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tv   NEWS LIVE - 30  Al Jazeera  July 7, 2018 7:00am-7:34am +03

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rebels in southern syria reach a cease fire agreement with government forces after two weeks of intense fighting. and sam is a dan this is al jazeera live from doha also coming up china looks for closer economic ties with europe after the u.s. imposes tariffs and spanks fears of a trade war. the u.s. court orders the trumpet ministration to release the names of young migrant children separated from their parents of the border. and i'm sorry the thai fourball coach who led these players into a cave apologizes to parents. the
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syrian government is back in control of southern province after it reached a cease fire deal with rebels it ends more than two weeks of fighting that forced three hundred thirty thousand people to flee many to the border with jordan where the deal was brokered by russia which has been supporting the syrian government bernard smith reports from the jordanian syrian border for the first time in three years the syrian regime is back in control of its fronted with jule this military convoy flying russian and syrian flags rumble towards the nasi border crossing minutes after opposition fighters agree to surrender terms they had little choice in the face of overwhelming russian firepower the fighters will hand over heavy weapons and thousands of them and their families will be given safe passage to opposition held areas in the north of syria. syrian government forces swept through
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down a province backed up by russian air 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 their last remaining strongholds they still hold connla province at the front or with the israeli occupied golan heights recovering control of this area because our side's next goal. nearly three weeks of fighting for 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 but the russians will be expected to protect the syrians from any fear regime reprisals burnitz with al-jazeera on the jordan syria border now that hashimi is the director of the center for middle east studies at the university of denver he says the ceasefire is a psychological blow to 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 as a law so this is this is a ceasefire that effectively will i think play out in the exact same way that we saw this play out in east
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a few months ago and in aleppo but two years ago with the conquest of remaining the rain 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 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 of the world's chemical weapons watchdog has found evidence chlorine gas was used in an attack on the syrian city of duma in april a preliminary report by the o.p.c. w. says various chlorinated chemicals were found at the site dozens of people were
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killed in the attack on duma which was under rebel control at the time damascus has denied carrying out any chemical weapons attacks the u.s. and north korea have agreed to form working groups to settle details for denuclearizing the peninsula the u.s. secretary of state mike home pale has been holding talks with north korean officials in pyongyang a state department spokeswoman says pompei or has been very firm on the complete denuclearize ation of north korea sara clock has more from seoul. well today is the first full day and the only full day of negotiations on the trip to north korea it's a two day trip and both sides are seeking to progress on the singapore summit which was a pledge only it's a pomp and he is working high level working group have the task of nothing at the detail with north korea and that includes the next steps as well as a timeframe now north korea and the u.s. have established these high level working groups yesterday they had a three hour meeting on arrival and today they have the two high level work working
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groups are looking to progress on those talks now the u.s. delegation has told reporters that momentum is being made to implement a denuclearization plan at the u.s. state department is also said that pump arab raised the repatriation of remains of the american troops killed in the korean war now this was the fourth point in the pledge which was agreed to at the singapore summit and it was seen as a goodwill gesture on the behalf of the north koreans now on the nuclear disarmament front a questions have been raised about north korea's intentions in the wake of satellite data and intelligence reports which suggested they were expanding their nuclear facilities post the singapore summit so pumper and his delegation have this huge task of getting at fleshing out north korea's intentions and the test of the success of these talks will be whether or not both sides can agree to a plan and that is the timeframe and the method to denuclearize the korean peninsula china's premier league chairing is seeking closer trade ties with europe
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after the u.s. imposed tariffs on chinese goods lee is due to meet european leaders involved carrier on saturday beijing impose tariffs on thirty four billion dollars worth of u.s. goods on friday the move follows u.s. tariffs on chinese goods worth the same amount of 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 terrorists 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
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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 the u.s. competitors there will be no winners the question is going to be something lose more than anybody else right now though it looks like the united states is doing the opposite of what it intended it is in essence rallied the entire world against it and u.s. tariffs could ultimately hurt u.s. firms as well as chinese that's because far from being a 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 tariffs on use microchips that are designed and made in the u.s.
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so those companies will also be hits. it's thought the u.s. is imposing 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 garia chinese premier league co-chairing said foreign firms was safe in china. our view is 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 the interests uphold the authority of the world trade organization and see the multinational trade order as relations with the us continue to china's leaders appear to make new friends wherever they can probably bright al-jazeera beijing deborah elms is the executive director of the asian trade
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center in singapore she says tariffs are going to hit supply lines outside of the u.s. and china i think it's very problematic for companies here in asia because they're very tightly connected through supply chains so as an example one of the products that's on the list for tariff increases are boats you know recreational boats and so forth but a lot of the parts and components in a boat or railway cars or some of these big heavy machinery products that are on the list are manufactured or created across asia you know the seat belts the seats dashboards the steering wheels all of those things can be made by even small companies across asia and those are now affected by this tariff increase so as we imagine this to be between the u.s. and china it's not really just between the u.s. and china it's increasingly between global supply chains and global supply chains and a lots of collateral damage is going to result. the football coach who led the group
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of young players into the cave complex in thailand has apologized to the parents the scribbled note is the first contact from the twenty five year old who led the team into the on the ground caves rescuers say the twelve boys are not yet ready for the dangerous scuba dive to safety heavy rains a full cost that could worsen the flooding inside the has more from chiang rai two weeks after the boys on the coach went in to the town one cave here in northern thailand all options are on the table is to try to get them out you know we know the the most feasible one right now but very risky very dangerous is to bring them out the way they went in but there are many technical dives involved in that process it's going to take hours and we know that some of the health of the boys and their coats aren't the best so it's a very taxing operations they need to make sure they're in the best health as possible something that the families have done over the last several hours overnight and that is that there's been an exchange of hand written letters now we
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know over days they've been trying to put a communication line all the way into the boy's forty five kilometers into this cave system that failed it wasn't working so what they did is they exchanged old fashioned style handwritten notes the parents sent notes in there was actually notes very endearing we love you we miss you we're all standing by for you right outside the cave and there's also a note from a doctor saying don't worry your parents are being cared for out here and then the boys and their coach responded to that letter saying don't worry about us we're fine please go home please get some rest to their parents and one even said he's worried about the teachers because they've been out of school and they're worried about there being too much homework one boy even asked they have a barbecue pork ready for him when he comes out so and then during exchange but obviously it underlines just how emotional this is for the parents and all the relatives involved in this and this nation to this is something that they've been following again for these two weeks that these boys in the coach have been been in this cave system. still ahead on al jazeera standing their ground palestinians
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fight israel's latest attempt to clear their village in the occupied west bank plus . time charlie and in austria three thousand meters up taking you inside this mountain to a new museum dedicated to james bond. i . mean the weather sponsored by cattle always welcome will start by looking at the weather across the levant and western parts of asia generally fine set up just a chance of a shower on the southern side of the caspian sea again very warm conditions for much of iraq with temperatures in the south maybe pushing fifty degrees celsius shaping up to be very similar to some as we've had in recent years for sixteen heat wave conditions is also looking pretty hot around the side of the mediterranean behave always got the breezes just to help things along so pleasant enough thirty
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degrees expected in beirut heading south or is in the arabian peninsula pretty quiet at the moment not much in the way of breeze to speak of forty to forty three's medina and mecca here in doha has been around the forty two to forty three mark over the last few days may just get up to forty four certainly very humid weather the winds are very light at the moment and coming in from the gulf area across into southern portions of africa we've got some showers for mozambique but otherwise it's a generally fine picture across much of south africa brightness durbin there looking at highs of twenty one degrees little bit of cloud developing across botswana namibia just a small risk of a shower for central parts of africa we've got some heavy showers for parts of south sudan and towards the gulf of guinea region you can really see some very heavy rain affecting parts of west africa bamako mali should be largely dry. though whether it's sponsored by qatar. getting to the heart of the matter if you. the supreme leader calls you today and says let's have to would you accept facing
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realities what do you think reunification would look like there are two people think the peaceful unification is the only option for prosperity you. hear their story on talk to al-jazeera and. whether someone is telling. me i think it's how you approach an individual and that's what it is a certain way of doing it you can't just. fly out. watching out to syria time to recap the headlines the syrian government is back in control of southern province after it reached a ceasefire deal with rebels it ends more than two weeks of fighting there have
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displaced three hundred thirty thousand people the deal was brokered by russia which backs the government. the u.s. and north korea have agreed to form working groups the south out the details for denuclearizing the peninsula u.s. secretary of state mike pompei o is in pyongyang for the third time this year. the football coach who led the group of young players into the cave complex in thailand has apologized to parents rescuers say the twelve boys are not yet ready for the dangerous dive to safety. u.s. federal court has ordered the trumpet ministration to produce a list of all children under five forcibly separated from their parents at the border the order also requires the government to explain how each of the migrant children will be reunited with their families by choose day the separation sparked protests against donald trump's zero tolerance immigration policy john hundred has more from washington d.c. . the troubled ministration went to court in california to explain why it can't
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abide by an immigration court order the court had ordered that you 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 administration 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 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
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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. the raw report scott said and the u.a.e. 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 deployments of cuts of the forces on the ground in afghanistan. israel supreme court has issued a temporary injunction to block the demolition of a palestinian village in the occupied west bank the better when community of colonel ahmad is lived there since before israel's occupation of the area more than fifty years ago the israeli government says it can move to an area near a landfill charles stratford reports. born here in the bedouin village
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of trial in the israeli occupied west bank. he's lived here with his family all his life. he's ready 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 mean completely surrounding jerusalem and separating the north from the south of the occupied west bank. i am like i me mine 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 focused a lot of parents to leave in one thousand nine hundred eighty eight and now they are forcing us out but where can we go. what is really security forces raided kano 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
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a temporary injunction on the demolition of the village to 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 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 connel is a cold area see the israeli government has administrative and security control here
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israel says it confiscated the land around connel amr 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 while this community is suffering and such at that have been really 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 tires because these radial sorties would not allow proper 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.
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al-jazeera. in the occupied west bank well the powers have been meeting in vienna to try to salvage the two thousand and fifteen iran nuclear deal and it's the first time they've all met since the u.s. pulled out of the landmark agreement in may the u.s. is reimposing sanctions iran on iran rather and is threatening to punish countries who continue to do business with to iran ministers are trying to find a way to compensate iran for the sanctions there's been no breakthrough so far. we will not be able to compensate for everything that arises from companies pulling out of iran which feel their american business is 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 that completely abandoning the deal would cause even more harm to iran's economy therefore i hope we will move
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a step further today by making it clear to iran that we will deliver as far as that is possible. colombians are holding candlelight vigils across the country to demand action on recent killings of community leaders more than one hundred people have been killed in conflict areas since a peace deal was signed with fogge rebels in two thousand and sixteen rights groups blamed the violence on funk dissidents who didn't back the agreement understand that on p.r.t. has more from a vigil in the capital bogota. colombia they're holding. and that's in towns and villages across the country to bring attention to the continued murdered human rights defenders and social and community leaders the violence against human rights defenders like. these protestors are asking for an end to the killings and also and hand to what they see as indifference on 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. 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 the government needs to be made for twenty four killed just last month it can't be ignored we can't be going backwards after what we achieved. in past days that 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 there remind many colombians of the darker days of the country's internal conflict.
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if. al-jazeera. where ever you are. when the news breaks. on the old man city and the story builds to be forced to leave it would just be all 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 board winning documentaries and live news and out of your i got to commend
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you on hearing is good journalism. on air and online. with bureaus spanning six continents across the. al-jazeera correspondent she brings the stories they tell. her soon to in world news. and a new museum dedicated to double zero seven is about to open it's designed to look like the villains last charlie angelo reports. the
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journey starts with a cable car through the clouds emerging onto a mountaintop through a doorway cut into the rock and you've entered the world of james bond. the british super spy who survived decades of near death experiences and dispatched one hundred fifty villains over twenty four films. double o. seven elements is less of a museum more of a cinematic experience during visitors into different rooms dedicated to the music the gadgets and the exotic locations that make the james bond franchise the longest running of all time so. this mountain is where some of specter the latest film is shot the ice cube restaurant doubles as the hof the clinic and the road below is where the car chase happens the museum has been designed to feel like a filmic journey we designed each of the spaces to feel like it might be on set and
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we wanted to kind of set up the journey of our guests as as you might find the structure of the movie. darkness to lie drama to rest by you know throughout the whole experience the setting is utterly modern but the original character of james bond doesn't always sit well in the modern world his casual sexism and racism scene in some of the earlier films are not on display here the new bond while also a killer is also carrying the term bond girls is gone and the screams tell us that while he has had amorous liaisons with over forty women three quarters of them have tried to kill him. here you can see some of the key gadgets used in the films explore the omega laser watch. analyze the jag your car used inspector and play at being a secret agent getting your own identity but what the museum does best is deconstruct how the films are made this model shows how the outline chase sequence inspector is
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stitched together where the cameras are placed and how six planes become one removing some of the movie magic but hopefully inspiring another generation to enter the industry charlie al-jazeera buster. and let's take you through some of the headlines now the syrian government is back in control of southern province after it reached a cease fire deal with rebels it ends more than two weeks of fighting that has displaced three hundred thirty thousand people the deal was brokered by russia which banks the government the world's chemical weapons watchdog has found evidence chlorine gas was used in an attack on the syrian city of duma in april a preliminary report by the o.p.c. w. says various chlorinated chemicals of found at the site dozens of people were killed in the attack on duma which was under rebel control at the time syria's government has denied involvement. u.s.
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federal court has ordered the trumpet ministration to produce a list of all migrant children on the age of five who were separated from their parents at the border the order also requires the government to explain how each of the one hundred one children will be reunited with their families by choose day john hendren has more from washington d.c. there are three thousand children in total were separated from their parents in the administration still is trying to meet a goal of reuniting those children with their parents the judge said the troubled ministration might be able to get a delay if he 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 the u.s. and north korea have agreed to form working groups to set out details for denuclearizing the peninsula the u.s. secretary of state has been holding talks with north korean officials in pyongyang
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the state department spokeswoman says pump air has been very firm on complete denuclearize ation. the football coach who led the group of young players into the cave complex in thailand has apologized to their parents rescuers say the twelve boys are not yet ready for the dangerous dive to safety heavy rains of forecasts that could worsen the flooding inside china's premier league is seeking closer trade ties with europe after the u.s. imposed tariffs on chinese goods china has filed another complaint to the w t o talked about this here and now. a new series of rewind a cabaret or be able back to life i'm sorry and brand new updates on the best of al-jazeera documentaries the struggle continues book from bob till now for these distance rewind continues with the return of them is it can't stop shall come when
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one 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 only. you can watch as world. would see. the time for change has come. that was the message from malaysia's new needham has your muhammad off to his shock victory over the ruling coalition inmate. who turns ninety three next week is the world's oldest head of states he opposed the political forces he was once a part of the united malaya national organization or i'm know which of malaysia since its independence from britain in one nine hundred fifty seven. malaysia is a diverse nation with millions of muslims hindus buddhists and christians living side.

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