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tv   NEWS LIVE - 30  Al Jazeera  July 9, 2018 3:00am-3:33am +03

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this issue of the election coming up. what we do with. the former president of the sea the house until august to register itself for the elections the first round will be on this on the seventh of october our second round it is necessary and the twenty eighth of october he says he's innocent of all the charges lodged against him that really this is a political campaign to stop him running in those elections and the reason that his opponents want to stop him running is because the opinion polls and his supporters a convinced that he would win he still that meant popular as president from two thousand and three and so two thousand and ten dollars millions of brazilians out of poverty remains in the in the limelight even after he stepped down two thousand and ten so he's convinced he would do that but again it was also another cause election or court to decide whether he is in fact eligible given his legal situation to stand put his name forward for those elections or i don't know thanks
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very much they don't want the reporting that at least thirty five people have been killed and dozens more are missing in japan and after three straight days of torrential rain evacuation orders are in place for nearly two million people a multiple landslide warnings have been issued a large scale rescue operation has been launched prime minister shinzo hobby has described it as a race against the clock makes by new as this report large parts of japan haven't seen flooding like this in generations the country inundated by high water and rivers of mud dozens are already dead swept away in swollen rivers buried by landslides and its hole is expected to rise even though even though we haven't been able to confirm the safety of a lot of people in there are many who are stranded facing the terror of impending inundation and waiting for rescue the life saving operation is now a race against the clock. nearly two million people have been ordered to evacuate their homes another two point three million asked to leave voluntarily the south
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and western regions have been particularly hard hit. in chorus hundreds of patients were risk youth from this hospital elsewhere in the city more than a thousand people remain trapped some of used social media to plea for help others are taking the risk use upon themselves just a little from what i went to my father's family home but it's hopeless. study we were hoping to find to pay for it but we found only one japan is used to natural disasters earthquakes volcanic eruptions and flooding a common but seldom on the scale more than fifty thousand rescue workers police and military personnel have been deployed 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 are so many things happening all at once and obviously if a road is washed out or bridges destroyed even if you have
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a nice fire engine or ambulance you can't get to some of the places that you need to go to in coachy prefix twenty six centimeters of rain fell in three hours the heaviest downpours since records began more than forty years ago and monday's forecast office little comfort and. 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. in some places flood waters have receded leaving grim sites like dead fish and crushed cars the search for survivors could take days to clean up possibly much longer. al-jazeera. you're watching the news live from london there's much more still to come here on the program if those requests were gangster like there the world is a gangster. state. that washington is pushing too hard for complete.
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the face of forty years of suffering we meet there are family haunted by decades of oppression. and croatia celebrate a place. russia's. have agreed to reopen embassies in each other's capitals as part of plans to normalize relations between the once feuding neighboring countries ethiopia's prime minister is in eritrea for a historic summit it's the first such visit by an ethiopian leader in more than twenty is. as this report. that was hard to imagine even a few days ago and if you'll be in prime minister locked in the embrace of an eritrean leader on every june soil the two countries haven't had diplomatic
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relations in twenty years but it was a gesture and an opportunity that eritrean president is a yes a forty welcomed with warm smiles and a red carpet this isn't just peace between countries to ordinary countries for two or three neighbors if you're paying your three i have very rich history shared culture shared religion and shared memory in trauma. thousands of people lined the streets of the capital to greet these motorcade they stood among flags of the two nations one said or. nearly a hundred thousand people were killed during that conflict over a disputed border between one thousand nine hundred eighty and two thousand but over the past few weeks they have been signs of improving relations last month as new reformist prime minister ahmed agreed to accept the terms of a peace deal that ended the two year conflict it was his biggest and most
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controversial decision yet since coming to power earlier this year there are a number of disputed territories along the border and territories will move both directions. and there are going to be communities like resists being finding themselves transferred to another national jurisdiction or divided by the new order so the implementation is something that's going to have to be handled very carefully. the dispute has taken a toll on both sides of the border atreus isolated regime and its focus on the border conflict with has forced thousands of people to flee the country diskeeper its mandatory military conscription abby meanwhile wants to put if you'll be back on track as one of africa's bosses great commies with access to editor yes posts. but for many it's a symbolic coming together of debate to for was that i have raised hopes for peace
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in the horn of africa priyanka gupta al-jazeera protests as america had been demonstrating against the sentences handed down last month the leaders of these social movement known as hit i was shopping a court in casablanca gave four of its leaders sentences of up to twenty years in jail for conspiracy to undermine the security of the state the group's organized many protests brokers refreeze in the money more jobs and economic development. at least ten people have died in a train crash near the greek border seventy three others were injured when five carriages came off the rails close to the city of color around one hundred kilometers west of the trains destination of istanbul the train was carrying more than three hundred passengers. the syrian military and the rebel group of accused each other of breaching a cease fire deal in the region agreed only two days ago the russian brokered deal so rebels agreed to hand over heavy weapons in exchange for security guarantees and
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safe passage to other areas government troops took control of the main border crossing between syria and jordan but it smith has more. we understand that one rebel group is holding out in an area to the north of crossing a crossing is a very strategic crossing for the syrian regime it links jordan to syria and through to the ports of beirut in lebanon and the syrian regime wants to get this crossing open again one group in an area to the north of the crossing says that the russians and the syrians are not holding to their part of the cease fire deal and the cease fire deal was essentially that the rebel groups opposition groups would hand over their having weapons they would be given safe passage to opposition groups held areas in the north of syria and that the russians would oversee security along the border areas that particular aspect very important because people down there were concerned that syrian forces without russian supervision might take retaliatory steps against people living there but anyway what this group
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accusing the syrians and the russians of not regarding the ceasefire agreement it's not clear what part of the agreement they are not respecting or being accused of not respecting but that has prompted an outbreak of fighting as strikes we understand and shelling on the ground as president bashar al assad consolidate his control in syria some of those who fled the country are returning home a million syrian refugees are registered in lebanon and the government there is keen for them to leave but many are worried about what will happen when they cross the border from also in lebanon there has this report. their years in exile are now over the are on their way home. there the latest batch of refugees living in the lebanese border town of voluntarily return. there haven't been mass returned yet but these people are among those who can make the journey back to syria now mostly under the control of president bashar assad. she was.
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safe many homes are destroyed but ours is fine the circumstances are different for every person who. can't happen before syrian authorities screened the names of the refugees and approved the applicants request to return lebanon's general security in the process so far the returns have not been in significant numbers the united nations says that thirteen thousand refugees have gone home in recent years there are over one million syrian refugees registered with the u.n. here but lebanon's government says hundreds of thousands more are not registered lebanese politicians are pushing for speedy returns because of the economic burden on the country but the united nations says returns are premature it refuses to organize them because it believes conditions are not right syria is still not safe and assurances need to be put in place many refugees fled persecution and continued
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to be considered a security risk by the syrian government. there are refugees who don't want to return because they don't feel safe there waiting for circumstances to change they want international guarantees among them refugees from the syrian town of qusayr at least forty thousand of them are in lebanon and tens of thousands of others are displaced across syria has not just been totally destroyed there was mass displacement among the muslims who make up the bulk of the opposition. is from that town he says he joined the calls for democracy but now. never took up arms that however is enough to be called a terrorist by the syrian government. homes because of the regime and now they want us to return home to the regime how can we if our towns are destroyed and we face security risks is just one of the many areas where the regime is making demographic changes those who come from areas like
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qusayr which formed the backbone of the uprising cannot make this journey back they say they are unwelcome and their safety and security are at risk there is still little reconciliation and peace in the new syria. northeastern lebanon. more than seven hundred thousand have fled into neighboring bangladesh since a government crackdown began an organist last year as one of the world's biggest refugee emergencies with the united nations accusing them of ethnic cleansing many in just say they've been facing justice for decades. that's one family in the camp and cox 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. a heart or a hinge a refugee in her ninety's has fled persecution in me and more three separate times
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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. war they beat us 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 rackrent 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 way here we would have been killed like stray dogs muhammad are you his goals grand
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son in law he says he'll always be haunted by what he's seen back home. in minus the horrible you know no one could even ask questions about the photos disappearances even a brother didn't have the right to ask about his missing brother you understand 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 ali you've once his children to be able to experience peace and to get justice he says there's only one way that can happen atrocities that are being committed against
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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. at the critical long camp in cox's bazaar on the dish. so this here in the news still to come look down in indian administered kashmir is the army prepared for a surge in protests. and so idea of a crowd of venezuelan jails with food beds and basic knowledge and hygiene are becoming more and more scarce. to the different sounds and secondly to as many details coming up.
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hello there we don't have a great deal of trout across parts of the middle east at the moment we just have a little bit drifting its way across the caspian sea there are nothing to kazakstan that's where we see most of the showers then as we head through the next day or so but elsewhere so looking draw i and find we still have winds feeding down from the north in the eastern parts of om up say not quite as hot here but for baghdad very hot forty six degrees will be our maximum as we head through the next few days you can see the winds feeding down through kuwait and down the gulf they're working their way towards us here in doha in doha it's been incredibly humid over the last few days some glasses of steamed up instantly but all of that's going to change because the winds will be picking up that we quite fierce on monday but at least they'll bring in some dry as so it looks like it'll be hotter forty five degrees will be our maximum but it will be a dry heat when that eases again in the wind swing easterly for choose day it will stay humid once more and forty two degrees will this time beyond maximum down
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towards the southern parts of africa we have a few bits and pieces pieces of cloud here we've also got a few showers around as well most of those around the northern parts of south africa some of them rather live a pushing their way up into botswana to we've also got quite a few showers around the coast of mozambique and madagascar. capturing a moment in time snapshots of other lives other stories. provide an eclipse into someone else's world inspiring documentaries from impassioned filmmakers everybody's going to. circle. member. on al-jazeera. with
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a big breaking news story can be chaotic and frantic behind the scenes. people shouting instructions if you're trying to provide the best most accurate up to date information as quickly as you can. it's when you come off air and things seem pinned to realize even witness history in the making. can i get a reminder the top stories here on al-jazeera in the first phase of a rescue operation to get a boy's football team when they came out of a cave in thailand and the boys have been safe so far the next phase will begin in
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the next ten to twenty hours. a judge in brazil has ruled the former president doing enough to silva must stay in jail just hours after another judge ordered that he be freed. a twelve year jail time for corruption and money too and. at least eighty five people are dead and dozens more remain unaccounted for following record flooding in japan the prime minister has launched a major rescue operation. indeed it misted kashmir is under lockdown as the army prepares for surgeon protests separatists and marking two years since the death of a charismatic young rebel leader star hide it has more. two years after his death the influence of four hundred one e lives separatists in indian administrate kashmir are marking the anniversary with protests and calls to shut down the region businesses to close said tools in place
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oh good on the young people here say when he has influenced them to continue their fight after the martyrdom was over the money had to go to foundation other to should struggle in a newbie in a new directions and now what we do they use are not making any kind of compromise with india and we have sucky forgot precious life was fought just god is a special day for us indeed this is not a black day for us this is it jail for this is a deal for resilience and this is a day of resistance for us and good hard most awful vonnie is the face of resistance he's the face of hope. rouhani one who is twenty two years old when he was killed in a shootout with the indian army followed was one of the worst surges of violence in the region's recent history. months of street protests and a military crackdown killed more than one hundred people. two years
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on and indian security forces are taking no chances the region is under lockdown and people aren't able to use mobile internet when his home town has been sealed off and there's a curfew in place was three stone throwing protesters were killed on saturday including a sixteen year old girl. but the army's conduct is now coming under growing international scrutiny though me your little world the united nations report last month criticize its use of excessive force against protesters and called for restraint those calls have been echoed by rights groups and separatist leaders. we condemn the atrocities which are happening here we want to say to the world community please interfere so that the bloodshed of innocent kashmiris are stopped and we are set free of the suppression. separatists in indian administered kashmir wants an end to indian rule india has deployed hof
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a million troops to keep control of a fight that's gone on for decades so the height at al-jazeera the solidarity march for migrants has reached its final destination in london ten weeks after studying all from the if the italian french border hundreds of charlie workers and volunteers who retrace the steps of refugees and migrants heading through france have been greeted at a special event in london's hyde park and that is the. well this gathering in london's hyde park is bringing together refugees people who've made britain their home and volunteers who worked with some of them in cali including in that notorious jungle camp which was destroyed about two years ago they've also been joined by a group of pro migrants activists who've walked right through france to highlight some of the issues facing refugees and migrants right now i'm joined with one of the maya con forty my a tell me exactly what messages you've been trying to put out
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during that month we basically wanted to ask for a better dignified and open welcome of refugees and we wanted to do that in no happy joyful way and to show that us in front many many people are open to the welcome of refugees open now how to them are very in gauging a cause for refugees this is what we wanted to show and we clearly show that we have thousands of people joining us are just very quickly the situation in kelly is still not perfect by any means definitely not we have a lot less refugees and at the time of the brink big jungle we have about five or six hundred refugees however they're living in a horrific conditions namely because the government is doing everything to discourage him from staying there so they constantly chorusing them in any way they can and they actually also do the same towards us to see asians will help them well
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just today some of the group twenty three people in fights were refused permission to come here to travel to england because they didn't have a visa just another reminder of the different rights that different groups of people have and that's one of these issues that the activists are calling for they're calling for britain and france to meet their legal obligations to help these refugees but also for the right to travel. well the march started on april thirtieth in the italian border city of into million a before heading forty eight hundred kilometers northwest through france to cali and the closest seaport on mainland europe to the u.k. the to join them or root for the activists who it's lead to cali arriving in the north and french it was a moment of celebration. they spent two months on the road to raise awareness about the plight of refugees in france but we wanted to demand
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a decent dignified welcome of refugees and we also wanted to do and ask for the end of the dream and education of the acts of the legality of the march retrace the route taken by migrants and refugees who hope to reach the u.k. along the way people joined in a show of solidarity. you feel very good to see that there are other people. who show solidarity from walk critical of this government under the agreement with france britain has a border in cali and it's made the most of these fences to stop for a few just crossing the english channel each day people attempt to get through first failed by trying. you can see if people saw a black widow symbolically on the french and that is to represent more than two hundred refugees or diety trying to reach tonight again john.
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for those stuck in the city conditions are paul zia is from afghanistan he didn't wish to be identified he said he's been here for a year and dreams of leaving. my family in london i must grant that while the european union struggles with how to deal with migration these people say europe must be more welcoming it's the message they take with them to britain where the march ends but the refugees who walked with them in cali will have to stay behind. al-jazeera telling. the united states is reassuring as asian allies that progress is on track to rid north korea of nuclear weapons yes such a state might compare has been in japan after another round of talks in north korea has accused for making its words dykstra like the months so our clock reports from south korea's capital. the u.s. secretary of state was among friends when he arrived in tokyo met by japanese prime
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minister shinzo of a mike palm pio briefed the u.s. ally playing down accusations he engaged gangsta like demands of the to die talks in pyongyang and so if those requests were gangster like there that the world is a gangster because there was a unanimous decision of the un security council about what needs to be achieved instead he described the 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
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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 tour mike pump reassured the japanese and south korean foreign ministers the talks were still on track despite the us allies presented a united front to caring once again the commitment to complete denuclearization in the korean peninsula we reaffirm 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 a line is not enough to justify lifting the u.n. sanctions on north korea that were made in place and to pyongyang abandons its
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nuclear program that sentiment a 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. june is in state media is reporting that nine members of the security forces have been killed in the bush engine duba province close to the border with algeria the interior ministry says a police patrol was attacked with a grenade and then shot at if confirmed that death toll will be the highest in an attack in june is in two thousand and fifteen israel's agriculture minister has become the first member of parliament to visit a mosque compound since a three year ban was lifted. from the right wing party jewish home was seen in the courtyard of the holy site during a regular visiting hours for non muslims prime minister benjamin netanyahu lifted the ban on members of parliament visiting the site last week conditions
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inside venezuela's jails that it's horribly bad with serious overcrowding and frequent violence but for some prison is the lack of space means they're being kept locked up for years in police stations with meant to hold people for more than forty eight hours don't hold them as more. five men to a police station holding cell but smaller than a car. with no excited yard no beds they stuck in here twenty people seven snatching sleepin blankets slung up his makeshift hammocks the bottles waged in the bars a few urine ating. but at least it's for a maximum of forty eight hours that's what venezuela north says anyway reality some of actually been here for years one and a half in this man's case he's desperate to get to a real jail. there are moments when there are lots of prisoners they bring them and bring them but there aren't transfers to anywhere else and that's really difficult
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because the holding cells sometimes are a little and you collapse venezuela's jails are completely overcrowded that means the prisoners across the country are stuck in police station lock ups while they wait for space to be freed up for many family visits are their only hope of food and your investigators claim that several detainees have died of hunger. venezuelan enzio window to freedom monitored almost two hundred temporary detention centers last year they found that nearly two thirds were cleaned so rubbish and human waste holed up and this is was right more than sixty percent didn't have separate cells for women and that lock ups were two hundred fifty percent of their maximum capacity the crush of people has led to many police forces resorting to a radical and illegal solution keeping prisoners simply struck some patrol cars when they run out of cells. meanwhile the wheels of the venezuelan justice system
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turn slowly to speed them up or at least make conditions will bearable you have to pay. the just and that is swell and the whole penitentiary system is the big mafia that produces a lot of money. taking you to the tribunal to continue judicial process getting the transport to get you anywhere. they can charge you to eat for the officer to take the food you drill it brings from the door of the locker. especially for those who don't have the cash this is the reality of what can be years on end john home and. venezuela. so you come here on the news we meet the people who travel from thousand to one way to run with the bulls in pamplona but. i'm on the richardson of the world cup finals in russia where the host nation is still feeling good about its football saying despite a quarter final defeat. i
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had a briefing today from a man named steel who has been out there working with the security forces a veteran of el salvador's dirty war sent to iraq you seem to be without portfolio doing whatever it is that he wanted to take interest in an ex-pat in counterinsurgency while this interview was going on with jim steele there were these terrible screams about pain and terror but what was his mission and what legacy did he leave searching for steel around his era. when the news breaks. on the mailman 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 award winning documentaries and live news on al-jazeera i got to commend you on.

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