tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera July 7, 2018 2:00am-3:01am +03
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zero. zero i'm richelle carey this is the news hour live from doha coming up in the next sixty minutes. rebels in syria reach a ceasefire agreement with government forces after two weeks of intense fighting and province. taking its case to the world trade organization beijing files another complaint after washington imposes billions of dollars worth of tariffs on chinese imports. by the cabinet agrees on
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a way forward to minimize the economic impact after brock's it. and in sport it will be an all european semi final at the world cup after france and belgium topples brazil. the syrian government is back in control of southern province after raids to ceasefire tale with troubles and ends more than two weeks of fighting that have forced three hundred thirty thousand people to flee many to the border with jordan the deal was brokered by russia which has been supporting the syrian government and its offensive or smith reports on the jordan syria border for the first time in three years the syrian regime is back in control of its from two with jule this military convoy flying russian and syrian flags rumbled towards the nazi border crossing minutes after opposition fighters agreed to surrender terms they had little choice in the face of overwhelming russian firepower the fighters will
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handle the 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 down a 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 agreement covers most of the area held by the opposition in southwest syria one of the last remaining strongholds they still hold connla province at the front two with the israeli occupied golan heights recovering control of this area because our sides next goal. nearly three weeks of fighting which 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
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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 thoughts the russians who will be expected to protect the syrians from any fear regime reprisals burnitz with al-jazeera on the jordan syria border that are hashemi instructor and they center for middle east studies at university of denver he joins us from toronto via skype your time so we'll put the the empacher the ceasefire and some sort of context first just to the technical ceasefire of it all what does that mean. well effectively means the defeat of the remaining rebel held forces in southern syria but russia has.
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overwhelming firepower syria has the backing of iran and has the law so this is this is a ceasefire that effectively will i think play out in the exact same way that we saw events play out in east people took a few months ago and in aleppo about two years ago with the conquest of remaining there in parts of syria by the assad regime backed by its international and regional allies and when you talk about the international regional allies will how important is russia's role and making sure the ceasefire sticks. well russia has been the main negotiating partner there the biggest international backer of the assad regime they have the. you know they have the international position as being a member of the u.n. security council with a veto they've been the key interlocutor with the syrian rebels are the ones who negotiated the cease fire and they are now claiming that they're the ones who are
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going to implement it and this is you know perfectly consistent with past practice that we've seen with respect to those two other areas and in syria in the scooter and aleppo that i just mentioned russia was you know a key player in negotiating those deals as well what kind of psychological impact will this have does this have on the rebels. well. it just confirms i think the worst fears and suspicions of the syrian rebels that they have been abandoned by the international community they've been abandoned by their regional allies and it's just a matter of time before the assad regime conquers all of the remaining parts of syria so it's psychologically a huge defeat it doesn't really represent a shift in the tide of the war just confirms existing political and military trends that have been in place really since russia intervened in twenty fifteen ok. always
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good to call on you at times like this thank you very much. they were all skeptical weapons watchdog as found evidence chlorine gas was used internets hacked on the syrian city of duma and april a poem unary support by the open seat of the u.s. says various coronated chemicals were found at the site dozens of people were killed in that attack on tomorrow which was under rebel control of the time the u.s. u.k. and france blamed the syrian government and launched a series of air strikes in response to mask this denies carrying out any chemical weapons attacks. but more out of the news hour including. the latest salvo fired in the u.s. migration battle to track the ministrations order to release the name of migrant children separated from their parents. a stark reminder of just how dangerous it is to rescue those young footballers trapped inside a cave ins island. and sport it's party time in france is take to the streets to celebrate their world cup quarter final victory.
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hours have been meeting in vienna to try to salvage the two thousand and fifteen iran nuclear deal it's the first time they've all met since the u.s. pulled out of that landmark agreement and may the u.s. is reimposing sanctions on iran has threatened to punish countries who continue to do business with tehran and us are trying to find a way to compensate iran for the sanctions but there have been no breakthroughs so far the participants indigency feel a critical firm commitment to the full and effective implementation of the nuclear deal very cold that the is a key element of the global nonproliferation architecture and a significant achievement of most natural diplomacy endorsed unanimously by the un security council through twenty two thirty one the participants welcomed the
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eleventh report by the international atomic energy agency on the twenty fourth of may confirming that iran is abiding by its nuclear related commitments that all has more 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 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
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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 starvation status or if 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. sanctions the situation has become difficult but we try to make clear to iran the 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 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 only
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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. stood in complete 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. china has filed another complaint against the u.s. to the world trade organization after the trap of ministration impose tariffs on thirty four billion dollars worth of chinese goods accusing washington of starting the largest trade war in economic history rob mcbride reports from beijing 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 tiris were imposed china promised to be true to its word searches are 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
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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 has been boosted his 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 u.s. competitors so 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.
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firms as well as chinese that's because far from being a straight forward take for tatts an easily winnable trade war it's complicated for example some of the chinese semiconductors the u.s. is putting tyrus on use microchips that are designed and made in the u.s. so those companies will also be hades. it's still the u.s. is imposing tirades to punish china for what it says are unfair trade practices and stealing american intellectual property rights but attending a gathering of sixteen central and east european leaders in both gambia chinese premier league co-chairing said foreign firms was safe in china don't want to live to please our view is that trade war is never a solution china would never start a trade well but if any party results to increase of tariffs then china will take measures in response to protect step up and interests uphold the authority of the
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world trade organization and see if the multinational trade auto as relations with the u.s. continue to sour china's leaders appear to make new friends wherever they can probably bright al-jazeera beijing either country affected by trump's hardline approach to trade tariffs as canada leaders in the auto industry are warning of potentially catastrophic consequences recent steel tariffs in the retaliation measures by the canadian government are minimal compared to the tsunami like economic downturn that will occur should we lose nafta or be subject to a twenty five percent tariff on automotive if the canadian government sees fit to respond in kind the consequences will be even more severe for canada its economy and most importantly our consumers we stand a potentially historic crossroads for our industry in this country right now where we cannot hope to control the actions of any foreign government we can control what we do at home in a trade war we point the guns at ourselves the case prime minister theresa may says her cabinet has agreed on what they want from the e.u.
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after britain leaves the bloc they have been struggling to unite right wing politicians in our government on how the u.k. will follow through with brics it after an all day meeting to resolve party infighting may says the country will seek a business friendly approach it means the u.k. will obey the rules for moving goods to and from europe if parker has more from london. it's been an extraordinary long day for cabinet ministers and to reason may they've been locked in negotiations and discussions for more than twelve hours we've learned more over the course of the day about what the ministers had for dinner as opposed to what they actually achieved in their meetings but at the end of it all to reason may is the merge saying that her government has reached a collective position on how best to move forward with trade negotiations with the e.u. at the heart of it all she talks about there being a key wish list for the u.k. going forward about there being a common u.k. e.u. trading area about there being
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a common rulebook when it comes to the movement of industrial and agricultural goods between the block and the u.k. going forward about there being a reduction of any possible friction between the two as well putting paid to the possibility of return to border checks and customs posts on the border between northern ireland and the republic of ireland this is what the prime minister had to say the end of the day. in detail 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 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
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world and now we want to get on at pace negotiating this with you to bring prosperity and security to people well the fact that the prime minister has referred to this is a collective position rather than a unanimous decision may imply that there are some differences of opinion within the cabinet going forward we do know that the bronx accent country david davis wrote a letter to reason bay ahead of this martha meeting objecting to what he described as an unworkable proposal this does of course only form the backbone of a pre legal document a white paper that still needs to be negotiated in parliament we may well see some amendments to this proposal going forward before eventually being presented to the e.u. that has of course the power to accept or reject this proposal going forward. and the u.s. secretary of state might pompei o is in north korea for talks on dismantling its nuclear program it's the first visit to the young yang since the historic summit
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between president will trump the north korean leader kim jong un last month pay a waltz of discuss the return of the remains of u.s. troops who died in the korean war a small hussein is a political expert at the truman national security project she joins us live from washington d.c. appreciate your time very much so after the summit between kim jong un and donald trump there was a lot of bluster a lot of talk about what was accomplished but it for the most part it was all talk this is when the work is done now so. there was a lot of talk about c.v. idea which means complete verifiable irreversible dismantlement of the nuclear program you don't hear a lot of talk about that now so where do we actually start. so this is a really interesting question that you posed because the trump administration is so unique in that the first step they took was giving president kim jong un the legitimacy of acknowledgement by the leader of the united states of america and now
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we're starting to get into the work and into the details of months very unique because normally what we would do is we would handle the details in the dirty work first and we would give the other side of the reward at the end but you know he's shaking it up and maybe that's ok maybe that will work out it's very interesting because today the state department released a statement that walked back specifically from what you said the complete verifiable irreversible denuclearization and they released a statement today that talked a little bit about making steps towards progress and that is really a change in tone from the trump administration we know that secretary of state pompei zero is meeting in north korea for the third time since he has become secretary of state i wish him all the best and i wish him good luck but i have to say as a former obama appointee it's very interesting that this administration would criticize
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the iran deal when we said don't trust verify and it seems like they're giving a huge leap of faith in the north korean administration there's a process saying before there verify in the great point donald trump has specifically use the language of i believe mick cetera et cetera all these these things that has not earned and they've already given him the legitimacy of this meeting so what motivation does he actually have to do anything. that's a fabulous question and i think so many policy experts in washington d.c. are wondering the same thing i mean we know that president kim jong un has used his summit in singapore with president trump and multiple propaganda videos to the north korean people to show that he is some kind of legitimate leader on the world stage who is worthy of the most powerful man in the world tourists back and i think
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that's very questionable why did we do that when we don't really have evidence yet save for about simply video that honestly a high school student could have doctored about tunnel blowing off as some kind of evidence that that was you know the north korean administration's denuclearization and and that is just not enough they are up to a lot of suspicious activity they continue with it and i'm worried and i think a lot of policy experts are in washington d.c. the administration is foolishly playing into his hands we will have to see how it all plays out as he said sometimes maybe shaking it up we'll get a different result to say the same thank you very much. a u.s. federal court has ordered the trump administration to produce a list of all migrant children under five separated from their parents at the
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mexico border this order requires reunification of those children within two weeks in all others within thirty days the separation sparked a fierce outcry in protest against donald trump's zero tolerance immigration policy it's going to live to john hundred in washington d.c. john tell us more about what this judge has ruled said. well richelle the trump administration went into court just saying it could not comply with the judge's order as you mentioned there are three thousand kids who were separated from their parents by the trump administration when they came over the border undocumented of those kids about one hundred one of them are under five years of age so the judge said ok fine reunite all those kids with their parents within thirty days that would be the end of this month but for those who are under five to have to reunite those within two weeks the deadline is this coming tuesday but by tonight they were supposed to be able to put the parents in touch with those kids and the u.s. government went to court and said i'm sorry we can only locate about half of them
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so the judge said fine if you can give us a list of all those one hundred one children from zero to four years of age by five pm tomorrow i will grant you more time what is interesting here is that about nineteen of those parents have been deported the u.s. government does not know where they are it says another one thousand have been released within the united states and the government doesn't know where they are so they're only about forty six of the parents of those hundred one children who are able to be located because they're in the custody of customs enforcement officials but if the u.s. government were not to abide by this order there's really very little the court can do it can hold the u.s. government in contempt of court and that's pretty much about it i think it bears repeating what you said that there are parents who were deported without their children and so when you look at how all of this is played out and the fact that. i went to court today knowing they had to go to court and still were not able to have
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all these records together what does this say about how this policy the zero tolerance policy has been implemented. it means the parents lost or they the government lost track of these children it means the u.s. government had no plan for how to reunite them when it separated them at the border is part of it zero tolerance policy and if if you reflect on this the u.s. government keep better track of postal packages than it does of these human beings it's actually using d.n.a. tests to try to match up the parents with the children it also means that we were misled at the very least by alex's are the health and human services secretary when he spoke to the senate finance committee on june twenty sixth he said at that time there is no reason why any parent would not know where their child is located with just basic keystrokes within seconds i could find any child in our care for any parent it's available well today the justice department lawyer said something very
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different on that she said the way a family separation is put in the system is not in some form so we can't just run it all in other words there is no list you can't find it from a keystroke and one interesting point is when the judge said you need to give this list by five pm on saturday the government lawyers said that they would comply but she could not personally comply because she had dog sitting duties and would have to leave town or show i'm sorry somebody would dog sit for her thanks john henson appreciate that. the u.s. seafood industry is feeling the pinch of tightening immigration policies with a shortage of labor those in maryland's crabmeat sector say many businesses that employ foreign workers analogy of shutting down. or reports. just as essential to life on hoopers island as water and air are the crabs. it's all of it i mean if we don't have that. we don't have nothing and it's all
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catch 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 wal-mart and 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 mean it's still feel bad for the ones that
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didn't get it across the bay a less fortunate pier this crap making 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 check go get a crew here get the owner harry phillips sells bait fish to survive i can't do this or. i mean we're hurt real bad. in a community this small it spreads quickly the general store has fewer customers who have fewer dollars to spend. actually almost halted a lot of business here myself and 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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maybe 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 still ahead on al-jazeera time may be running out for a popular chinese that's been accused of spreading blasphemous content in tunisia plus. in austria three thousand meters up taking you inside this mountain to a new museum dedicated to james. and a sports arena williams fights back to stay on track.
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welcome back we'll start in north america this time and the heat wave which has been affecting eastern parts of canada resulting in more than thirty faith is on places they on is where that's a cold front which introduced slightly fresher conditions across much of eastern canada and also down through into houston part of the united states so cool weather for new york still pleasant twenty six degrees some heavy rain for that frontal system across southeast nerissa anyway into parts of texas you see it gradually fragments as we head on through into sunday now the weather system moving across the northern plains into the prairie's and also affecting the great lakes other states we're looking at to find conditions out across many western areas that we have got some showers developing across the desert southwest heading down into central america it's looking fairly wet across parts of mexico some heavy showers are likely here and all the way through the isthmus the risk of showers coming off the caribbean side and the risk will increase of thing is ahead on through into sunday but for most of the islands weather conditions are looking pretty good i
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think for western parts of cuba and the bahamas likely to be some heavier more prolonged showers at times northern parts of south america see more showers southern areas gerri find this is quite a nasty area of low pressure giving some pretty heavy rain and it could be a very wet day and one as aries. with over forty thousand people killed under his roof it took twenty five years to bring him to a court of law but why for so long was such a brutal dictator considered an ally of the west who heard our reporting to the congress to the press there were engaged in. their program al-jazeera unravels the history of chad's notorious former president he's saying had three dictator on trial on al-jazeera.
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it's. running six continents across the. correspondent she living green the stories they tell. you see euro. news. you're watching al-jazeera let's make out the top stories for you right now the syrian government is back in control of southern terra province after a reach a cease fire deal with travels this says more than eight weeks of fighting that have displaced three hundred thirty thousand people the deal was brokered by russia
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which backs the government's china has filed another complaint against the u.s. to the world trade organization after the trump administration impose tariffs of thirty four billion dollars worth of chinese goods beijing is accused washington of starting the largest trade war in economic history. u.s. federal court has ordered the trumpet ministration to produce a list of all migrant children under the age of five who are separated from their parents at the mexico border order also requires the government to explain how each of the children will be reunited with their families by tuesday. place in thailand say twelve boys and the football coach trapped inside a cave are not ready for the dangerous dive to get out heavy rains are forecast it could worsen flooding inside the quay and one of the divers died while delivering oxygen to the children scott heiler is in the rescue site. so mancow don was a retired navy seal diver who was brought back to help with the operation to rescue
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the stranded football team and their coach he was part of the seal team with the british divers who found the boys' early friday morning he was ferrying air tanks deep in the cave he passed out on the water a fellow diver pulled him out and attempted to resuscitate him he died from lack of oxygen and his death underlines just how risky the conditions are it takes six hours to reach the boys and their coach and involves a series of complicated dives 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 the location where the boys were found we can't yet pinpoint exactly cation using global positioning systems otherwise we could drill 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 because. to send and receive life signals we can gather information that can be
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used to find the boys like cation in the cave from above the ground even with all the technology 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 hotter al-jazeera. and the death toll from the sinking of a tourist boat in thailand has risen to thirty three with the chance of finding more survivors is slim the motive mostly chinese tourists sank when it was toppled by a highway who kept on thursday one hundred people were on board. the mayor of qatar has met france's president to discuss the blockade against qatar and the fight against terrorism both leaders say they are committed to building a strong alliance that has been a major allies in saudi arabia egypt and bahrain cut diplomatic ties with qatar our
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ports from paris. a strong show of support from the french president to the emir of qatar. to his guest as an important partner in the fight against terrorism and as a stabilizing force in the middle east look at on the border for some time i was a friend of france a reliable partner i think we were alone side the minute he determined fashion to fight terrorism and promote peace in north africa and the middle east where you know you shake to me. and he said his country is committed to building a strong alliance with fronts. 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
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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 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 jesus the 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
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a special status in the region and therefore it can still play a key role in the g.c.c. crisis continues despite attempts 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 dunk weighed in ties with iran qatar's government has rejected the demands calling them an infringement on its sovereignty the u.s. and the e.u. have urged all the sides to set aside their difference. but santa arabia has reportedly warned it might take action if the top of chases the russian made as four hundred and across the system an escalation that is likely to prolong the gulf dispute which has plunged the region into its worst political crisis in decades.
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paris there are reports that qatar and the united arab emirates are set to become the newest members of the u.s. and nato led coalition in afghanistan and the washington times says ground troops from the rival nations are expected to join forces in training and advising afghan soldiers it will be the first ever deployment of qatari forces on the ground in afghanistan later of the japanese didn't say call behind the one thousand nine hundred five chemical attack on tokyo subway has been executed along with six of his followers thirteen people were killed and thousands were injured when sarin nerve gas was released an underground stations has more from tokyo. it was one of the longest and most complex criminal trials in japan's history authorities have executed choko asada the leader of a religious group gold. which loans the sarin gas attack on several tokyo subway stations in march one thousand nine hundred ninety five. at least fifteen people
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were killed in that attack and thousands were injured some of them with permanent disability it was europeans biggest attack since the end of food war two i thought i 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 i don't with six of his followers who carried out with the attack you do feel in my office 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 the story or form a group which had done this to me to 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 as to how does excuse and has even
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minded some citizens hear of the dangers of some groups that are trying to spread their ideas especially among young people they are my they are things that 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 he didn't give them it's a. very litigious group that succeeded or ses it doesn't promote assad as violent approach. but this was not listen then surveillance over its members by the japanese police who launched a raid on that hits gotos at the same time as assad execution the execution of course. to a chapter in the one nine hundred ninety five citing incident and it reminds the japanese authorities. don't think would be that that is both parks freddy said i'm a just book you. have been protests in the south korean capital against the court's
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decision not to issue an arrest warrant for the chairman of korean air the company staff from among those who watch show you to step down cho is under investigation for a and for tax evasion that a judge on thursday ruled the charges were disputable sarah clarke has more from seoul. but around three hundred people here it's not a stuff it is stuff stewart's pots from two of south korea's biggest airlines held a protest here they moved a protest. targeting management at the different airlines probably the most high profile issue is the issue of the korean a stuff demanding the head of the chairman of the company stand down this is an investigation into tax evasion and embezzlement involving mr cho alas not a court gave him a reprieve and denied prosecutions request for an arrest warrant today pilots staff and stewards were back on the streets today it's not a protesting and demanding that he stand down now the second issue involving the
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other way along which is south korea's second biggest carrier this is yana airlines they're protesting and demanding management of fix a problem over catering this week around one hundred ten flights took off without their meal service and this is due to management changing that catering stuff it's not assigned his pricing pressure and bullying stuff and stuff shouldn't have to deal with this and as a result they try to come to the streets to not to complain about the airlines management so as you can see two of south korea's biggest airlines the stuff here on the streets protesting over the management situation. people in central nigeria are accusing the government of failing to protect them from escalating violence farming communities are battling a magic cattle herders in a conflict over fertile land at least two hundred people have been killed in recent weeks and many more forced from their homes many just as more fans are simply to stay. off and buy a conflict she knows nothing about this toddler fighting for her life was brought
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to hospital with a broken limbs and standpoint our parents didn't survive. the the old villages in troublous were all affected by a conflict that many years lead was over after three year break it came by the very rude shock to me that this same community would visit. attacks again and was will lead to these number of killings in pledges that there must be total investigation on us root cause of this case it may be beyond what was the government responded by deploying more troops but that hasn't stopped the flow of refugees. the only kid areas has been was a casualty he didn't leave when others fled she's in causal level. neurons would burn in labor i feel powerless without him
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knowing that i don't know what would happen to me or the kids who are in school i don't know but people do this is the grave of the only victim of the attack on cockroach. witnesses say when the religious sense danger they moved us in from location protected by the security forces but many vulnerable villages once are lucky when they say eighty four people were killed in the attacks that lasted days but community leaders insist the total is more than two hundred. curiously the crisis in the central state of plateau is between two ethnic groups the biro who are mostly farmers and the floody had been blame each other for igniting the conflict the full unease jihadist came behind the church with a number more than one hundred people in blood over block and they came. from last august to today we lost over two hundred fifty persons cyclical is
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some underwrote some in the reordering field and so most of us were continual receiving these killings and killings and killing. the government just blamed for its failure to protect the weak either for political expediency or the failure of the security apparatus to deal with the violence like in most nigerian states affected by killings this year the conflict center mainly on land resources the population has grown so has the demand for food and with the effects of climate change becoming more real the fight over land and water has intensified i mean you also say that with nigeria's campaign season opening politicians i exported the situation to their advantage. al-jazeera central nigeria. a popular chinese music video apple's setting up a team of two hundred sensors and education to monitor content a government block the tick-tock advocating at
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a spreading pornographic am class and this content and as more from jakarta thank you thank you 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. in china was the most 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 site or to block the application i have only two requests that i'm number one cleaned up existing that they want them and second we have to get the some sort of photograph you just there won't be any negative condemn any more. thirteen year old pro bowl non-doctor has more than seven hundred thousand followers on tick tock and his fans
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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 this is going to destroy the small if they pull a real let them say whatever they want to feel upset about it. after take the course blocked bow out as he calls himself online now uses another similar application thirty years old i'm rapidly becoming a national star because of the news a video application from china child lives could say his story shows that uncontrolled an unlimited access to social media makes children from noble view or worth. local rights groups have urged the government to enforce a strict age limit of sixty to access. the site and make sure its content is strictly filter before it allows tick tock to operate in indonesia. that it to
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brag it is far too open and this gives opportunities for people with bad intentions 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 on their platforms cyber security experts have criticized the company for a lack of privacy settings tick-tock as announced it wants to hire two hundred people in indonesia to help filter its content so it can operate here again stuck fast and al-jazeera jacka. the world cup in russia the fifth time in history. in the semifinals.
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the. last thing. you sleep last night we had to go bust city center at least to get ahead beginning for food and not just walking. in the lead in a two meter that depletes will see a. goal the. last minute you've been up a class act that would be touching to me is just stuff and. sometimes they succeed and my friend is not having something so i want to have a chance to them in each hand than. an edsel paul butler. people.
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did it begin did each end. to be. changed. when the news breaks. on the main man city and the story builds to be forced to leave with christiane when people need to be heard to women and girls are being bombed and given away in refugee camps al-jazeera has teams on the ground to bring you the winning documentaries and nine years on al-jazeera i got to commend you all i'm hearing is good journalism. and. in a world where journalism as an industry is changing we have al-jazeera fortunate to
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be able to continue to expand to continue to have that passenger drive and present the stories in a way that is important to our viewers. everyone has a story worth hearing. and cover those that are often ignored we don't weigh our coverage towards one particular region or continent that's why i joined al-jazeera . al-jazeera is very assertive we just tell the reality as it is out for a hardware contract they call it modern slavery we call for indonesia every day not only when there's a breaking news story and the news has a very fascinating country but very difficult to understand from the outside and because i've been living here for sixty years i know very well it's going on and i go out there and cover the whole country and even if you don't fear i guess the opportunity for a journalist to be a real journalist. with
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i know. i do. some of it i like every weekly news cycle brings a series of breaking stories but it was in the truck didn't happen the boy told through the eyes of the world journalists images matter a lot international politics joining the listening post as we turn the cameras on the media and focus on how they report on the stories that matter the most big third if someone from the country who guides you who needs you to this story of the bar line tells us who wrote been listening post on al-jazeera.
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are. you every your. rebels in syria reach a ceasefire agreement with government forces after two weeks of intense fighting and terror province. and we shall carry this is al jazeera live from doha also coming up beijing files another complaint to the world trade organization after washington and poses billions of dollars worth of tariffs on chinese imports and u.s. court orders the top administration to release the names of young migrant children who were separated from their parents at the mexico.
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