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tv   NEWS LIVE - 30  Al Jazeera  July 4, 2018 2:00pm-2:34pm +03

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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 elf 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 a little bit of everything to stay honest to the whole thing but still big the hole 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 as how i ended up not giving him more. than the world of the need to be i wanted him to express through i just didn't want him to think shout and scream and cry just assure that his discipline i wondered something which is very subtle that he expresses but it's barely an expression although he's a shy kid although he doesn't speak he would still stand for what is being said what is believed. the nation will give you
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a lot of difficulty because you know the rules but when it when it comes down the flipping those pages and understanding animation or everything goes for cost at least my first five line drawings follow and for it all because i don't know what the book 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 phased i used to bang my head with as i would not have been on a mission right when it came to making background i laid my mind was always working in one particular direction because i have been born and brought up but those are the images that have come across all the banks 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 i.
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nixing what a lot with digital it gives you more freedom then it kind of gave me the opportunity late going to get on one on a digital and then use these not their shows and all luck and margy them but i'm get an image their lives with. legs if i have to visualize my kitchen. i don't visualize a dark blue because those are the on those that i haven't been in no make that when i see you i said that there could have been a bit though shock you know i could have taken a shot sort of an establishment hardware you know follow on building even on a nation i just wondered. what i what my mind makes me like the image or the magic that comes to my mind is when i'll go.
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for this one phone because of the kind of phone are those and also the sort of the guy. i just wanted to follow the field i just wonder before i make. structures if it doesn't have structural i don't mean it's ok i'm fine with that or. she's one of the oldest women living in this part of mccurdy in the serious sensual being with state and mina garber is her real name and she's hailed as a savior by the other women she sent in by in the local language which means each additional breathing assistant or a midwife i mean has been delivering babies in her village for more than fifty years. know that she would be. not going to was a well they come to me. they poor and they need help sometimes they come with
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nothing i contra fuse them so i take care that even when they come pay me. but the challenges faced by him enough can be extreme this is what's left over a 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. and this was difficult not said whether someone is paying for some of his favorites it doesn't matter we need three things it's how you approach an official and that's what it is a certain way of doing it you can't just barge in a good story and fly out. in
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one nine hundred forty eight the state of israel was proclaimed. palestine was lost . sixteen years later in one thousand nine hundred sixty four the palestine liberation organization or the p.l.o. was founded. made up of different factions the p.l.o. has been at the heart of the struggle to regain palestine ever since. expelled from jordan and then the ban on the p.l.o. seem to be running out of options. forced into
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a corner its leader yasser arafat's soon found himself in gauged in a fratricidal fight for the control of the p.l.o. . all right take me alive now back to moscow where russian foreign minister sergei lavrov is giving a news conference. journalists after talks with the jordanian foreign minister a menace of add on the latest attempts to broker some sort of ceasefire deal between syrian forces and rebels in southern syria that's the scenario that the u.s. . we. will only we too tedious communal intervention only we do use kuwait. in the syrians would be to run. our consulates and run their rushes really to combat the real resistance and russia already. in order to
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resume such talks with. the. we are ready to do as part of our learning with. the killer with others through national security and also that you don't lose national awards in the middle east quartet. the. in addition to some other regional human. also you see some other australians scotians the prosecutor a lot about being rationed consists of. consistently based on.
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the criminal between the said i'm. going to serve them put him. up to about the circle. we intend to continue our interaction. peaceful nuclear area where he was with a source for where. we want to the worst while i was from such severe injury we believe that they borrow want to know how greece next meeting before the end of this year we're going to trial what's next before the end of his year will contribute to these efforts.
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we will continue working together. both in our work in particular interests and poetry and on. regional and international issues. we just been hearing there from the russian foreign minister sergey lavrov moscow updating journalists. latest attempts to which. yes the current situation in syria the fighting in southern syria around the province. there's a jordanian foreign minister a minister fadi there as well this is after the talks between the two of them
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jordan has been involved in brokering those talks. one of the major issues as well there is the displacement of hundreds of thousands of syrian refugees in that region in the last count around two hundred seventy thousand of them moved to fled their homes in southwestern syria since the military launched the syrian military launched this assault on the rebel held areas two weeks ago those numbers according to the u.n. let's bring in at this point challenge our correspondent in moscow who's been listening to this with me so rory of we've been hearing anything there of substance at this point on where things stand on the diplomatic side on the issue of addressing the plight of those refugees. i'm afraid the audio translation from that feed was so poor that i couldn't really can
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really hear anything of what they were saying that press conference so i'll have to go back and listen to it after the facts and speak to you i think in the end in a few minutes or an hour or so and actually tell you what they said in that press conference because i couldn't hear it myself but. basically the jordanian foreign minister has come to moscow come to russia very concerned about the situation that is unfolding across the border from jordan in southern syria of course as we've been hearing through this program both jordan and israel have closed their borders to the refugees who are trying to flee the onslaught that's going on in our province right now an onslaught that has basically been unleashed on them by syrian government forces linked militias and of course the russian air force which has been bombing heavily this is
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a tactic that we have seen from the syrian government and from the russians. it's been done in aleppo it's been done in duma as well now we're seeing it in there are basically. a fierce onslaught military onslaught coupled with pressure from the russians to the the rebels on the ground sensually either surrender or move to a different part of syria and that's a fact that was seen before we're seeing it again and i think the russians are saying that what's going to happen in iraq is going to be similar to what has happened in the course of this conflict so far which is a rapid government takeover of the area and then they will move along the question of course about iraq is what is the united states doing at the moment because it was. the united states in two thousand and seventeen along with russia and the
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jordanians that set up this particular part of syria as a de escalation zone so effectively what's the americans seem to be doing at the moment is walking away from that the russians have torn up the americans and on of enforcing their defense of the rebels in the area essentially duran's seems to be abandoned and these regional forces russia jordan and the united states draft hoping that this thing gets wrapped up as quickly as possible and with minimal blowback. already chalons life for us there in moscow. technical problems we're getting the better of us at this end as well so unfortunately we weren't able to hear much of what was said at that news conference so we will let you go away and hopefully we'll get more information. let's turn now to rami corey is he's a senior fellow
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a professor at american university in beirut we've been talking to him on this issue so rami. just getting back to where jordan stands in all of this and how they are trying to address this growing problem on their border with syria. jordan has been through this you know half a dozen or a dozen times in the last forty fifty years in the middle east being a kind of a shock absorber in between these big countries that are battling with each other or internal civil wars having to accept refugee flows that sometimes contribute elements to their countries sometimes create great new pressures they know exactly what they're doing what they want is to make sure that any refugee flows are accompanied by huge amounts of international financial aid that allow the country to address those needs without taking away things from jordan they want to make sure that any refugee presence in the country does not diminish the opportunities
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for jordanians in terms of water access jobs and things of that nature and they want to expand their strategic capabilities in the region to make themselves more important to other people so that they can leverage any agreement they make on this issue into advances and other areas whether it's bilateral trade with syria they're desperate to open the border for trade with syria and lebanon over land or if it's issues related to iran or issues related to israel or their relations with saudi arabia the jordanians will try to use their leverage in syria and with the russians to perhaps. help them in their negotiations to get more money from the gulf countries and of course with the united states and israel so this is an exercise that jordan has done many times and quite skillfully the jordanians are very good at this they they do understand there's
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a humanitarian imperative they believe they've met those minimum needs by opening their country to hundreds of thousands of syrian refugees as they did to iraqis to palestinians to lebanese and to others before them. and what is there a sense that the what the series the syrian government has essentially created facts on the ground. in the conflict in syria in the sense that the tide is very much turning in their favor and the opposition and the rebels for their side will be left with a kind of a fait accompli they won't really have much option then to then to go back to the negotiating table. well that's of the situation right now the level of the rebels in southern syria who are quite of a diversified group of people including small pockets of even islam excite people here and there we think these groups have no leverage anymore they're beaten they
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just have to decide how much they can salvage they'd like to they're going to give up their weapons they'd like to save their lives they'd like to be given safe passage to adlib and northwestern syria where a lot of opposition groups are concentrated now or maybe back to their homes in syria if they haven't been fighters of they feel they can live a normal life so they opposition groups really have no leverage whatsoever right. right now the bigger question for the syrian government is how to restore order in all of syria in a way that has the government being accepted again as a legitimate actor as the legitimate dominant political solvent force in the country the bitterness of the war the killing the the incredible savagery that has been practiced both by the syrian government and some up as are some groups and foreign fighters whether they're russians or iranians or others there's been some
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really terrible barbaric stuff that's been done by all kinds of people pro and anti-government groups it's hard to overcome that very quickly so a protracted reconciliation process needs to be done and the jordanians won't have much role to play in that but the jordanians want to love leverage a role for themselves also as perhaps guarantors of the southern cease fire they were part of the russian syrian jordanian agreement that brought a cease fire initially to the south but that obviously doesn't exist anymore the syrian government and the russians have resumed their attacks so that you have to look at the combination of all these factors together and syria is is. as it was a hundred years ago is really the linchpin of what the future arrangements we might see coming out in the middle east on the jordanians are very keen to make sure that they're part of those arrangements. appreciate your thoughts on this as always rami
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corrie in beirut thanks very much all right other news now and the united nations wants access to yemeni prisons run by the united arab emirates where it says a number of prisoners have been tortured and sexually abused by soldiers witnesses show the associated press news agency drawings smuggled out of prisons last month they show threats and beatings over him qatari is a yemen analyst based in new york he says there's plenty of evidence around of torture being systematically used in emma rotty run prisons in yemen the torture by the u.s. united arab emirates forces in yemen and their kidnapping of detainees and sexual abuse is being well documented by a number of international human rights are going to die.

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