tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera July 7, 2018 12:00am-1:01am +03
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at that q. you don't feel arrives is just as guilty as suffers the same consequences that's the law exploring the dark side of american justice the system with joe burden on al-jazeera. this is al jazeera. and this is live from london coming up in the program syrian forces resume control of the country's border with rebels withdrawal from under a russian brokered deal. secures cabinet agreement on how to plan with the u.k. seeking a free trade area with goods. washington's multibillion dollar tariffs on china take effect from fury from beijing state media
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campaign to trumpet ministration hoodlums. a former navy diver has died trying to help rescue a football team trapped in a cave in time but officials say there's still no way to get them out. with all the natives from the world cup favorites brazil have been knocked out by belgium. france and in all the european semifinal after the french. so the opposition forces in southern syria have agreed to hand in their weapons in a cease fire deal brokered by russia under the deal russian military police will give fighters safe passage out of dera province to rebel held areas in the north the syrian government says it will take control of the border with jordan
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contradicting early reports from rebel sources that russian military police would take over from tip but as smith reports from the border. for the first time in three years the syrian regime is back in control of its fronted with jordan this military convoy flying russian and syrian flags rumbled towards the nasi border crossing minutes after opposition fighters agreed to surrender terms they had little choice in the face of overwhelming russian firepower the fighters will hand over heavy weapons and thousands of them and their families will be given safe passage to opposition held areas in the north of syria syrian government forces swept through data province backed up by russian as strikes but as part of the surrender terms they'll leave for villages they captured earlier these and the rest of the border area will be supervised by the russian military for bashar al assad it was a small price to pay for taking back the border this is a vital trade route that the regime would eventually want to reopen with jordanian
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agreement. data covers most of the area held by the opposition in southwest syria one of their last remaining strongholds they still hold kinetic province at the front two with the israeli occupied golan heights recovering control of this area because our side's next goal. nearly three weeks of fighting but data has displaced more than three hundred thirty thousand syrians according to the u.n. tens of thousands of them headed to the jordanian border where they've been stuck with little or no access to food water and sanitation. the jordanian government says the return of syrians massed along its border is now a priority and those displaced people will need to feel confident that it's safe to return home so the jordanians say they've discussed guarantees with concerned parties but the russians will be expected to protect the syrians from any fear regime reprisals burnitz with al-jazeera on the jordan syria border well let's take
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this on we can speak to rich white souse the director and senior fellow at the hudson institute center for political military analysis and joins us now from washington d.c. and mr rudd said tell me what you think about this deal what's your reaction to. when the reports first came out it sounded like it was a somewhat different than the previous patterns in the sense that look like the russians were going to take a stronger role in taking over some place in the angry meant not allowing syrian government forces to mediate return but latest reports in past hours so appear it makes it appear it's just like the standard agreements in which the rebels agreed to yield there are heavy weapons and then either we integrate into a local community or go to or some other region and so i mean this this fall this is the development is pretty inevitable i think the next
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stage is more interesting a little less predictable ok well let's is this particular deal is concerned it's a turning point is that the revolution is effectively over isn't it. well you know there is still the yes i mean in a sense that the gov it's not clear how the rebels could basically overthrow the assad regime or even sab listen a separate government or divides here what with the various scenarios we've been discussing in the past here is it looks like the syrian government is going to be conquer much of syria there's still a bit of question though what they're going to do when they approach the turkish border will lay can to try and occupy the last. for the last meter of syrian territory will they allow some kind of buffer zone and then how would they work with some of the other countries involved with the iranians believe will the
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americans leave and so on so a lot of interesting questions but i think in terms of a regime change led by the rebels yes that scenario is not really foreseeable right very much confirms rosie's most communities concern that the exceptions from his desk he would see this side is his day will run. right you won't get the government saying that but the fact they've been acting that way pretty much for the past year or so i mean what really turned things around of course was the russian military invention and before that occur it looked like the rebels had a real chance of overthrowing outside but since then the government has recover and gone on with the help of a law in rainy and others to reconquer bits and pieces of syria one at a time from one front in a time to cease fires for diplomacy and particularly through military force and so
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yes i think that's i think assad is going to be there or until he's sasa nader or otherwise removed by some other means. with the russian involvement in this. go into the schools coming summit between donald trump and some of the mia putin is there any relevance that we can see just because of you i think are precisely right if you think about i mean we're here in washington struggling to think about what it's going to be on the agenda and that summit i mean there's not really clear what they could really agree to concretely in terms crane arms control sanctions all if there's no progress in any of those but syria cries out for some kind of russian u.s. initiative or statement since we're now approaching the end game perhaps all having some kind of agreement about what kind of transition might occur in the sense of allowing them broader participation of society how to enforce
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a cease fire the conflict at the final stages so i think you're right that's probably going to be one of the main topics at the july sixteenth summit in helsinki richard appreciate your expertise with this thanks very much indeed richard writes. from washington d.c. thank you for having me. well the global chemical weapons watchdog says it's found evidence of chlorine used in that attack on the syrian city of duma which killed dozens of civilians in april the report by the a.p.c. w. is based on the preliminary analysis inspectors who were sent to the city near the capital damascus say they found evidence of a chlorinated organic chemicals into locations the united states the united kingdom and france blamed the syrian government for the attack and launched a series of air strikes in response. cabinet ministers have come to an agreement on what they want from the e.u. brics it after britain leaves the bloc well members of cabinet to be in an all day
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meeting attempting to resolve their differences and what's been described as a business friendly approach the prime minister says that the u.k. will obey e.u. rules for moving goods between britain and europe but it will look for a new arrangement for services which make up most of the british economy that speak to me been following events joins us now live from westminster tell us what this means in the context of this ongoing tew multiple seeking agreement and is everybody in agree. well that's the big question is everybody backing their surgeries in maine has called this a collective agreement on how best to move forward with trade negotiations with the e.u. what does collective mean does it mean unanimous are there some people within the cabinet who are not happy about to resume a proposal going forward at its heart it talks about the creation of an e.u. u.k. free trade zone it talks about a shared rulebook between the e.u. in the u.k.
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when it comes to the flow of i call coach cultural and industrial goods to between the bloc and the united kingdom going forward in order to avoid friction between the e.u. and u.k. and also putting pe and tourism a's our eyes to the possibility of return to border posts or customs checks on the border between northern ireland and the republic of ireland all in all after this incredibly long meeting at checkers the prime minister's official residence outside the u.k. side the capital to resume a is a bird saying it's been incredibly successful day this is what she had to say in detailed discussions today the cabinet has agreed our collective position on the future of our negotiations with the u n r p a proposal will create a u.k. e.u. free trade area which establishes a common rulebook on industrial goods and agricultural products this will maintain high standards but we will ensure that no changes can take place without the approval of our parliament as
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a result we will avoid friction in trade that will protect jobs and livelihoods and also meet our commitment to northern ireland but we've also agrees a new business friendly customs model with freedom to strike trade deals around the world and now we want to get on at pace negotiating this with you to bring prosperity and security to people to resume a that is sounding very certain about what's been agreed what about the you what it will they make of it. well first of all what's been achieved here is a proposal really the cabinet have lent their support collectively into recent days words to her idea on how to move forward with negotiations that will form the backbone of a white paper the house to still be presented in parliament it may face amendments before then of course being presented to e.u. negotiators going forward the e.u. will then decide on whether to accept it or reject it and there are key points within this plan that the e.u.
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may have some problems with the reason may speak confidently about the flow of agricultural industrial goods between the e.u. and the u.k. going forward the u.k. has been criticized by it before. every picking from cornerstones within the single market saying on the one hand will look goods can flow across borders but what about those other cornerstones the flow of people the flow of services the flow of capital as well there may be some critical points here some critical objections yet to be heard from the e.u. but there are of course some important stages to get to to pass fergus before it's even put before the e.u. negotiators themselves and so it goes on all right leave thanks very much indeed black reporting there from westminster a trade war between the world's largest economies has officially begun with the united states and china imposing huge tariffs on each other washington for the first shot with tariffs on thirty four billion dollars worth of chinese goods beijing has accused president donald trump of starting the largest trade war in
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economic history state media even comparing his administration to a gang of hoodlums from beijing his robot right. china has always said it will match any u.s. tariff with its own at the ministry of foreign affairs briefing just hours after the us terrorists were imposed china promised to be true to its word shot i want to stress that we never want to see the escalation of trade frictions into a trade war a trade war is the last thing we want to see because as we've said many times no one country will benefit thirty four billion dollars worth of goods will be affected from farm products to automobiles chemicals and medical equipment as those u.s. products become more expensive china has been looking for other countries to supply them. china has been trying their hardest to diversify suppliers of energy of agricultural products especially when all the heat focused on saudi being on china
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has been boosted its investment in a lot of other unconventional countries for soybean exports such as russia in so doing say critics of the u.s. policy beijing has been forging deeper trade links with the u.s. competitors there will be no winners the question is will there be something lose more than anybody else right now though it looks like the united states is doing the opposite of what it intended it is in essence rallied the entire world against it and u.s. tariffs could ultimately hurt u.s. firms as well as chinese that's because far from being a straightforward take for tat easily winnable trade war it's complicated for example some of the chinese semiconductors the u.s. is putting tariffs on use microchips that are designed and made in the u.s. so those companies will also be hits. it's thought the u.s. is imposing tariffs to punish china for what it says are unfair trade practices and
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stealing american intellectual property rights but attending a gathering of sixteen central and east european leaders in both garia chinese premier league co-chairing said foreign firms were safe in china so. our view is that trade war is never a solution china would never start a trade war but if any party resorts to increase of tariffs then china will take measures in response to protect and interests uphold the authority of the world trade organization and see if the multinational trade order as relations with the u.s. continue to china's leaders appear to make new friends wherever they can probably pride al-jazeera beijing they're watching the odds or news hour live from london much more still to come on the program. european powers try to cobble together an economic package to keep iran in the nuclear deal that trump has ditched.
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the music that kids in indonesia get enough of but the government is blocking it we'll tell you why. fighting back to stay on track for eight wimbledon title. in thailand one of the divers helping with the cave rescue of the traps youth football team has died the former navy seal lost consciousness on his way out of the cave he'd been delivering oxygen tanks of the twelve teenage boys and their coach the head of the rescue effort says the boys are not yet ready to attempt to dive out of the cave system although with heavy rain forecast plans may have to be brought forward. at the rescue site in chiang rai so was a retired navy seal diver who was brought back to help with the operation to rescue the stranded football team and their coach he was part of the seal team with the
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british divers who found the boys early friday morning he was ferrying air tanks deep in the cave he passed out under water a fellow diver pulled him out and attempted to resuscitate him he died from lack of oxygen his death just how risky the conditions are it takes six hours to reach the boys and their coach and involves a series of complicated. the effort to find another way to get them out is picking up pace by the drilling is ongoing on the western side of the mountain and aiming to east l.a. cation where the boys were found we can't yet to pinpoint exactly cation using global positioning systems otherwise we could tune into the caves and bring them out. but another team is specifically focused on finding their location above ground using technology and equipment that can detect fault lines underground. to send and receive live signals we can gather information that can be used to find the boys like cation in the cave from above the ground even with all the technology
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being deployed and the hundreds of rescuers working around the clock the biggest threat remains to be something that nobody has any control over the weather one heavy rainfall could undo days of work and the families continue their wait at the mouth of the cave hoping for a communication line with the boys and their coach to be completed it was supposed to be up and running days ago got harder al-jazeera. the u.s. secretary of state my pompei was in north korea to discuss the country's plans to dismantle its nuclear program it is his first visit to pyongyang since the historic summit last month between president told trump a north korean leader kim jong il would also discuss the remains of u.s. troops missing from the korean war on his two day visit. the european powers have been meeting with iran in vienna to try and salvage the two thousand and fifty nuclear deal it is the first time they've come together since the u.s. controversially pulled out of the agreement earlier this year but foreign ministers
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appeared to make no concrete breakthrough in their efforts to provide to iran with an economic package to compensate for u.s. sanctions. this time. we will not be able to compensate for everything that arises from companies pulling out of iran which feel their american businesses threatened by sanctions for companies which still want to invest we would like to keep payment options open and create securities with an extended mandate of the european investment bank due to the us sanctions the situation has become difficult but we try to make clear to iran that completely abandoning the deal would cause even more harm to iran's economy therefore i hope we will move a step further today by making it clear to iran that we will deliver as far as that is possible let's hear now from. vienna. you may recall shortly after the u.s. withdrew from the nuclear deal in may the remaining five powers signatory to it said that they would uphold the deal if iran agreed to honor it and iran said it would as long as they would protect and guarantee its interests essentially
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compensating it for lost revenue as a result of the reimposing of u.s. nuclear sanctions that begins now with and secondly u.s. sanctions threatened against any company or entity continuing to do business with iran well i don't think as a result of this first meeting there's been much of a breakthrough either in convincing iran of the benefits of staying in the deal or of coming up with mechanisms to compensate it indeed one big question is whether they can compensate iran for the loss of oil revenue and company investment as a result of those u.s. sanctions i promise the german foreign minister spoke to us a little earlier and admitted they can't. correct the star status or we will not be able to compensate for everything that arises from companies pulling out of iran which feel they're american businesses threatened by sanctions for companies which still want to invest we would like to keep payment options open and create securities with an extended mandate of the european investment bank due to the u.s.
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sanctions the situation has become difficult but we try to make clear to iran that completely abandoning the deal would cause even more harm to iran's economy therefore i hope we will move a step further today by making it clear to iran that we will deliver as far as status possible so they may not be able to provide full compensation but they are determined to keep iran connected to the international financial system through the swift payment system and investment channels open through the european investment bank among other things it's a beginning these are the proposals on the table the iranians don't seem totally convinced mohamed job adds the reef the foreign minister keen to go she ate it in the original deal praised his partners here for their will to resist the united states but he said the proposals were as. they stood incomplete the iranian president hassan rouhani had on thursday evening called them disappointing i don't think much that happened here in vienna on friday will alter that view. one person
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has been killed during violent clashes along the gaza israel border israeli soldiers fired tear gas and live gunshots at thousands of palestinian demonstrators who are burning tires and throwing rocks at least three hundred ninety six people were injured several being sent to hospital at least one hundred twenty six palestinians have been killed since protests against israeli occupation began in late march. a turkish court has given a prison sentences to journalists accused of links with the july two thousand and sixteen failed coup thirty journalists in executives from the newspaper were arrested in september two thousand and sixteen all denied any involvement in sentences range from eight to ten and a half years somalia which has been shut down had ties to a u.s. based cleric for to look good in the turkish government blamed for the coup attempt . there are reports the united arab emirates is set to become the newest members of the u.s. and nato led coalition in afghanistan according to the washington times ground
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troops from the rival nations are expected to join forces training in advising afghan soldiers they will be the first ever deployment of country forces on the ground in afghanistan it's believed nato members will formally approve the inclusion of doha and i would i do meeting in brussels next week well the emir of qatar has met with the french president in paris with both leaders committed to building a strong alliance among the points discussed was the fight against terrorism and the blockade of kata by other g.c.c. countries. reports from paris. a strong show of support from the french president to the meat of qatar. emmanuelle macro refer to his guest as an important partner in the fight against terrorism and qatar as a stabilizing force in the middle east look at a border for terrorism friend of france and a reliable partner i think we were the long side the mid-term and fashion to fight
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terrorism and promote peace in north africa and the middle east you know what you know you shit i mean bin hamad al thani said his country is committed to building a strong alliance with france. the emir wants international support for his country last year saudi arabia u.a.e. bahar ain and egypt sever ties with qatar and imposed a sea land and blocking the accused qatar of financing extremism accusations strongly dismissed by doha. the world knows that many things that are said about qatar are not true so i ask everybody to take the time to look at what qatar does for world peace and per peace in our region the gulf crisis has prompted qatar to expand its military capabilities in december it announced the purchase of fighter jets and armored vehicles from france qatar is the world's largest
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exporter of liquefied natural gas and has signed major arms deals with the u.s. france the u.k. and russia it is also establishing new trade routes to minimize the impact of the blockade which has hurt some industries if. france could play a crucial role in b.j. to g.c.c. crisis france has strong ties with qatar u.a.e. and is involved in many shoes in the region it is a country that has a special status in the region and therefore it can still play a key role in the g.c.c. crisis continues despite a towns by the u.s. to broker a deal the blockade in countries say there won't be a deal unless qatar accepts a list of thirteen demands that includes shutting down al-jazeera closing a turkish military base and raiding time with iran qatar's government has
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rejected the demands calling them an infringement on its sovereignty the u.s. and the e.u. have urged all the science to set aside their difference. for to do warned it might take action if chase is the. hundred and system and escalation that is likely to prolong the gulf dispute which has plunged the region into its worst political crisis in decades. so that here on the news still to come police in the u.k. raced to find the source of the deadly nerve agent as the latest victims remain in critical condition. the former leader of a japanese doomsday cult executed more than twenty years after releasing sarin gas on tokyo subway systems. in france as the national team celebrates their world
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cup quarter final victory. welcome back we're still looking at some very warm weather across europe temperatures across parts of france and the u.k. in excess of thirty degrees celsius mostly sherritt civet in fact is further towards the southeast really from austria down through into the balkans and southeast there is generally so some big storms are likely here more unsettled weather across the north and there is the winds coming in from the northwest so temperatures bit above average but not much above average for stockholm and for moscow but many parts of southern europe generally looking at fine weather with temperatures into the low thirty's some of the forecasts are into sunday the area of rain moves further towards the east through poland through into ukraine into
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north africa we've got a fair bit of lifted dust around for to cross more southern areas otherwise it's all fine weather conditions but strong winds giving some dust across algeria more mauritania and maybe into western sahara but otherwise fine conditions for car of that thirty nine degrees into central parts of africa and we've got a lines of showers across parts of west africa those that we particularly heavy elsewhere a few showers still left coming through south sudan into congo otherwise jiri not looking too bad for southern portions of africa some showers for mozambique but most areas like to be dry and fine twenty in cape town. on counting the cost call war the world's biggest exporters attempt to steer away from a damaging trade war with the u.s. boss how online streaming services are taking on hollywood bollywood and beyond. counting the cost and i was dizzy it. was
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just ten years old when a devastating earthquake struck mexico city in one thousand nine hundred five the quake damaged her family's apartment and the government moved them to distant shack around seventy families who lost their homes in that earthquake still live in this camp say i'm going to get up that because of the government raised our hopes and then abandon us politicians have promised that they won't allow a repeat of what happened after the earthquake in one thousand eight hundred five but the cost and complexity of housing hundreds of people living in camps is a major task and one that many people here think the government failed.
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delegator much of the top stories here on al-jazeera the opposition forces in southern syria have agreed in their weapons in the ceasefire deal brokered by russia. you have come to an agreement on what they want from the e.u. . britain leaves abroad and what prime minister describes as a business friendly approach. in thailand one of the divers helping with the rescue of the trapped youth football team has died a former navy seal lost consciousness on its way out. according pakistan has given a ten year jail sentence to ousted prime minister know a sheriff in a corruption case is told to receive the seven year jail term found guilty of buying luxury properties in london with under income the sixty seven year old was removed from office last year of other corruption allegations and banned from politics for life both he and his ruling pakistan muslim league have repeatedly
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denied any wrongdoing. as i'm about force. showing. the ruling of the national accountability court which i stayed over nine months. at a conclusion then painting mr sharif to ten years then president had ordered to seven years in prison and a son in law gap two hundred. two one years in prison now a washout even though also said to be fined eight million pounds. i was. awarded a candidate for the upcoming election to million pounds fine they said indeed i would take by the national accountability court. order and now have to appeal within eight days to file an appeal by day we'll have to do. rendering them sad
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studio targeting it is going to be important to see whether mr trevor now returned from england to lead his party through the election retired you on the grainy fifth of july if you don't know it of course really in a heavy political price showing more political uncertainty for august on a ridge sounding yes war as far as the people of pakistan are concerned that accountability much before all and it should be across the board and should also include all the political parties. the leader of the japanese doomsday cult that was behind the nine hundred ninety five chemical attack chemical attack on tokyo subway has been executed as one of six of his followers at least thirteen people were killed and thousands more injured when sarin nerve gas was released in several underground stations for the salami has more now from turkey. it was one of the longest and most complex criminal trials in japan's history. executed choko asada.
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the leader of a religious group called orm which lowers the sarin gas attack on several talk your subway stations in march one nine hundred ninety five. at least thirteen people were killed in that attack and thousands were injured some of them with permanent disability it was japan's biggest attack since the end of ford war two. was sentenced to death in two thousand and four but his execution was delayed because of complications after he claimed insanity during the trial. some welcomed his execution by long with six of his followers who carried i would bet that. you will name one of us today i'm glad that the execution was finally done because it will bring peace to the souls of the victims who have been waiting for justice for twenty three years it'll be there but the execution of us one hundred doesn't end
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the story or form a group which had done this to mated ten thousand members its followers established a new religious group eighteen years ago under the name of a life which has now about one thousand members. so how does it secure and has it in mind that some citizens hear of the dangers of some groups that are trying to spread their ideas especially among young people they are my things. most young people do not have strong religious backgrounds that make it easy to control their ideas therefore our universities constantly send messages to us that we must stay away from extremist ideas and be careful not to fall victim to them it is the music. that allusions to group that succeeded or it doesn't promote assad as a violent approach but this has not listen then this surveillance of its members by the japanese police who knows the raid on their headquarters at the same time as assad as execution the execution of course out of puts an end to another long
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chapter in the one nine hundred ninety five citing guys that incident and it reminds the japanese authorities of our version of a better country could be a step back but he said i'm i just took you. for more on this professor and author in a reader joins us over skype from manchester professor really just tell us a little bit more about this man and a little bit more about the cults that he established where it's not a cut it was a religious movement code on shinrikyo that he founded in the nineteen eighties originally he was partially blind. but he was interested in yoga meditation and so on knew he was very charismatic and attracted a number of followers nothing like the number that your reporter mentioned by the way really had a few thousand followers at its apex but had
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a great region and they thought they had a message that said the world was corrupt and needed to be changed radically she something all religious movements. and how do they they believe. had a mission to save the world from what they saw as a coming apocalypse at the end of the twentieth century english what was the reasoning the thinking as far as he was concerned as far as you know as far as we know for that the sarin gas attack what were they trying to achieve. initially they thought they could change the world by peaceful means but then because they were recruiting people people who that message wasn't getting across they started to become very critical and hostile society went into a lot of conflicts with people around them where they set up their communes. a lot of ran into a lot of opposition and reacted with a kind of with violence against this opposition you know as if to say we've got the truth you're not listening you need to be punished and ultimately they started to
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think that the only way that society could be chinese would be through radical violent change so they started to manufacture weapons or what we call methods of mass destruction particular gases and ultimately started to use these against their what they saw as their enemies incidentally the people who were executed were not the people who let the sorry not in the subway that was you your reporter got that wrong they say these for senior people who are involved in the manufacture and production of the weapons and it with some other killings because almost so killed a number about committed bomb other sarin attack and. so this is took place nearly a quarter of a century ago doesn't it didn't get it how does this fit into the context of of the country as it is now as it is today and how were these are these crimes perceived well i mean it happened in the crimes happened from eighty nine to one
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thousand nine hundred ninety five which was when the sorry no tact happened. at that point you know came to be seen as knowledge danger kind as a kind of terror a group of people argued it was also very much a religious group i mean it was the religious things that caused it to become violent but of course it's twenty old years ago and for young japanese it's almost like history for ota japanese it's still not very much part of that consciousness because be you know it's the classic you will remember where you were when this happened it raised all sorts of questions not just about this group but about the idea religion in general really just movements in japan have been protected by the law and they get favorable tax status and so on so christians were rice about should the state be more interventionist in religion should it be controlling more
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and they've actually tightened up some of the laws and so on about it there's been a great deal of kind of hostility towards and towards religion and towards the idea of joining religious groups you know the idea that if you're a member of a religious organization you could get controlled and manipulated but she's the argument that went on around them should reach out so. it's still around and of course as your reporter mentioned japan tended to see this group after it happened as as a terror group of course since two thousand and one since nine eleven we've you know the idea of global terrorism has been a dominant theme in the media and in political life and so on so in a sense it home fitted into that and then it kind of help ignite a consciousness of terrorism very powerful in japan great to get your perspective
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on the appreciate very much and for putting it straight thanks very much ok chiz. british police insoles bre in the nearby town of amesbury searching for an unknown object feared to be contaminated with traces of the deadly nerve agent know each other well there it is believe the door just didn't charlie rowley who've been poisoned by novae truck may have come in contact with a contaminated vod or other item in a public place it's believed the item may have been thrown away by whoever carried out the march attack on former russian spy so gates cripple and his daughter peter shop has more on the police investigation from salisbury. what's hindering the police and counterterrorism offices in this operation is the fact that novacek the nerve agent has a dangerously long shelf life it was first deployed in march against the ski poles now four months later it's remained as deadly as ever the couple for years and on saturday are critically ill police said they can't rule out that more people could
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fall ill if they get in contact with the nerve agent the police are working on the strong assumption that the couple made contact with the nerve agent at a location that was not part of the multi-million pound cleanup operation lasted weeks here and if that's the case the police are no closer to finding the actual location of the nerve agent. to the united states know where business is in the seafood industry say they're feeling the pinch of donald trump tightening immigration policies with a shortage of seasonal laborers those in merrylands crab meat meat sector and say a lack of foreign workers mean they're in danger of shutting down but if your question is this ripple. just as essential to life on hooper's island as water and air are the crabs. it's all of it.
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it's all. in the water the chain of islands on the coast of maryland has depended on crab fishing for nearly three centuries the local economy rides on the backs of these christie ations and the mexican workers who travel here to pick their meat. these are foreign seasonal workers who fill the local labor shortage this woman has made the annual journey for twenty years back to walnut i make more money here than in mexico i don't have to work as much and i have benefits and i've been able to better my life. but this partnership between the mexican crab pickers and their american employers faces a challenge to the trauma administration changed the process of awarding a worker visa called the h two b. this year it's now a moderate in fewer than half of the crab factories on hoopers island received these approval feel very good but i feel bad for them to get it.
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across the bay a less fortunate pier this crappy king house lost the visa lottery and no visas means no workers so behind these doors is an empty picking room no workers no crabs no money on the table we're barely getting by we're. taking a truck going get a crew here to get the owner harry phillips sells bait fish to survive i can't do this or. i mean we're hurt real bad you know they become a self. in a community this small the pain spreads quickly but general store has fewer customers who have fewer dollars to spend. actually almost halted a lot of business here myself in a local restaurant yet in this rural county that trump easily won in two thousand and sixteen you are blaming the president. i'm so happy with the president
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plate maybe he doesn't know what's going on i don't know local say they believe trump will and the visa lottery when he realizes the damage it's done they hope this isn't the end of their livelihood heidi joe castro al-jazeera hooper's island maryland help of a chinese music video to talk has announced it will set up a team of two hundred senses in indonesia to monitor uploaded content this comes off the indonesian government but in the app accusing it of spreading pornographic and blasphemous content so that person has more from chicago. thank you and yes dick talk has become popular because even young children can easily use the application to create their own music videos it is operated by one of the fastest growing tech startups in china. called godin in china was the most
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downloaded app in the first month of this year and indonesia is its fourth largest market but the government in indonesia is concerned about all the unfiltered videos on the platform the minister of communications as he has received hundreds of reports of pornographic and blasphemous content and this side to block the application i have only to request that i'm number one cleaned up existing negative content and second we have to get a sense of our students for the future of there won't be any negative condemn any more. thirteen year old per boll non-doctor has more than seven hundred thousand followers on tick tock and his fans follow him everywhere. but his fame has also led to bullies who threaten him online his model is so worried she won't allow him to go to school yes well this is going to try to small table area let them say whatever they want to feel upset about it. after take tacos blocked bore out been
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labelled as he calls himself online now uses another similar application thirty years old and rapidly becoming a national star because of the news a video application from china child arrives called say his story shows that uncontrolled an unlimited access to social media makes children fall of all view or worse. local rights groups have urged the government to enforce a strict age limit of sixteen to access the site and make sure its content is strictly filter before it allows stick talk to operate in indonesia. that. it is far too open and this gives opportunities for people with bad intention. like paedophiles rapists child traffickers people with bad intentions always find a way while these children only think about the fun they have they don't think about the consequences. the application has also caused controversy in china last april that country's media watchdog ordered the owners to clean up the content
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on their platforms cyber security experts have criticized the company for a lack of privacy settings tick-tock has announced it wants to hire two hundred people in indonesia to help filter its content so it can operate here again stop fast and al-jazeera jacka their. well. the world cup. three thousand taking you inside this mountain to a new museum dedicated to. business updates brought to you by. going places together.
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just. where and. when the news breaks piece on the city and the story builds to be forced to leave just. when people need to be heard to women and girls being gone and given away in refugee camps al-jazeera has teams on the ground to bring me the food winning documentaries and nine. zero i got to commend you hearing is good journalism
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we have a news gathering team here that is second to their all over the world and they do a fantastic job when information is coming in very quickly all at once we want to be able to react to all of the changes and al-jazeera we adapt to them. my job is is to break it all down and we help the view understand and make sense of it. this is one of the most tediously fired parents of our judicial system what to do with children examining the juvenile justice they did not doll crime it's got a face an adult sons adolescents should not be demanding the rest of their lives for actions that are taken at that period of their lives is just as guilty as suffers the same consequences as the law exploring the dark side of american justice system with joe burden on al-jazeera.
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syrian forces resume control of the country's border with jordan as rebels withdraw from dera under a russian brokered deal. that i'm a klutz sarah live from london also coming up in the program tourism a secure cabinets agreement on have a plan for the u.k. seeking a free trade area with the e.u. for goods. washington's multibillion dollar tariffs on china take effect prompting fury from beijing state media compares the trump administration to
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