tv Cuba Calling Al Jazeera July 9, 2018 6:33am-7:01am +03
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so military crackdown killed more than one hundred people. two years 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. 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. a 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
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indian rule india has deployed hof a million troops to keep control of a fight that's gone on for decades so high it's al-jazeera protesters in morocco have been demonstrating against the sentences handed down last month to leaders of the social movement. 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 groups organize many protests in morocco's referee gen demanding more jobs and economic development. israel's agriculture minister has become the first member of parliament to visit the al aqsa mosque compound since a three year ban was lifted eerie arielle from the right wing party jewish home was seen in the courtyard of the holy site during regular visiting hours for non muslims prime minister benjamin netanyahu lifted the ban on members of parliament visiting the site last week. at least eight people have been injured so far at this
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year's bull running festival in northern spain every year people injured and sometimes even killed as five hundred kilogram bulls chased them through the cobbled streets so why then would someone sign up for this compound home has been to find out. just minutes to go on the phone with the book. i was going i'm still floating in there and you're think oh there it is i i feel so happy i have friends come from california to pump load not facing down danger together. i was. this time is made of victualling drama from colorado he's sharing some safety advice for you knock it out this morning yes that's really the boring. for you and your guy thereat american author an ist
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hemingway's favorite bar he made the bull running world famous in his nine hundred twenty s. novel fiesta gotta keep your head on the sea you don't know what's going to happen next sunday so running back to get. ready i don't have a fast one up there but i have to be doused with someone else you know that's my baby right we're going now i didn't bring you and so i already. made known to every i next morning this is that emotion and i think i cough tom bores eight hundred fifty meat is insane how fast it was coming it fairly new arena and next thing you know you were right behind you the bulls are right there it was it's a happy it's like you're running and you're looking for the fools and someone just
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standing there and you just told me well we know your site oh my goodness you know the what if i don't know how they were my. i if you can't be afraid of please can i. write ever. instinct said right it went out the window i could go tomorrow there's more days of . 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. so i have for you on the program we'll have all the sports including a look ahead to the world cup semifinals. the british ryder who secured a weekend's super by double.
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the final. i had a briefing today from a man named steele who has been out there working with the security forces a veteran of the. war sent to iraq you seem to be without portfolio doing whatever it is that he wanted to take interest and it's about him counterinsurgency and 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.
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his iraq. let's get all this for now with peta. marianne thank you very much we start with formula one and off to an impressive effort by miss eighty's is that lewis hamilton to clinch pole position on home soil was the championship lead to sebastian vettel who stole the show in sunday's british grand prix tatyana sanchez reports. it was hamilton was looking to make history as silverstein hoping to become the most successful drive in british grand prix history with five consecutive wins at this track i but the brit suffered the worst possible stop
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i ferrari's kimmie reichen in collided with the defending world champion sending him into a spin on the opening lap. hindering his position on the track hamilton with now at the back. so it was time to rethink a move which would eventually pay off both my sadie's chose not to go to the pit stop at the first safety car intervention i the move ended up lifting a focused and determined lewis hamilton back up a few places while his teammate took the overall race lead at this point i but the decision would catch up with battery but as he suffered from the decision needing a desperate tire change. allowing ferrari sebastian vettel and reichen into i have a take them if eighty's rival perhaps the chairing helped lift hamilton spirit fueling him and he managed to navigate his way to
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a second place finish in front of his home crowd. but the checkered flag belonged to germany's vettel pick out of the race on the great route. yeah i think really a race that i enjoyed a lot that the few. enjoyed a lot so yeah it was a lot of amazing day the greatest race of the year and it's the greatest crowd and i'm sorry i was able to bring out of you today but thank you so much for your support as you guys help me get through today so i take it on the chin and keep pushing hard to believe me i will not give up i would have hamilton back at the top of the championship standings but instead it's his ferrari rival his lead is just eight point tatiana sanchez al-jazeera. i france are preparing for their first world cup semi final since two thousand and
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six twelve years ago in germany they successfully reached the final before losing to italy on this occasion they'll be aiming to emulate the class of nineteen ninety eight hundred stayed when they won the tournament on home turf but standing in their way will be belgium who have impressed many people in russia at this year's event the french insist they will take nothing for granted. this purply top a secure it's more about respect belgium or third in the fee for world rankings they're very good team with such a good generation and with some players who have played together for a long time they're reaching an age of maturity they're playing well for their clubs i do think that this is going to be a more difficult game compared to the games we've already played. meanwhile five times world champions brazil have landed back home following the quarter final exit at the hands of belgium this is the third time in the last four world cups that the brazilians have been beaten at the quarter final stage the only exception to that
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recent pattern was a semi final appearance on home soil four years ago many issues will need to be addressed now in brazil including the future of coach as the country prepares to host next year's south american championship america. those of us about thirty two years ago brazil had no chance to win and now we want to favorites so there are a lot of good things i think that it's not the end of an era there were a lot of good things that have to be appreciated the coach and his assistants have done a great job and certainly they will keep doing a great job of course when you don't when you have that feeling of i want to to win but the balance is positive fernando has stepped down from his role as spain national team coach after the country's world cup exit he has turned down the offer to return to his formal role as sporting director the fifty year old took charge of the team after julien looked at take he was sacked on the eve of the tournament after the take he had agreed to become
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a real madrid manager after the world cup yet all took spain to the top of group b. in russia but they were knocked out in the last sixteen following a penalty shoot out of feet to the host nation. after the traditional resting on middle son there wimbledon the players will be back out on court on monday for the start of the last sixteen on center court eight times champion roger federer faces frenchman edwin mann the reno to see the rafa will also be in action against czech eva silly over on court one over talk of it will play current cut off of russia while fourth seed when martin del potro will take on jules simone on court two. on the women's side center court will host serena williams as she plays in the now and julie kirby will be on called one against bill in the bench each elsewhere covering the push for faces kiki burdens of the netherlands and you in austin payne go will be in action against alexandria sas novich cycling world champion b. to say given of slovakia has won the second stage of this year's tour de france and
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for good measure he's also in possession of the leaders yellow jersey sunday stage took the riders on a one hundred eighty two point five kilometer journey with one categorized climb stage one winner from colombia finance was held up in a crash in the final kilometer say going to voided the pileup and would overtake a local rider on all of them are on the slight incline near the finish he will to hold of the challenge from italy so let me go but early in a sprint finish to take that day's honors and back to yellow jersey. three zero am champion jonathan ray continued his dominance of the world superbike series at the maisano on sunday the british cover sucky rider was made to work hard for it's forcing his way to the front and overtaking dutchman michael funded mark who had been leading for most of the race crossing the line first just zero point three three four seconds ahead of fun the mark thirty one year old man leads chaz davies
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by mighty two points at the top of the stampede. and that's all the sport for now will have another update again later but it's back to london and mariam thanks very much detail that set for the news hour but much more coming up in just a couple of minutes i'll see a very shortly. the story of a friendship between a filmmaker and a seven year old girl what is it would mean. giving whom and into
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a refugee family being the syrian war. in the face of deep rooted tension between the lebanese and the refugees. my syrian friends. by savvy it up on al-jazeera. with bureaus spanning six continents across the globe. to do. al jazeera has correspondents live in bringing the stories they tell. us about it. fluent in world news a beleaguered out of five paying the price for his political maneuvering in the middle east now desperate for american recognition good technique and absolutely
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denounce all the. good it is how did the p.l.o. find strength and support from their own life for oppressed palestinians living in the occupied territories chronicling the turbin story the struggle for palestinian homes p.l.o. history of a revolution on al-jazeera. well you. know some of the like. four boys are rescued in the first phase of the operation to save a football team trapped in a waterlogged cave in thailand. i know i'm maryam namazie in london with al-jazeera also coming out
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a british woman dies after being exposed to a nerve agent which police suspect was also used to poison a form of russian spy. a brotherly embrace as eritrea and ethiopia we established diplomatic ties after years of hostilities. in the form of brazilian president lula could be released from prison shortly after a day of wrangling between two judges. four boys have been rescued in the first phase of an operation to save a football team trapped in a waterlogged cave in thailand the rescue of the remaining eight boys and that coach has been put on hold until monday to give the divers time to replenish oxygen supplies scott haida has the latest on the operation now from chiang rai after more than two weeks deep underground one by one the boys emerged and were taken
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away by ambulance their ordeal finally came to rescuers launched a daring effort to bring them out guiding them through a four kilometer labyrinth of treacherous tunnels. head of the rescue mission described it as d. day and called the boys by the nickname of their football team when he confirmed the first extraction had been a success. you know 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 a big day we've been waiting for we are seeing the wild boar football team in the flesh now that's not. the rescue mission took days of preparing and planning after the group was found alive by divers on monday crews have been pumping water out of the cave system resupplying the boys with food and oxygen and drilling to help open up their escape route with. sunday's mission was described as better than expected and went quicker than planned as rescuers take the next ten
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to twenty hours to prepare for monday's mission heavy rain has started to fall and that's something that could complicate the next rescue eight boys in their twenty five year old football coach remain inside the cave experts say divers already face a dangerous mission to get them out for the team themselves of course there's the risk that is as they're bringing the boys out there can be something that goes wrong in one of the dives and either one of the boys panics or has some type of medical emergency such as vomiting into the regulator mask which is it can be deadly and if they panic they can potentially also take the rescuer with them so from a team standpoint that's one of the biggest dangers they face before rescued boys are now recovering in a local hospital for the nine others still trapped agonizing wait goes on scott had an al-jazeera chain run. well from the cave entrance itself authorities predicted
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an eleven hour round trip to reach the boys and their coach some of it under water but the first face seems so progressed more quickly than that the football team is stuck four kilometers inside huddle together on a muddy bank to get out they have to travel through narrow dark passages sometimes no more than just over half a metre wide while the rescue is happening alternative ways to get them out is still being explored as well including drilling holes from above where neil greenberg is a professor at king's college london who specializes in psychological trauma and post-traumatic stress disorder he says the success of the rescues first phase will help keep up the spirits of the remaining boys and their coach from a psychological point of view i'm sure the boys and the coach are left will be buoyed by the fact that their colleagues who got out i'm sure they'll be a tad sad because it's not them but the same time that's going to give them hope that actually if the others can do it they can do it do they match is the vibe as
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you say sixteen days. since day nine i'm sure their minds will be focused on we're getting out we're going home i would very much hope that the rescuers and also the contact they've had with the outside world including the parents has kept them very focused on the fact is they're getting out at this stage of the operation and bringing into their minds the fact that it might not be possible for them that there might be other doubts would not be helpful for them or indeed for the rescue effort. breaking news now u.k. police confirming that a woman who was exposed to the nerve agent novacek in the town of amesbury last week has died forty four year old dawn sturgis fell ill after apparently handling an item contaminated with the substance a male friend she was with at the time is also critically ill but he said now
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launched a murder investigation the british prime minister trees amaze saying that she is shocked and appalled by study just as death police suspect it was the same batch of novacek used in an attack on russian double agent circus cripple and his daughter in nearby souls bring in macho so for more on this let's speak to philip ingram is a chemical weapons analyst and a former senior intelligence officer joins us via skype from bombing and thank you very much for taking the time to speak to us we knew that dawn study just was critically ill but from what we know about the effects of this this nerve agent novacek what might have caused her death that's a very difficult. to comment on you know. like any nerves it's one of those sacks of nerves when the bully stops and believe the switch themselves so one of the things the initial things that happens is you get a buildup of fluid little little malone's on an effect of the you start to draw in
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the room. and then lead or. rest if you feel your own moral theory but it's up to the coroner decide and work out what it is that's actually killed. and we understand that that post-mortem examination is going to be taking place and we also knew that this amesbury couple were exposed to the same nerve agent as the script hols but it will police be able to identify how they were exposed. well the police i understand are looking for one of the walls that. they touched because i'm on i suspect what it is is it's the the vessel that was used by the would be assassins of this cripples that they discarded in the park and that will still have the navi taught contaminants either on the outside of it or inside it as well and that nestle could have been a syringe it could have been a little pot it could be something as innocent as you know a part of
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a stream or something out but somehow or other and the come in contact with it's been of got into the skin and this nerve agent is absorbed through the skin and the the lethal dose builds up over a period of time is it virtually impossible vent to be sure that this area has. that any trace of no which has been completely eliminated from from the area or whether just you know when the flaws in the clean up operation well the q-tip operation didn't concentrate in this area because they they didn't know that anyone with who come in contact with a moving truck agent had been there i'm there to difficulties but not to talk the first one is it's designed to evade normal detection techniques the detection capabilities are used by the british military near to military the police the emergency services the rest of it so it requires special of our trees on the special of our trees they're very lucky in that the closest ones are four combined
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but there's so much of an area that needs to be checked they don't have the volume capacity to go through and check it quickly so you know we got a capacity problem here in checking these areas they may well have the offending item but they may not have gone through the checking process yet we have to wait until the police. investigation continues does this mean then that there is a significant risk of further exposure. i think that there is a clear and present danger and i actually highlighted this to measure police on the fifteenth of march when i asked what had happened. the content of that occurring the more we talk with will be assassins than descriptions from the work and then subsequently. the risk of a helping themselves very small and it is very small because there's not a lot of it is a very large area and you have to come in says go contact with it with your bare skin because it's absorbed through the skin but if you do we know see the leaflets it's in there is. thank you very much for sharing your thoughts and analysis of
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appreciate it philip ingram chemical weapons analyst and former senior intelligence officer joining us that from bombing i'm going at her other top story this hour ethiopia and eritrea cream to reopen embassies in each other's capitals as part of plans to normalize relations between the once feuding neighboring countries if you have his prime minister is in neighboring eritrea for a historic summit it's the first such visit by an ethiopian leader in more than twenty is crank up to report. that was hard to imagine even a few days ago and if you'll be in prime minister locked in the embrace often eritrean leader on every june soil the two countries haven't had diplomatic 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
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or three neighbors if you're paying your three i have very rich history shared culture shared religion and shared memory in probably. thousands of people lined the streets of the capital to greet abbie's motorcade they stood among flags of the two nations once a poor. nearly one 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 if you'll be 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 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 resist
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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're 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 the big two four was that a raise topes for peace in the horn of africa priyanka gupta al-jazeera now confusion in brazil as to whether or not a former president believes in us and in it to silva is to be released from prison a brazilian court of appeals judge overruled an order.
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