we can't the union's president says republican backers will not stop them from moving ahead what they used the supreme court decision to do is to encourage members to drop your membership knowing that if enough members drop their
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membership that are union sick a year that is. union teachers say that even with less money they plan to forge ahead with more protests that began in west virginia this year and spread across the u.s. winning teachers' pay raises in budget increases john hendren al-jazeera minneapolis minnesota. i'm. glad you know. some of it i like.
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i mean i don't know how to define it it's not possible for me to the thing that that's it's just one on those things that you feel this is yes yes i believe in this i'm still not but i'm an independent on a mission for america. it's about the idea that you had a funds dongle raised. it's about it's about the believing in your dreams it's about that. as a filmmaker i would want my audience to support that when men begin first as a unit i would definitely want my audience to be a jumble with it and say yes this is what i want and. i have tried to be very honest with the film the story isn't mine yes i. repaired off from my sister was a childhood incident she was the one who planted chocolate all of them so i have put in the lumens of my childhood off but i suppose in my influences that i've had . the little incidents that used to take place in my own backyard i have cried
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a little bit of everything to stay honest to the whole thing but still think the whole even from my point of view. i'm trying to create that language where this kid is a shy kid and it doesn't speak to that is how i ended up not giving him more. than ever the need to be i wanted him to express through i just didn't want anything to shout and scream and cry just assure that his discipline i wondered something which is very subtle that he expresses but it's very an expression is a shy kid although he doesn't speak he would still stand up for his dreams but his believe. the nation will give you a lot of difficulty because you know the truth but when it when it comes down to flipping those pages and understanding animation or everything goes for cost at least my first five line drawings following for the fall because i didn't know what
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they were like i did and they were not working on though there was this one man that i started to like and i said yes i'm going to go it's really. i can't tell you the number of problems that i phrased i. to bang my head was i would not have been on a mission of a renegade making vagabond i laid my mind was always walking in one particular direction because i have been born and brought up the those are the images that have come across on the bank so i know what i sat good with all i ever knew my exposure maybe a school little that i ended up doing the same bank owns all that by. mixing what that along with digital it gives you more freedom then it kind of gave me the opportunity to relate can thought about that on one on a digital level and then lose these not their shows and all luck and margy them and
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but i'm get an image their lives we've. laid if i have to visualize my kitchen. i don't visualize a dark blue because those are the on those that i haven't seen and know when i see it i see here that there could have been a better shot than i could have taken a shot sort of an establishment. you know follow on building even on a mission i just wondered to all of what i what what my mind makes me think like the image of the magic that comes to my mind is one i will go away. from this one film because of the kind of film and those and also tell you about the soul of this guy and i just wanted to follow the story i just wonder before i
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make. stuff as if it doesn't have structure i don't mean it's ok and i'm fine with that that are. one of the really special things about working for al-jazeera is that even as a camera woman i get to have so much input in contribution to a story. i feel we cover this region better than anyone else working for us as you know very generously liberally particularly because you have a lot of people that are divided on political issues we are we the people we live to tell the real stories are just mended in-depth journalism we don't feel inferior to the audience across the globe. 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
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affairs that matter to. al-jazeera. having ok and you're in the stream today coming hurtling toward civil war strikes that began back in twenty sixteen and i got five regions have led to extreme violence and calls for secession but take a look at how cameron got here and how its citizens accommodate coping imo it could be louder live on you tube and we want to hear from all of you especially those in our cameroonian community well the examiner what it will take to bring both sides to the table and how a long lasting peace could be possible using said. they want to strike to stop for
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our president to talk with our english speaking colleagues to try to restore peace in cameroon since we are indivisible we must form is what i consider. filming. the head of state with these two and with rejoined so that you can sit down on the train is sufficient to make your commitment to be a peaceful country. but for which really i have no problem or distance is bringing it up to a problem so we need peace not going to the other state we have to use the word we can do to solve the problem so there will be. cameroonians there speaking on cameroon day violence first broke out in the northwest and southwest regions of cameroon in october twenty sixth and at that time noise and teachers went on an indefinite strike saying they were being mistreated marginalized socially economically and politically by the government of the francophone majority nation the other for minority makes up about twenty percent of the population and what
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they say is their force assimilation has long been a source of discontent those protests led to calls for secession and reignited a separatist movement that was calling for the creation of the independent republic of brasilia with conflicts between the government and separatist rebels in the anglo phone region of the country is escalating and neither side is showing signs of backing down on the military calls the separatists terrorists the separatists have accused the military of genocide human rights group amnesty international has criticised both sides for excessive use of force so joining us on set we have written gang he's an advisor for the republic of add a community organizer for the amazonia people's restoration recent. allowed to go see is a child region researcher at amnesty international and jang manga is a cameroonian blogger and activists are hoping also be joined on the phone by bakary the minister of communications for the government of cameroon he'll be
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speaking to us from an official in gage welcome to the stream all of you and i want to start with our community because they pitched today show and have been for several weeks now two opposing perspectives are i here says i live in. a country colonized by cameroon and i live in fear of being shot at for no reason there is beyond disturbing presence of armed forces everywhere in amazonia and they see civilians as snow on the other side we got a comment from someone who also lives in that region that some call amazonia this is any who says this is a huge a lie i'm here and mend and civilians are scared of losing their properties and being killed or called names by secessionists if they say or do anything against them jang do you want to weigh in here we're seeing very different points of view from people who live in the very same area how do you see it.
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or really to. reclaim the recruitment of something the. country. and even group so normal people living in. you have been invaded by. some forces coming from. everything we can. only. living abroad are calling you and. i would think that if he makes that statement he will look as if he just came in from os. the reason why there are some english people. cam'ron is because of how we came to be and this is exactly because the trust issue was not to minetta properly that this problem has arisen you cannot make a claim that cameron is one in the visible and that is
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a false statement and that is what is going to cause the genocide that is already creeping in though into that interview that region republican from missouri is the successor state following the constitution are disillusioned of the federal united come all republics which was the entity that was not properly installed when the united kingdom as the ministry authority and the united states failed to fulfill their obligation as per you and article so at least be a dream what they are we talking about here we're talking about nine hundred eighty four so what i'm going to do for a moment is just keep us up to date where we are right now asked you jack how can it be two very different examples of what is going on how is that even possible. yes go ahead the reason is because there's been systematic assimilation predetermine by the franco come on the lions ever since they started having association with the with the english numbers which is of our country when we have
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