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tv   NEWS LIVE - 30  Al Jazeera  July 9, 2018 1:00am-1:34am +03

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meeting as productive making good progress he said north korea agreed to destroy test sites and the next round of talks to sit down for later this month. north korea reaffirmed its commitment to complete denuclearization we had detailed and subs in discussions about the next steps towards a fully verified and complete denuclearization. of north korea painted a very different picture describing the talks as regrettable and relations were entering a dangerous phase in a statement released by the foreign ministry it said the fastest shortcut to denuclearize action is to leave deep rooted distrust in the past and prioritize building trust via new solutions and phase by phase actions criticism aside north korea did declare we still cherish a good faith in president trump on the second leg of his asian two of my compo reassured the japanese and south korean foreign ministers the talks was still on
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track despite the the us allies presented a united front declaring once again the commitment to complete denuclearization in the korean peninsula we have reaffirmed that international community will continue to fully implement relevant un security council resolutions in order to materialise cv id despite describing these talks as making progress my palm pilot says progress the line is not enough to justify lifting the un sanctions on north korea that were made in place and to pyongyang abandons its nuclear program that sentiment to shit by the japanese and the south korean foreign minister as for a timeframe on how to achieve that neither side is set a date sarah clock al-jazeera so. you're watching live from london still to come on the program they were a long time and for this reason in a brotherly embrace details on the dramatic foreign relations between eritrea and
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ethiopia. and we meet the people who travel thousands of kilometers to risk the lives in pamplona. hello there let's start off with a look at the storm that we have in the pacific it's here it's called maria and it's gradually tracking its way towards the west it is a huge storm you can tell from its very well defined eye the winds within this well the sustained at two hundred forty kilometers per hour so it's incredibly powerful and it's working its way towards the north coast of taiwan now it won't reach us for a good few days yet and by the time it does hopefully it should have weakened for the time being it's actually looking quite quiet for many of us had just a few showers to deal with in the southern parts of china and more in the north as
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well those ones in the north look more potent and i think for trying to explain away at all monday and tuesday as well so plenty of rain across this region and we head across towards india well lots of rain here particularly across the central belt at the moment really being very very wet over the last few days more wet weather still to come and it looks like the rains the some of us here will be intensified by this is larry of low pressure that's developing so plenty of showers in the western parts of india through the central belt and up towards nepal and through bangladesh and me and for the northwest though it's a lot drier and brighter here so force in new delhi will get to thirty five degrees and force in karate it should be dry at thirty two. seen but rarely heard two million street children desperate existence one of the child reporters from the slumdog press giving a voice to invisible children on al-jazeera. getting to the heart of the matter
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if. the bill calls you today let's have talks would you accept realities what do you think. like a lot of people think the peaceful unification is the only option for south korea hear this story on talk to al-jazeera. of the top stories here on out and the first phase of a rescue operation to get the boys football team and their coach out of the cave in thailand and for the boys have been safe so for the next phase will begin in the next ten to twenty. five people are dead and dozens more main unaccounted for
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following record flooding in japan the prime minister has launched a major rescue operation. the syrian military and the rebel group of accused each other a breach in terra province agreed two days ago under the deal the rebels agreed to hand over heavy weapons in exchange for safe passage to other areas. now more than seven hundred thousand have fled into neighboring bangladesh since a government crackdown began in august last year it is one of the world's biggest refugee emergencies with the united nations accusing them of ethnic cleansing many say they've been facing justice for decades june met one family in a camp and talks is bizarre just across the border in bangladesh. she's the head of four generations of family and the bearer of forty years of suffering ghouls a heart or a hinge
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a refugee in her ninety's has fled persecution in me and more three separate times in her life first in one thousand nine hundred seventy eight then one nine hundred ninety one and finally in two thousand and seventy five. she speaks softly and slowly telling me that while age may have left her unable to remember everything she'll never forget the constant horrors her family suffered at the hands of security forces in me and more over the years. they beat as they kidnapped as they detained does google and her family span almost a century in age bonded through blood and displacement they now all live in a single hut located in the world's largest refugee kenya. her son only ahmed first fled rack kind state and came to bangladesh as a teenager he recounts just how awful the crackdown by security forces was in two thousand and seventeen i didn't know at that out of if we couldn't have made our
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way here we would have been killed like stray dogs muhammad i you is goals grandson in law he says he'll always be haunted by what he seen back home in minus the horrible you know kind of that no one could even ask questions about the photos disappearances even a brother didn't have the right to ask about his missing brother distant we had no clue who was disappeared into way we just had to remain silent about it here the signs of trauma are everywhere and fear is clearly etched on faces. in many ways what's happened to this particular extended family really mirrors what's happened to so many other rohinton who face decades of repression and abuse their hinges aren't just the world's largest group of stateless people they're also among the world's most persecuted minorities. more than anything muhammad i you've once his children to be able to experience peace and to get justice he says there's
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only one way that can happen atrocities being committed against middle women should be heard by the international criminal court so that we get justice and if it's not satisfied satisfaction is not a sentiment goal is familiar with for her pain has been a constant and time continues to be as cruel as life has been hard when it speak directly to mohammed not his back from his trip to coax is bizarre and i have to report really bringing to life the the difficulties that people are facing there and of course that you've reported from the times before can you draw a comparison as to how things are. nic i will say that i was simply astounding when i saw the state of the camp this time versus the first time i was there in october of two thousand and seventeen the amount of
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work that has gone into improving the infrastructure of the long camp which is the largest refugee settlement in the world housing around a million refugees it is really a sight to behold you're talking about roads drainage ditches dams that are being built it's a race against the clock because this is monsoon season and when the rains come that means there is a threat of landslides because this is an area that is prone to natural disasters already and most of the huts that they were him to live in they are made simply of of bamboo and tarpaulin a lot of them are on these very steep muddy hills signs that are devoid of vegetation so even in the past week even with all the building that's going on even with the fact that tens of thousands of the most vulnerable refugees are being moved to safer areas in the camp when rains would happen when we were there when there would be two or three or four hours of sustained rains we would hear from aid
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workers that there had been small landslides and because of that people are very afraid of what's going to happen at the height of monsoon season and when the cyclons move in and when there are days and days of sustained rain so even though it was heartening to see how much work is being done by the bangladeshi government by the aid workers the u.n. and especially the role hinge of their that are volunteering and that are working at a furious pace to make things better fact the matter is people are afraid they are scared of what's going to happen they are afraid that there will be more landslides that there will be more flooding and how exactly that will affect this very vulnerable population and of course we'll have a very important question that is that of citizenship is a huge issue for the rangers and. absolutely and what was interesting this time nic is that you know you had a u.n. delegation that was there in the past week and they were talking quite a bit about the fact that they were hindered deserve to be made citizens of me and more but also what we saw is a lot of community leaders within the range of population that are feeling much
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more emboldened to express their sentiment on this issue every single ranger that we spoke with in the past week when we asked them about this issue if they would be willing to be repatriated or to go back to me and where they said they would never do so unless they were granted citizenship by the government of me and more the fact of the matter is this is the largest group of stateless people in the world and this has been a contentious issue for them for decades and now you have the you when that is saying they need to be granted citizenship and they are calling on the me and more authorities to do so but you have really hinge on that are saying much the same but here's what's interesting is that a lot of the we're going to we spoke with that are being vocal about this issue they are not so happy with what the u.n. is doing because there are hints of feel that they are being marginalized from this process the u.n. has been signing memorandum of understanding with the government of me and more to try to ensure some kind of safe mechanism by which will hinge it can return to me and more but the real him that we're talking to say that they don't have a seat at the table that they are not being involved in issues that deeply affect
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them and they want to make sure that they have people in place that are overlooking what's going on and that no agreements are signed unless they have their input nick or a man would have to leave the goods to you thanks very much indeed. breaking news a judge in brazil has ordered the release of the former president luiz and not enough c.e.o. lula da silva had been sentenced to twelve years and one months in prison for corruption and money laundering it could be released in the next few hours it is a very important development in brazil and we will bring you more on this breaking news as we get it. ethiopia's prime minister is in neighboring eritrea for a historic summit in the first such visit by any ethiopian leader in more than twenty years. as information minister has described his greeting by eritrean president of worki as a brotherly embrace ethiopia and eritrea fought a costly war between one thousand nine hundred eighty and two thousand over
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a disputed border but there have been signs of improving relations in recent months after prime minister ivory agreed to accept the terms of a peace deal that ended that conflict halleluiah luli is the program director of a money africa and he thinks the shared history of the two countries are more and is more important than the differences. this isn't just peace between two countries to ordinary countries for two or three neighbors if you can your three you have video of each history shared culture shared religion and shared me more in trouble so if your peers any of us foreign policy and regional engagement has been significantly been shipped by this the water and this film it does for for eighteen years and the two countries acknowledges that the you know the stalemate the north watton always not peace policy has significantly damaged their. economies
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regional security and the political situation in the two countries and the two countries have huge potential for you cannot make cultural and political cooperation that will have a great impact for their security and integration of the horn of africa and the because they're naturally good so far at this year's bull running for us for the northern spain every year people are injured and sometimes even killed there's five hundred kilogram bulls chase them through the cobbled streets so why on earth would someone sign up for this carpenter who has been to find out. just minutes to go before with the bulls. going on i'm still over it in here and your thing over this i. get lost. i have friends come from california to pump not facing down danger to get out.
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i was. this time has made objects and drama from colorado he's sharing some safety advice for you guys get out there when you get i that's very helpful. for you and your guy thereat american author honest hemingway's favorite bar he made the bull running world famous in his nine hundred twenty s. novel fiesta gotta keep your head of the city you don't know what's going to happen next running. running. running i don't know the fastest one out there but i have to be doused with someone else you know that's my baby right we're going now i couldn't bring cans out i already. made known to every i next morning this is that emotion and i thank you
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i cough tom bores eight hundred fifty meat is insane how fast was it coming you really knew arena and next thing you know you were right behind you the polls are right there it was it's epic it's like you're running and you're looking for the fools and someone just standing there and you just pull well we know your site oh my goodness get out the way here i don't know how they are my but. i know you can't defeat only can't see. but every. it stinks right went out the window i could go tomorrow there's more days. their photos tell of a trip they'll never forget and this video postcard from pamplona. which you will hear. whole al-jazeera pamplona spain.
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now let's get back to the breaking news about the silver the former brazilian president a judge's order to release his release he had been sentenced to twelve years and one month in prison for corruption money laundering majority says a left wing politician must be released from prison while an appeal process is carried out lets him more from daniel day what more have you heard about this breaking news. an appeals court judge in the southern city of port is saying that it should be released from prison he's been in prison in cricket some city since the seventh of april on corruption and money laundering charges a sentence of twelve years and one month he's always had even a sense of those charges and his team have been fighting to get him released. the appeals process can be completed he was sentenced by a very narrow supreme court ruling back in april the interesting thing is if he is allowed to work later on today it's still not one hundred percent clear still looks
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as though he may walk at least temporarily while that appeals process is being heard there is then the question of whether he can put his name forward to stand in the presidential election. opinion polls suggest that if he does not if you fill out to do that he would in fact win those elections so a lot in the balance here waiting to see what happens whether he walks today then what will happen with that appeals court. we will come but you don't know as we hear more about this breaking news lou the silver judge's order the release of the former president of the disabled while an appeal process continues into his sentencing. so then the top stories here on al-jazeera at least four schoolboys have been freed from a cave in northern thailand where they've been trapped for more than two weeks the children have been rushed to hospital officials have launched
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a dangerous rescue mission to save the boys and the football coach who was stranded after rains flooded the caves the next phase to save those still inside will start a monday morning in china right prophets. i would like to inform everyone at home and all those who have been giving us support all along that after sixteen days today's the day we've been waiting for the wild boar football team in the flesh now at least eighty five people have died as differential rain and landslides a pound western japan prime minister shinzo abe a says rescue operation underway is now a race against the clock evacuation orders are in place for nearly two million people in the military has been deployed to safe people by water and by. the syrian military in a rebel group in the southern province of daraa are accusing each other of breaching a cease fire deal it was only agreed two days ago the russian brokered deal so
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rebels agreed to hand over heavy weapons in exchange for security guarantees and safe passage to other areas here's the true state might pumpin has been intended to brief the japanese and south korean foreign ministers after another round of talks in north korea the north korean foreign ministry has accused him of making in their words. to moms to get rid of their nuclear weapons pompei says that he is confident the north korean leader kim jong un will stick by the commitments he made to denuclearize during last month's summit with donald trump. a judge in brazil as we've been hearing has ordered the release of the former president do it unless you knew that the silva had been sentenced to twelve years and one months in prison for corruption money laundering the judge says the left wing politicians must be released from prison and could have an appeal process is carried out it appears prime minister ahmed is in neighboring eritrea for
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a historic summit in the first such visit by any ethiopian lead more than twenty years all right up to date with headlines here on al-jazeera coming up next it's one of. for nine hundred forty six to nine hundred fifty eight the united states detonated dozens of atomic bombs in the marshall islands when the u.s. was getting ready to clean up and leave and leave one nine hundred seventy s. they picked the pit that had been left by one of the smaller atomic explosions and dumped a lot of this cutrone i'm another radioactive waste into the pit the bottom of the dome it's permeable soil there was nowhere for her to line it and therefore
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the seawater is is inside the dome when this dome was built there was no factoring in sea level rises caused by climate change now every day when the tide rolls out ready zero active isotopes from underneath the die roll out with it. really we're not talking just the marshall islands we're talking the whole smooth motion. of. the. two million children live rough on india's streets. it's
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a brutal join their suffering usually hate it and ignore. but a new speed run by street children is now bringing. there are stories from the slums to the world. on this episode one of the dedicated young reporters as he uncovered the important issues of the street. you see. in the laneways of an old delhi young added to enter a porsche are about to show me an unusual five taking place across the country. heat in the switching time caption in condition. to enjoy the printing almost ten thousand copies of a newspaper made entirely by street kids. but
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now around the world paper is dying but in india the print industry is experiencing an incredible food. this space is called the locking them up in hindi that means voice of the children and it's being read by people as far away as london and the usa. what's more surprising is shampoo in a job and everyone at the paper street kids. listen to kris kobach i think you could have but. those side they've been on but i found them but you know we've got the home button just south. of neck of the danger here but don't put it in context that is because what they do you see all very little but what you can do in the top as personally inside out but i mean by what you can cover to
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balance by the force. excited she's never seen thanks for printed. it's a. lot of them i guess but you can just imagine some place yes the memory of the past now would be some out of a few soviet ships that this. industry kids of the poorest of the pool. nicknamed the invisible children because they live in cities shadows. the scandal is sixteen year old joke she's.
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got. she's the paper's most senior portia. amount of just enough food for tonight. that. i'm not. mad mad men is in the game and there's a game that might put it out but if the men in the premiere get up you may have a point that they're not that bill bennett said and then that it didn't go mike out to be a man and it will do that without any of the. humanity doing me ministries and everybody will be decided in the me that. his home is a slum next to this major bus stop. these she's watched people without a second thought. do know what you're saying you know we're not the minds our mind our home at the level of their job and they had
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a little bit that they were truly about they set out to be. the more aware they are the wealthy were but never to be sat down with the impudent. but. there never is i'm not saying it doesn't matter if you see how but same as i am. right. there are at least two million street kids who live like chelsea in india. she's one of only sixty's kid reporters at the locker room so they have an enormous task trying to give a voice to those who feel ignored and invisible. out here in the slums the search for a good story starts early. can
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i make i'm no good now that i'm in there to be all toward healing so they can then have some but i'm but a history of what took me about that that the old. joke has never been taught journalism but weaves in and around these songs easily. there's a good marriage became a government thing because there were those that didn't but money got. she receives a tip off about two children. and finds these young kids alone got in plastic. which provides the family's only income leaving them vulnerable to the. i take it it was that they didn't they want to know that. i have never. done any rina it's winter in delhi and who knows what it means to sleep rough
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thinks of a good angle with a story ah but you cannot man up ten i'm aghast at it as again i met you. now but i'd. opt. out but dot of the box when they do not attend that the total cost if they were to. feel you have local. slums of existed for centuries in india but the latest census shows they're growing on average at least a million people every year. george he hopes rushing into these conditions will make someone paid attention back to the caribbean. you see where they are you see garcons or. when you found.
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somebody. made you made i guess a year ago i got a little dirty but they will then. put it on your yes they say they're waiting for you. but staying objective can be hard for these young reporters as a local security guard arrives we leave and i sense job he's frustrated. man i am i did me back those but to the minute not. the posse toki it. would be yes about jake delhomme a guy. that deal with the lookout. as a country india economically is on the way up.
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literacy rates are rising in these papers and now read the new. i mean amongst all of these up and coming papers is blocked. i can do this some don't read it would be hard to meet an editor more passionate than seventeen year old shamble you know. this is. what took about this one but. this is the newspaper's editorial meeting. killed in downtown delhi all the street kids are invited to pitch story ideas to. tell you. how. i know. not to.
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be. the day of but he did the movie i wouldn't do it soon but i'm in the midst of the. worst city. to see that on paper just to lose the. good luck to you know muslim in the good days simple in the war as. well did. you know he has to be careful when dealing with his reporter's stories. they have first hand experiences and often confronting. like this young reporter reveals a shocking allegation about leaks and. i. have one. of the four of them.
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that i feel i would have not heard of a half ago what fat. couple. you know what we have to offer if you have. it rough and. ready to do the job sadly allegations of sexual abuse and not uncommon. at this newspaper everyone knows the slums and what living there is like. but you know. their job and in going to how could we normally on the go real niggas story either but just guesses said we were not one in some difficulty you are with look at him. i'm going to be good don't get hung coward i would work with a few a much lower than the enemy. but that the event was at their will have many more
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than good.

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