tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera July 7, 2018 5:00am-6:01am +03
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and refuse. to do news. this is al-jazeera. carried 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 there a problem it's. taking its case to the world trade organization beijing files another complaint after washington imposes billions of dollars for the tariffs on chinese imports. a u.s. court orders a trump ministrations to release the names of dung migrant children separated from their parents at the mexico border. and the sport it will be an all european semi final at the world cup after france beats iroquois in belgium topples brazil.
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the syrian government is back in control of southern province africa reached a cease fire deal with rebels and ends more than two weeks of fighting that it forced three hundred thirty thousand people to flee many of them to the border with jordan the steel was procured by russia which has been supporting the syrian government and its offensive and sarah bernard smith reports in 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 rumble towards the nazi border crossing minutes off to opposition fighters agree to surrender terms they are little choice in the face of overwhelming russian firepower the fighters will handle the heavy weapons and files of them and the families will be given safe passage to opposition held areas in the north of syria
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. 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 connecter a province at the front it would be israeli occupied golan heights recovering control of this area because our sides 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
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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 that's the russians who will be expected to protect the syrians from any fear regime reprisals burnitz with al-jazeera on the jordan syria border and their shame is the director of the center for middle east studies at the university of denver he says a ceasefire is a psychological blow for the rebels who are fast losing ground. effectively means the defeat of the remaining rebel held forces in southern syria russia has. 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 cleveland of
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a few months ago and in aleppo but two years ago with the conquest of remaining the remaining parts of syria by the assad regime backed by its international and regional allies 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 liberals chemical weapons watchdog has found evidence chlorine gas was used in an attack on the syrian city of doom and april a pulmonary report by the open seat of me says that there is coronated chemicals found at the site dozens of people were killed in that attack on two men which was
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under rebel control at the time damascus has deny in carrying out any chemical weapons attacks the u.s. and north korea have a great a form working groups to set out details for denuclearizing the peninsula there secretary of state my palm palace been holding talks with north korean officials in pyongyang says president is committed to a bright future for north korea as our clock is in the south korean capital seoul so what all do we know about what type of progress these talks have been making sarah. well as you mention here arrived yesterday he was greeted by north korea's top brass and and last night he had a three hour meeting with north korea's vice chairman kim john. and so is another meeting with him this morning which is underway as we speak my papa has been tweeting some various updates as you can imagine he's releasing very little but indications so far is that this progress is being made and he's told reporters that there is a continuing the momentum towards him from implementation of the deal and as we all
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know the singapore summit was last month but it delivered a pledge but very little details so what. has the difficult task of nothing out of the plan the time the time frame as well as the the process of denuclearize ation of the korean peninsula so these are critical talks and it's probably that the highest level talks since the summit in singapore last month he said he wants transparency on the weapons of mass destruction and the nuclear arsenal that exists in north korea so this all aside there has been increasing doubts about whether or not north korea's intentions it continues its pledge that was made in singapore post the release of some intelligence material an intelligence report and some satellite data which showed that that north korea was in fact expanding its nuclear facilities a factory and building on its arsenal so those questions have been raised in the lead up to his arrival and certainly now will be trying to establish what what
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exists the arsenal and what time frame north korea has in mind i should state that trump has also stated that they are not the u.s. is not softening it starts and is reportedly delivered a gift to kim jong un it's a it's a cd of the rocket man biotin john and he's said this reflects his commitment and their friendship and reflects the commitments that he expects can draw on to commit to with regard to the expectations of the singapore somers. interesting to say there are live in seoul sara thank you very. ours 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 in may the u.s. has re-imposing sanctions on iran and has threatened to punish countries who continue to do business with tehran ministers are trying to find a way to compensate iran for the sanctions but there have been no breakthroughs so far the participants in the just
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a critical firm commitment to the fool and effective implementation of the nuclear deal very cold that the disappear way 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 eleventh report by the international atomic energy agency on the twenty fourth of may confirming that iran is abiding by its nuclear related commitments china 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.
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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 call march the german foreign minister spoke to us a little earlier and admitted they can't. correct the star 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
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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 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 i don't fors they even called him disappointing i don't think much that happened on friday to that the. head of the news hour hand clothing . crap crisis the talmud voted for trump now feeling the pinch of his migration policies standing their ground the palestinians fight israel's latest attempt to
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clear their village in the occupied west bank and in sport it's party time in france as persians take to the streets to celebrate their world cup quarter final victory. place in thailand said the twelve boys and their football coach trapped inside that cave are not ready for the dangerous dive to get out heavy rains are forecast that could worsen flooding inside the cave and forced rescuers to retrieve them despite the risk the boys are being taught to dive many don't know how to swim the football team has been stuck since june twenty third that is from the cave flooded blocking the exit let's go live to scott hyde lawyer who has been following this every day so scott are they is it seem seeming that they're fully committed to the idea that the only way to get these boys and their coach out is the same way they went in by
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diving is that the only way. michele right now that is the most feasible way that's a way where they can actually see that there is a process a very difficult and dangerous process but that's one way that they can actually see ok they could possibly come up this way they're exploring other ideas other options and that is essentially another exit another escape route if you will and that is being explored up in the hills above where they are in the cave you know we know where they are in the cave now based on that the geography of the cave system itself what they're trying to do is pinpoint the location above ground and if they can do that what they're going to explore what they're going to try to do is see if there are any natural ways into the cave in that area around the area where the boys are or drill down to the boys obviously that is going to be a very complex situation that doesn't have any guarantees so if they find where they are they're using sophisticated devices they can use g.p.s. so they're using
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a device that actually detects fault lines under the ground they're using that up there to see if they can figure out exactly above ground where the boys are then try to drill so there are a lot of steps in that and they're a lot of things that could go wrong with that but right now they're seeing the tunnel as they start coming up the cave as you said the way they went in is the best option it's not a feasible option right now because there are so many factors at play changing factors at play they've decided not to have them come out yet but again it's a very very fluid situation you know there wasn't like a nine am saturday morning because the rains are forecast and we're going to try to get these boys out there so many different factors at play and so many different decisions to be made before they can start pulling those boys out tell us some of the brain power that's at play trying to figure out the best thing to do there really are some heavy hitters involved in this huge team trying to save them. absolutely here you have a very large international team you had experts divers from around the world coming in and going out and there's been a constant cycle we know that
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a british diving team is actually kind of helping lead the operation right now cave divers who are very very experienced at this you know on must the businessman it from the united states he is also going to chimed in and subject justin's an offering to help they're sending a team here what they're going to be doing it looks like is focusing on batteries and scanning equipment those are really really necessary here because you you know when you look at the system that goes into the cave there are kind of hold up positions that they have held that will have charging facilities or i should say electric electricity supplies oxygen tanks so that is very critical to keep those up and running and obviously relying on batteries or charging cells in those areas instead of a hard line of electricity coming into the cave is much more feasible it's much more reliable quite honestly and scanning devices obviously that would help with what i was just describing if they can figure out where exactly in this mountain range where those boys are they can maybe try to drill down to do something in that way so yes anything right now any technology that can help them figure out another
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way or the the one way they know is to come out the way they went in always welcome yet seems like any and everything is on the table as it should be scott highlife press inching right thank you french investigators say a cockpit fire likely caused an idjit egypt air jet to crash into the mediterranean two years ago and this contradicts the gyptian aviation authorities who suggested earlier bus was brought down deliberately and says traces of explosives were found on victims' remains all sixty six passengers and crew died when flight m s eight zero four crashed on its way from paris to cairo. china has filed another complaint against the u.s. to the world trade organization after the trump of ministration impose tariffs on thirty four billion dollars worth of chinese goods asia's accusing washington is 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
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the us tiris were imposed china promised to be true to its word. 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 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 there will be no winners the question is will there be something lose
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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 tyrus 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 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. our view is
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that trade war is never a solution china would never start a trade but if any party resorts to increase of tariffs then china will take measures in response to protect step up interests uphold the authority of the world trade organization and see if the multinational trade order 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 or clockers international trade strategist kerry clark she and associates a geo political trade consultancy. i appreciate your time very much so this complaint complaints rather poor all that china has filed with the how does that work i mean how quickly well there are actually some action from the deputy one way or another. the last to spirit idea that the w t o took six years it's not a speedy process and the americans are slowing it down even more by refusing to
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approve new judges for the up like body six year we the problem or probably be over you know can't go ahead the problem will be over before they get a ruling ok so that seems to. take so long to get a ruling. that seems to so it sounds like you're saying it sounds like you're saying that it's a matter of for a matter of form exactly it seems like it's just for show almost semantics but not actually any real avenue to get this situation solved so sense doesn't really seem to be an option what options are on the table for either side to keep this from escalating assuming either side wants to keep it from escalating and i think the chinese want to keep it from escalating even further because they have more exports to the united states than the other way around so china has more to lose. so is that why they're trying to play by the rules is that why president
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is pushing this because he feels that that he and the u.s. have the upper hand he feels he does but he's developing all kinds of political problems at home with farmers with other manufacturing industries who are losing out by this and it's going to be a big hit on consumers if you can't put a twenty five percent tariff. on a whole range of goods and expect prices to stay the same they're going to go up so if those things do play out the way that you say and there's every reason to believe that they will might it might it not be china that gets donald trump to back down might it actually be something that happens in the states that gets him to change his position. i suspect that. if trump decides that he needs china to help them more with north korea and
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problems in asia then we'll find that they'll reach a solution and everything will be fine again it can happen that quickly or it can take years i'll have to say i'm mr clark peter clark thank you for your insight we appreciate it. and other country affected by chaunce hardline approach to trade tariffs is 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 at 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
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a trade war we point the guns at ourselves yes federal court has ordered the trump the ministration to produce a list of all children under five forcibly separated from their parents at the border with mexico border also requires the government to explain how each of the migrant children will be reunited with their families and they want that explained by tuesday the separations sparked a fierce outcry in protest against donald trump's zero tolerance immigration policy john hendren has more from washington d.c. . the troubled ministration went to court in california to explain why it can't abide by an immigration court order the court had ordered that the administration had to reunite the parents of undocumented children who had been separated at the border with those children within thirty days but for children under five and there are about one hundred and one of those that had to reunite them by this coming tuesday it ministration was in court explaining it can't do that because you couldn't locate only about half or forty six of those one hundred one children
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under five there are three thousand children in total who were separated from their parents and the administration still is trying to meet a goal of reuniting those children with their parents the judge said the top administration might be able to get a delay if it could produce a list of these one hundred one children and their parents by five pm on saturday so that is what the administration is looking at but what this means is that the administration did not have a plan in one throws children with their parents when it separated the government lawyer said that the government would comply with that order but she would not personally be there for the saturday meeting because she had a dog sitting duties. b.s.e. food industry is feeling the pinch of trump's tightening immigration policies with a shortage of laborers and maryland's crabmeat sector say many businesses that employ foreign workers are now in danger of shutting down. reports or hooper's island. just as essential to life on hoopers island as water and
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air are the crabs. it's all of it i mean if we don't have. we don't have nothing it's all 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 perfecting a little 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
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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 didn't get it 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 the crew here to get the owner harry phillips sells bait fish to survive i can't do this or. i mean. hurt real bad. in a community this small the pain spreads quickly the general store has fewer customers who have fewer dollars to spend. actually almost halted
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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. 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 still ahead. demand action to stop violence despite a peace deal with park rebels. divided cabin a craze on a way forward to minimize the economic impact. and the sports arena williams fights back to stay on track for her.
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the weather sponsored by qatar. welcome back as we look at the weather conditions across central and southern parts of china it's looking pretty wet up next twenty four hours the gobi some localized flooding from this weather system as it slowly sinks southward telling brighter weather the coming to shanghai about stage but the wet weather could well extend into northern parts of vietnam and laos otherwise for me and mark and we're looking at some heavy showers at least for more western areas looks to be pretty wet through the course of saturday and sunday the getting see that area of rain sinking southward some very heavy rain likely across the philippines too as you look at weather conditions further south you can see that rain across central northern parts of the philippines once you come south it starts to get better in fact for borneo much the time it should be dry and fine want to show is across the north slope down somewhere but otherwise for much of java valley
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east timor weather conditions looking good cimatron ok singapore kuala lumpur and northward into thailand cherry not too bad one or two showers around the gulf of thailand you may see the odd share in bangkok but i think for much the time will just be hot and humid so move into south asia plenty of showers stones through the western ghats but also the circulation of low pressure affecting poor in this general area could be some very heavy rain here for the northeast looking drawing fire as a warm one in delhi with a maximum of forty one. the weather. scene but rarely heard two million street children live a desperate existence when he meets the child reporters from the slumdog press who are giving a voice to invisible children and how does era. zero .
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a new series of rewind i can bring your people back to life i'm sorry and bring you updates on the best of al-jazeera documentaries the struggle continues book from back to the. used to students rewind continues with the return of the lizard king steve show someone who want east upwards of two hundred species are going extinct every twenty four hours and a lot of that is attributed to wildlife trafficking rewind on al-jazeera. are watching al-jazeera let's recap the top stories for you right now the syrian
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government is back in control of southern sarah province after reached a cease fire deal with rebels and ends more than two weeks of fighting that had displaced three hundred thirty thousand people the deals brokered by russia which backs the government. the u.s. and north korea have agreed to form working groups to set out the details for denuclearizing the peninsula u.s. secretary of state might compare us n.p.r. for the third time this year. and u.s. federal court has ordered the top administration to produce a list of all migrant children under the age of five who are separated from their parents at the mexico border that order also requires the government to explain how each of these children will be reunited with their parents and they want that list by tuesday. there have been protests in haiti's capital port au prince over the increase in the cost of petrol demonstrators built barricades and burned tires to block a major streets in the city earlier the commerce and economic ministries hit the cost of diesel. kerosene the government agreed to reduce fuel subsidies and that
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the word order to receive a from the international monetary fund. the prime minister and. cabinet has agreed on what it wants from the european union on trade after britain leaves the block. to resolve party infighting reports. the entire cabinet arrived one by one by car to resume a's official residence sixty kilometers outside london at the start of the talks going in the government was split between those largely on the right of the conservative party demanding a so-called hard break said and those loyal to the prime minister looking for a softer divorce deal with the e.u. to prevent unwanted leaks ministers were told to hand over their smartphones and watches some ten hours later the conclave dispersed and the prime minister emerged an agreement reached cabinet has agreed to our collective position on the future.
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and apia proposal will create a new free trade area which establishes a common rulebook on industrial goods and i cultural projects this will maintain high standards but we will ensure that no changes can take place without the approval of parliament at the core of friday's agreement is the establishment of a free trade area put goods avoiding the deeper return to customs checks on the border between northern ireland and the republic of ireland that would involve the u.k. an e.u. sharing rules in all goods including industrial and agricultural goods but the u.k. service sector would be granted regulate free flexibility the u.k. will have the power to set tariffs some goods entering the country giving it the ability to strike new international trade deals it's taken two years to reach this point a collective position on how best to move forward with trade talks with the e.u. but it is of course only the first hurdle this proposal will form the backbone of a pre legal document a white paper that may face amendments and parliament before eventually being put
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before the e.u. which going to accept or reject it. the chief negotiator michel barnier reacted cautiously to the plan he repeated comments he made earlier in the day about the need for workable solutions we are i am ready to adopt a world for should look is relying change i mean short we need to quickly really stick and workable solution and obviously we look forward to do you case white paper the opposition labor party's brecht's secretary said he doubted the conservative government's deal would survive further scrutiny from m.p.'s from all parties demanding a clean heart break from the e.u. three tomato plant would nevertheless be presented to parliament next week and have barca al-jazeera westminster the mayor ka-zar has that france's president to discuss to walk head against qatar and to fight against terrorism both leaders say
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they are committed to building a strong alliance that has been a major ally a sense saudi arabia egypt and bahrain cut diplomatic and trade ties with qatar. reports in paris. a strong show of support from the french president to the emir of qatar emmanuelle macro refer to his gast as an important partner in the fight against terrorism and qatar as a stabilizing force in the middle east look at the table of terrorism friend of france a reliable partner i think we were two alongside the middle determined fashion to fight terrorism and promote peace in north africa and the middle east you know you shaped i mean been hammered fanny's 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.
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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 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
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a crucial role in the jaded 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 grading 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 science to set aside their difference. but sun's arabia has the force to do warned it might take action if the top of chases the russian made as
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four hundred crossed system an escalation that is likely to prolong the gulf dispute which has plunged the region into its worst political crisis in decades. paris there reports qatar and the united arab emirates are set to become the newest members of the u.s. and nato led coalition in afghanistan 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 country forces on the ground in afghanistan lawrence korb is senior fellow at the center for american progress and former u.s. assistant secretary defense he joins us live from delaware via skype and we appreciate it very much so how does something like this come to be is the help sought out or do the countries approach nato about being part of the coalition how does this work well basically i think you need to look coalition has been going. on who's involved on iraq thirty nine corn while they did not want this conflict to be
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seen as wants to follow me and was trying to you know tell you. i'm not going to run most muslim country and got our homes lost. in the air war already so this is all just you know made it round to what they want and so it doesn't necessarily matter how many ground troops it is or is it more the significance of what you said of the type of message that this could send. i think it's much more significant the type of message it sends i mean when you know how something like sixteen thousand troops they are in afghanistan who are devising and assisting the afghan military which is much bigger but the fact that you have muslim countries there i think sends a signal to the people in the region that this is not trying to reimpose follow any
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alyssum or to undermine their wombs that united values so. so going forward what type of difference our progress can this make and what's happening in afghanistan how much does it does outside outside advisors really make a difference and and helping you know make some sort of progress in the stale somewhat of a stalemate there well there's no doubt about it but the fact that you do have some more troops they can go into areas where they've united states have not been very very successful because they know the language of all not all of those things and obviously being of the same religion that they know the ups and know the cost them because what's happened is the u.s. forces are taken over an area that assumes that only the taliban come back in so maybe they can we some of the force will go under and the u.a.e. there you know the major coalition enough people who. are
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a score of always good to air and say thank you very much thank you for having me. colombians are holding candlelight vigils across the country to demand action following the recent killings of community leaders more than one hundred people have been killed in conflict areas sense a peace deal was signed with park rebels in two thousand and sixteen rights groups claim the violence on part dissidents who did not back the agreement. he has more from a vigil in the capital bogota. some of us are holding people and that's in the fifty pounds and villages across the country to bring attention to the continued murder of a human rights defenders and social and community leaders the violence against human rights defenders says since i haven't. read back and see. these protesters are asking for an end to the killings and also and hands to what they see as indifference on the part of the many colombian said and they're asking the
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government to do more to defend them and also recognize what they see as the systematic nature of these killings this impact those eboli go. it's a symbolic act to reject the genocide against social leaders and the political opposition we want to tell the world that in colombia human rights are still not respected any money but that's because the government needs to be made for twenty four killed just last month it can't be ignored we can't be going back quits after what we achieved twenty pence. in past days the united nations in your sleep rejected and condemned the killings also asking the colombian government for but for the people here the government so far has been able or unwilling to do enough to save the life of these people that remind many columbians of the darker days of the country's internal conflicts former pakistani prime minister nawaz sharif has been sentenced in absentia to ten years and prison for corruption his daughter
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received a seven year prison term they were convicted of violent. serious properties in london with under clarity and sixty seven year old who is in london denies any wrongdoing but says he will eventually return to pakistan he was removed from office last year over other corruption allegations and banned from politics for life israel supreme court has issued a temporary injunction to block the demolition of a palestinian village in the occupied west bank the bedouin community of kanaka maher has lived there since before israel's occupation of the area more than fifty years ago israeli government says they can move to an area near a landfill. reports sulaiman abu who was born here in the bedouin village you crawl into in the israeli occupied west bank he's lived here with his family all his life . these rady government wants to demolish and many other bedouin villages as part of a plan called easy one which involves expanding the illegal settlement of mala i do
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mean completely surrounding jerusalem and separating the north from the south of the occupied west bank. i am like any man i'm asking for freedom like any is that i only i have the right to live and to have my freedom like he does they photo out of bed and still leave in one nine hundred forty eight and now they are forcing us out but where can we go. that one israeli security forces raided qana on wednesday arresting and injuring a number of people. a day later bulldozers began clearing a path to the village. but late on friday israel supreme court put a temporary injunction on the demolition of the village after the palestinian authority submitted documents it saves show palestinians have owned the land since before israel's one nine hundred sixty seven occupation. activists palestinian
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villages and politicians recognize that the fight to protect twenty three other villages in this area that also faced them edition is far from over yet but they say this case is important because they want support from the international community they say that it highlights how israel continues to expand its settlements which is illegal according to international law under the one nine hundred ninety three oslo agreement between israel and palestine the occupied west bank was divided into three zones conall is the most cold areas see the israeli government has administrative and security control here israel says it confiscated the land around connel and in the one nine hundred seventy s. and has a right to build here. palestinian politicians say they have proof the land is still owned and least the bedouin by palestinians and these illegal. activity have swimming pools have schools have going to the gardens have everything
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while this community is suffering in such a terrible way what is this if it is not a system of apartheid sulaiman shows us the school that was built in two thousand and nine using timers because these radio sorties would not allow profit building materials into the village israel has always refused to issue building permits or supply the village with water and electricity they say the palestinians here can move to another area around twelve kilometers away near a landfill. and his fellow villagers say they will not leave stratford al-jazeera. in the occupied west bank or turkish court has handed down prison sentences to journalists it says are linked to the july of sixteen to july two thousand and sixteen that as failed coup thirty journalists and executives from the summer newspaper were arrested in september two thousand and sixteen all denied any involvement the sentences range from eight to ten and
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a half years in which has been shut down muslim to the u.s. bates cleric ayatollah golan who the turkish government blames for that attempt. british police in amesbury and solsbury are searching for a small vial fair to be contaminated with the nerve agent nova chalk police believe a couple may have handled the vial when they fell ill a week ago officers have been searching places where the two visited it's believed the vile may have been thrown away by whoever used the nerve gas against a former russian spy service ripple and his daughter and march. it was central mind area accusing the government of failing to protect them from escalating violence farming communities are battling a matic cattle herders in a conflict over fertile land at least two hundred people had been killed in recent weeks and many forced from their homes many more from jail sent letters state. orphaned by a conflict she knows nothing about this toddler fighting for life was brought to
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hospital with broken limbs and stab wounds our parents didn't survive. the the old villages in troublous were all affected by a conflict that many of us were after a three year break. by the very rude shock to me that this sim community would visit. attacks again and was will lead to these number of killings in blood to be total investigation of us root cause of disgrace it may be beyond what was the government responded by deploying more troops but that hasn't stopped the flow of refugees. but only could areas husband was a casualty he didn't leave when others fled she's in causal. i feel powerless without him. you know when i don't know what happened
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to me or the kids who are in school i don't know but people do this is a grave of the only victim of the attack on cockroach fish witnesses say when the religious sense then they moved to us and from the question protected by the security forces but many vulnerable villages once or lucky only 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 play two is between two ethnic groups the bureau 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 seclude legal is
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some under wrote some in the reordering field and so most of us we continue 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 again you also say that with nigeria's campaign season opening politicians are exploiting the situation to their advantage. al-jazeera central nigeria. still ahead on al-jazeera all the sports include i'm andy richardson at the world cup in russia where for just the fifth time in history only european seems to be
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taking part in the semifinals. july on al-jazeera in a new series of head to head maddy has been tackled the big issues with hard hitting questions pakistanis going to the polls to elect a new government what harm will the country take people in power continues to examine the use and abuse of power around the world a generation of voters in zimbabwe grew up knowing only the leadership of robert mugabe now they're electing a new president and the first time since independence his name's not on the ballot on television and online the stream continues to tap into the extraordinary potential of social media to disseminate news july on al-jazeera. capturing a moment in time. snapshots of other lives other stories. providing
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when the news breaks. on the mailman city and the story builds to be forced to leave it would just be when people need to be heard women and girls are being bought and given away in refugee camps al-jazeera has teams on the ground to bring you the winning documentaries and use analogies i got to commend you all i'm
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hearing is good journalism. and. in a world where journalism as an industry is changing we had fortunate to be able to continue to expand to continue to have that passen that drive and present the stories in a way that is important to worthless. 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 . with bureaus spanning six continents across the globe. to. al-jazeera correspondents live in green the stories they tell.
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in world news one of the really special things that work in progress here is that even as a camera woman i get to have so much empathy and contribution to a story i feel we cover this region better than anyone else working for it as it is that it channels they believe but the good because you have a lot of people that are divided on political issues we are we the people we live to tell the real stories just mended is to deliver in-depth journalism we don't feel inferior to the audience across the globe. al-jazeera. where ever you want.
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peace that we could. have brought us peace of mind important and know we can grow the invest. money and do many things that before the previous feel what happened the war. time is coming we really believe. put the seal on the back to reality was. the theme because they see this meeting. i believe the future of the plantation and he put it to you he's pretty good at that but we must cease from being the supplier of rubbish he is to. an end exporting
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barely read it but then put out. two forms but it needs. to be able to enjoy the finest cup of tea in the world. the more so wonderful herbie that would tell you the. dot of the gods problems would be nice and seventy. three years old who got. there the quads the illusion among consumers to go back to quality in bed happened . to on who would be born. creeped t. read the same enjoyment as it's big to be to do the deed that will predict why us will people still on. the rule. and. all you know.
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into the heart of the matter if well stuff i can see the turkish cypriot leader calls you today and says let's have talks would you accept basing realities what do you think reunification of look like there are two people think the peace for unification is the only option for prosperity or for south korea here their story on talk to how does iraq. the new poll ranks mexico city is the pull worst in the world for sexual violence many women are attacked while moving in the crowded spaces of the metro buses and even at the hands of taxi drivers the conversation starts with do you have a boyfriend you're very pretty and young you feel unsafe threatened you think about how to react what do i do if this gets worse now mahdi army uses a new service it's called loud drive it's for women passages only and drawn by women drivers pull for some extra features like a panic button and twenty four seven monitoring of drivers expelled from their base
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in jordan in lebanon less than a little. rebellion is rising in the rings. but was this just another inevitable step on the road. this is a long story short of the conflict that would cost out of sight his leadership in life. chronicling her story the struggle for pounced. on the history of the revolution and now just. one of the really special things about working for al-jazeera is that even as a camera woman i get to have so much empathy and contribution to a story i feel we cover this region better than anyone else would be for us as you know is that it turns the body but the good because you have a lot of people that are divided on political issues we are we the people we live to tell the real stories are just mended is to deliver in-depth journalism we don't feel inferior to the audience across the globe.
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rebels in southern syria reach a cease fire agreement with government forces after two weeks of intense fighting. i'm sami's a than this is al jazeera live from dollhouse coming up beijing imposes tariffs on u.s. goods prompting fears of a global trade war. the u.s. court orders the trumpet ministration to release the names of young migrant children who are separated from their parents at the mexico border. and rescue teams say they are trapped footballers are not yet ready to dive to safety despite heavy monsoon rains being for.
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