tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera July 8, 2018 3:00am-3:34am +03
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institutions is not just something usual not just some people. us about has some skills and capacities to influence and to infiltrate and i think the government this time because there have been so kind of improvement in security but for these kinds of attacks it seems a problem for the somali government to start you know how difficult is it going to be if if you have this type of weakness within the somali security forces how does the government now act to prevent an elimination this infiltration by al-shabaab. i think it's get it takes for some time for the government to eliminate or to be able to prevent these kind of attacks because these some kind of you know al-shabaab have been taken and found the. way the look was within the. weaknesses within the security institution is these kind of
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a problem is intelligence issues is this your issue is a common issues is it is only going to nation needs are within the security institutions and also information sharing so i think the government doesn't have a lot of options when it comes to these they have to go back to their offices of being the wrong with the security has to to sions about how al shabaab has managed to infiltrate government institution is government money to go through all these points and go all the way into the house it's not a fast time and it's not going to be the last time i think there's this kind of a need of of learning a lesson from here there's a kind of a need of thinking why these things happen why there is always an opportunity and space for our shop to operate within the government area is visually said billy protected part of the of the of. well thank you very much we do appreciate you
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taking the time to speak to us here on the news hour dean rubble joining us there from nairobi thank you on our families of the young boys trapped in a cave in thailand and receive notes from s. sons passed to them by rescuers this is the first contact they've had since the boys went missing two weeks ago there's no word yet on when an attempt will be made to bring them out and concerns are also growing about oxygen levels inside the cave scott hyla is in chandler i. coming from hundreds of meters deep within this mountain handwritten notes from the trip thirteen were delivered to the eager and worried parents outside the town long cave it was the first direct contact they've had since the boys went missing one read i love you mom i love you dad and he placed an order for his first meal when he gets out barbecued pork a seal diver added a note don't worry everyone is strong another note came from the twenty five year
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old football coach who took them into the cave he apologized to the parents and said they were being well taken care of the parents then wrote notes of their own also hand delivered the nearly five kilometers into the cave. twelve year old proper out son keogh is a novice monk at a temple just next to the football pitch where the boys were two weeks ago just before they went into the cave the temple is believed to be a guardian for the cave it's currently also acting as a base for some soldiers working on the rescue effort so i looked on right now i want them to be patient and i want them out as soon as they can the head of the rescue operation says that the challenges they're facing are unprecedented and some of the most experience and best rescuers in the world are involved concerns are growing about oxygen levels in the sections of the cave not under water and not just for the area where the boys in the coach are also where rescuers are staging equipment and working from now on only essential stuff will be in the cave he
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called every risk you dive a reaches the limit in the third chamber and i cannot go further than that such a risk you mission has never happened before on this planet it requires both expert knowledge and skill maybe. he went on to say that more than one hundred locations above the cave have been drilled looking for an alternate escape route as the rescue leaders plot the safest way to get the boys out the more than one thousand on hand to help with that plan is launched grab as much rest as they can it's got hotter al-jazeera chiang rai. you know at the news hour live from london much more still to tell you about more details are emerging about the surrender deal in southern syria and how russia will be involved a steep rise in fuel prices trigger violent protests in haiti. and the late second world number one sign a hell of a void the slide of the top seeds of one world and. more
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than one and a half million people in japan have been ordered to leave their homes after torrential rainfall triggered floods and landslides at least thirty eight people have died and dozens are missing with the worst flooding recorded from the city of kyoto to japan's southern tip shallop ballasts reports. across half a nation a sea of muddy water flooding has rich japan and her with central and southern regions largely submerged. the death toll has steadily climbed an elderly man was swept into a swollen river in her shima homes have collapsed and landslides have buried at least ten people east to west from kioto south dozens of people are missing or not going out of. my deepest condolences to the victims and my sympathies to all people who have been affected. in central and southern regions one point six million
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people have been handed evacuation orders another three million have been advised to leave the heavy rain is forecast into monday. heavy rain will continue in the area from western to eastern japan and it will be historic torrential rainfall which could be the heaviest rain ever recorded nearly fifty thousand police firefighters and civil defense personnel have been deployed. riverside pramod not a major tourist spot was shot when the comma river burst its banks. roads and bridges a shot for hundreds of kilometers warnings have been issued for landslide prone areas this rainfall is hitting basically everywhere at once so there's no it's difficult for the emergency services to prioritize where they should go first because there's so many things happening all at once and obviously if a road is washed out or bridges destroyed even if you have a nice fire engine or ambulance you can't get to some of the places that you need
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to go to and responders have experience rule areas of japan struggle with flooding at this time every year but this year there were special circumstances typhoon proper and into the sea of japan on choose day high winds taunting japan southern islands before it moved north dropping unprecedented rainfall the typhoon has passed a move that means little to those navigating its rest china ballasts al-jazeera. a march organized by pro migrant groups as arrived in calgary in france a mission to raise awareness of the appalling conditions facing people trying to get to the u.k. they started inventing media in italy on april thirtieth the route has sixty stages including nice musée. in paris. from cal a they will cross into dover in the u.k. and travel to london where the march officially ends attack. well i
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think the mug has finally arrived in cali off to boulder to opposing four hundred colleges as dog days in the northern italian town of bend to make it that is retrace the route that has taken place so many refugees and migrants as they try to reach this. because many of them of course most detroit and reach britain well the aim of this is really to try and raise awareness about the plight of refugees and with me is one of the people who will say that way maya can forty miles what was your message along the way as you won't through towns and villages we we had three messages we wanted to do a protest against the borders of both borders in italy and in france where the government prevents people from coming in and fresh. kenyan border and from the prevents people from going out of the british borders as one thing we wanted to demand. a decent dignified welcome of refugees and we also wanted to do and
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asked book the end of the cream and i dish and of actually the idea to was your refugees now you've been based in cali for years i mean it must be quite moving actually arriving here often all this time and it's actually strange to come you know we've been so long on the march with in towns that we didn't know and here we are in a town that we know meeting people that we know but it's just absolutely incredible to see i mean the people that are here and how joyful it is and i mean we are surrounded you see has many many people and we're very very excited about that all right thank you very much mark and forty who's walked all of this journey from northern italy to colors i said to raise awareness of the conditions of for refugees the journeys that they have to make which is so good difficult in this march of causeway and in london symbolically the end of this journey will take place on sunday. officials in yemen say more than one hundred sixty five people.
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have been killed in fighting between who sees in the saudi led coalition the fighting has been concentrated around the district of at the height which includes the coastal road leading to the city of data local sources have told al jazeera that pro-government forces have taken control of many areas into the sea leader has called for more reinforcements to help defend the west coast meanwhile syrian soldiers have been celebrating the recapture of the main border crossing with jordan government forces re took the crossing point on friday following a cease fire deal for rebels to hand over territory in the province of daraa a russian backed government offensive as calls more than three hundred thousand people to flee the region in recent weeks well the crossing had been controlled by rebels since two thousand and fifteen cutting off the main trade route for syrian goods going to jordan and the gulf countries the surrender deal has been brokered by the russians it's also highly symbolic for the syrian government is where the uprising against president bashar assad first began in two thousand and eleven
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al-jazeera has been its myth has more now from the jordanian side of the border crossing. russia's defense ministry confirmed the terms on which opposition fighters would hand over their weapons and be given safe passage to the north of syria and russia's involvement is significant and important particularly for the jordanians is the jordanians who are expecting the russians to supervise security on the syrian side of the border the jordanians particularly concerned on have made it clear they do not want the involvement of any iranian backed as ball or shia militias on the syrian side of the border near jordan those hezbollah has been involved in the fight to retake data jordan does not want them to be establishing a presence on this border russia security concerns for the lay those fears of jordan and the russians also expected to keep an eye on syrian security forces and make sure there are no reprisal attacks on displaced people who fled the fighting
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in data province jordan wants those displaced people to go back home they need to feel safe and secure that they can go back home and again the jordanians will expect and hope that the russian police military police patrolling along the border will allay any fears that those displaced people might have. hundreds of mourners have marched in gaza at the funeral of a palestinian man killed on the israeli border on friday. the twenty two year old was reportedly killed by israeli fire as he ran towards the border fence gaza's health ministry says twenty four others were injured more than one hundred twenty five palestinians have been killed since week the protests against israeli land confiscation began in much. well now three people including a teenage girl have been killed after security forces in indian administered kashmir opened fire on protesters five others have been critically injured in the
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violence the region is preparing to mark the second anniversary of the death of a prominent rebel leader internet access has been restricted in checkpoints put in place after demonstrations in the cold area. well now to haiti where at least one person has been killed off to protest that turned violent a steep increase in fuel prices has angered people who say they're already dealing with poverty on a daily basis. diane reports. the outrage was immediate fires set roads blocked protesters say they can't afford haiti's new fuel prices with chaos out on the street at the capital port au prince several people decided to spend the night at work many businesses close their doors this is . why wife is going to deliver a baby she needs a says or area but every hospital we go to we can't find a doctor because of the protests i don't know what to do the government announced
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an increase of up to fifty percent for diesel gasoline and kerrison but the hike a leader of diesel will now cost four dollars nearly five dollars for regular gas in a country were about eighty percent of workers earn less than two dollars a day the news wasn't received well you know move. we're speaking up against the president he hasn't delivered on the promises he made during his campaign from food to job creation we haven't seen anything since he came into power. and that's when our president of an eloise took office last year promising to improve the economy the government says that this move is part of that process. in february haiti's government agreed to reduce fuel subsidies in exchange for aid from the international monetary fund the protesters say they are tired of empty promises they fear more prices will go up while their wages stay the same. of opus order yun
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al-jazeera. a dozen vehicles have been set on fire in the french city of months off to a young man was shot dead by police has been rioting every night since the victim died on tuesday from a single bullet wound to the neck the lawyer for the policeman says he's now been charged with manslaughter the officer originally said he was acting in self-defense or trying to arrest the twenty two year old but later told investigators that you fired his gun by accident stay with us on the news hour much more still ahead a look at how zimbabwe's president is showing his resilience just two weeks after surviving a grenade attack at a rally. we meet the bedouin community at risk from israeli demolitions in new york you applied west bank. and jubilant scenes in england as fans contemplate the possibility that team could go all the way up the wild card.
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hello there we're seeing a little bit of cloud drift its way across the caspian sea at the moment you can see it here on the satellite picture drifting its way towards the east and it's giving us a few showers over parts of georgia and stretching down just into the northern parts of iran that elsewhere the really just very very hot for many of us so we're looking at a top temperature in baghdad over around forty six degrees that's not quite as hot as it has been but certainly it is very high the temperatures in doha will be rising over the next few days and that's because the humidity will be dropping off a bit so forty four degrees will be our maximum on sunday and on monday is the day when we're going to have very strong winds heading down from the northwest so a dry ed direction it won't be that humid but it will certainly be hot right about forty five towards the west and also a lot of the showers here over parts of eritrea some of them very heavy indeed down tools the southern parts of africa for many of us here it is fine and dry but not
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quite for all of us we're seeing the winds bring in more in the way of cloud along the east coast so for some of us in mozambique we could expect to see a few heavy showers as we can in the eastern parts of madagascar as well generally the further west you are there's a better chance of getting away with a dry day if you look at the central part so obama there's just a few showers and some of them could be heavy. the story of a friendship between a filmmaker and a seven year old girl would mean. giving whom it into a refugee family being the syrian war. in the face of deep rooted tension between the libyan ease and the refugees. my syrian friends. on al-jazeera.
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are. getting to the heart of the matter if. the supreme leader calls you today and says let's have talks would you accept facing new realities what do you think reunification would look like rid of people the peaceful infusion is the only option for prosperity or for south korea hear their story on talk to al-jazeera. but look at the top stories for you now the u.s. and north korea have given conflicting statements of the success of top level talks
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in pyongyang and secretary of state my pond bio says they were productive but north korea is saying they were extremely regrettable. at least eight people have been killed in two bomb blasts and a gun battle as a government building in the somali capital mogadishu. and a group of young footballers trapped in a cave in thailand of exchanged letters with their families the boys in their coach have been stuck there for more than two weeks. a lot of zimbabwe a leader is back on the campaign trail for the first time since last month's explosion at a rally two people were killed when a grenade was thrown amisom and gaga since then security is rallies have been stepped up harma chasseur has more now from endure. president innocent undergo security detail has always been tight but since the explosion at his campaign rally in pull away last month there are now even more soldiers guarding him the bobbies leader says he suspects
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a defeated faction from his own party linked to the wife of his predecessor roberts regardie was behind the attack he tells party supporters and the international community he has things under control where do. we. visitors so we've got there already. problem. terms we're good friends the army says it is not going to try to influence election results at the end of the month the parliamentary and presidential elections will be the first since robert mugabe resigned last year or twenty three presidential candidates have been told if they are worried about their safety security will be provided security is not the only concern there is disagreement between the electoral commission and opposition parties on the printing storage and distribution of ballot papers opposition leaders say they have not been allowed to
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see the ballot papers they fear voting this is culminated in an election crisis which we are now declaring because remember agreed when the process we are part of those people was supposed to participate in that process this election and there is going to be an election in zimbabwe do we need but it has to be done within agreed by lot of people nothing less nothing more we are not here to cause problems we are you to heard it played of the elections with every citizen is their right to articulate their with the opposition m.d.c. alliance and trade unions say they will protest next week president when i got quite is planning moralise where security would likely be intensified. al jazeera been doing some other. well joining me now in the studio is nick bronson a former senior researcher at the african scituate thank you very much for coming in to speak to us also there is a difference between the violence that might potentially break out between
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different groups in the country and then the grenade attack at a rally which is far more targeted like the one we saw against amisom and. do you see an increasing risk of violence as we go into the elections well i think the the. the president and his top team has clearly increased over recent weeks and the presidential guard the yellow berets you can see there in the in the picture you know that they they clearly are elements of those forces that remain loyal to former president robert mugabe and whether they're. all entirely equipped to do the job that they have been attracted to doing to defend the head to stay remains unclear i think as for sort of election related violence. there are tensions in both camps in zanu p.f. and in within the m.d.c. alliance and the m.d.c. t. which is now controlled by took on
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a coup pay so i mean i think there's an entirely plausible chance of having more violence as this campaign goes on but whether it's targeted and selected and you know borderline assassination attempts or whether it's something that's low level and violence between activists and campaigners it's two two very different two different things of course anderson wants to stay on the campaign trail he wants to keep the elections and drawing nearer what does he do now how does his team approach this very difficult to prevent these types of attacks yeah definitely and you know as as the incumbent head of state he's got certain benefits but also if he doesn't show himself to be statesman like he looks very vulnerable you know he only inherited power in november he's barely had sort of six months run before before calling the elections he hasn't got a great deal to point to in terms of tangible in chief and sure some commitments of investment and and and you know diplomatic missions and so on but realistically
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given that aura of you know the presidency he can't be seen to be vulnerable and hiding from you know potential security threat starting rallies where are you supposed to be attending and speaking that will make the camp. jane look look quite quite vulnerable and that's that's obviously not what you want to go into an election where you want to look like you've got a commanding lead an unassailable lead in convincing barbarians that you know you're the man for the job is there evidence that he's managing to do that how strong is his appeal among the general populace with a certain regions of the country where you know he's not popular at all i mean the white city stadium attackable the way it was was in the bill and an area where you know he's been implicated in gross human rights violations in the early one nine hundred eighty s. . he's not popular popular there even in the midlands where he you know he stood for election twice in two thousand two thousand and five he failed on both
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occasions to be elected as an m.p. and that's that's where he comes from you know that's his sort of backyard as it were and then in the north of the country must own a land where. robert mugabe's sort of voter base was always consolidated you know there are people there that aren't going to transfer over to mining where they're not necessarily going to align with him for all sorts of reasons both the way that we've got the was treated when he left power you know sort of unceremoniously. but also ethnic and tribal you know rivalry a great deal to look for as we go into these elections at the end of the month thank you very much nick branson from sunrise thank you now israel supreme court has issued a temporary injunction to block the demolition of a palestinian village in the occupied west bank the bedouin community and. has lived there for more than fifty years israeli government says it can move to an area nearby but the un is saying the demolition violates international law shall
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strafford explains. to who was born here in the bit who we believe to call the israeli occupied west bank he's lived to 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 mean completely surrounding jerusalem and separating the north from the south of the occupied west bank. i am like i mean 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 or better still leave in one thousand nine hundred eighty eight and now they are forcing us out but where can we go. 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
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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 demolition 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 . israel says it confiscated the land around where in the one nine hundred seventy
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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 settlers who had settled on an occupied territory have swimming pools have schools have going to gardens have everything 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 tires because these radio sorties would not allow proper building materials into the village israel has always refused to issue building permits or supply the village with water electricity they say the palestinians here can move to another area around twelve kilometers away near a landfill so lame and his fellow villagers say they will not leave charles
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strafford al jazeera. in the occupied west bank iran says it's executed eight people convicted of two attacks claimed by isis the last year at least eighteen people were killed and more than fifty injured during a gun and suicide bomb attack on parliament in the tomb of the islamic republic's founder intact ron it was the first time i still said it was behind the attack inside the country now thousands of women have gathered in seoul to protest against the growing problem of spy cam pornography in south korea. protesters say the government is not doing enough to stop hidden cameras being used to secretly recorded women in public spaces including toilets escalators or even their office desks saturdays rally is the latest in a series of protests calling for better police investigation and tougher punishments for those found guilty. well spain's famous bull running festival is
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taking place but it's being overshadowed by the treatment of women and fear of sex attacks the annual event in pamplona comes amid widespread anger and protests over the so-called wolfpack case when five men were accused of gang raping a woman at the festival two years ago called panel reports on how women visiting pamplona face the risk of groping and sexual assaults. alcohol's throwing a little too freely and testosterone may be running a little too high. women here defend their right to party as hard as the men but they were alarmed by the shocking record of sex attacks during pamplona as bull running fiesta. and. we make sure we don't walk around on our own and we look after each other and try to stay together we're careful about how much we drink to posters call for an end to sexual aggression feminist graffiti
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denounces rapists and those who conspire with them sprains feminist movement is galvanized in outrage after the five friends calling themselves the bulls were accused of gang raping a teenage woman at the fiestas two years ago now they were convicted on a lesser charge of sexual abuse and last month they were freed on bail last year police received around two dozen reports of sex crimes during the boom running they say the number of unreported cases was almost certainly much higher. pump this town hall is work with them in a still denies asians to set up models to raise awareness of illicit sexist. sexual violence is a symptom of an unfair hierarchy which places the power of men above women it's an instrument of control and power and telling women they're beneath them. she just numbers have come from a board. like these friends from san francisco they've heard of the danger of groping and sex attacks. i.
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i. i i. my clothes boy these women a born and raised in pamplona they blame outsiders for causing havoc at their siestas i even right now you see one of those guys with a water pistol trying to stress and react on my chest and that's uncomfortable usually the people who do that stuff are not from our town even before noon the scene is chaotic amid the drink and dogs hard to keep on guard for potential predator call petrol al-jazeera of spain. sports is up next on the news hour including of course for the world cup hosts russia keep a campaign alive with
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a win over croatia we're going to be life to sochi after this break. when the news breaks. on the mail man city and the story builds to be forced to leave the room just. 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 world winning document. and nine years on al jazeera i got to commend you on hearing is good journalism on air and on. the way when this idea popped into it when they're on line it's undoubtedly chief. of poverty and inequality in our society today or if you join the sunset criminal justice system is dysfunctional right now this is.
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