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tv   Juvenile Justice  Al Jazeera  July 10, 2018 4:00am-5:01am +03

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it could only work if the boys wouldn't panic and fully rely on their rescue us for guidance although details of the rescue operation have yet to emerge it's safe to say that this tricky plan has so far been successful authorities say the boys are doing fine despite day ordeal by details about their medical conditions have not been released dramatic disappearance of the football team and their equally dramatic rescue has not only captivated thailand but many worldwide how this brought in from around the globe something the palance of the boys say they will never forget as long as they live step fastened al-jazeera at the time long cave and not in thailand scott idlers at the hospital where the eight rescued boys are being treated and sent this update. second day a second rescue mission is successful for more boys pulled from deep inside that cave here in northern thailand and now eight boys are in this hospital over my
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shoulder they have a special floor that dedicated just to them we know that they're being protected they're isolated that's because there's concern about infectious diseases there's concern about bacteria their immune systems most likely are compromised they're worried about something in cast of them from outsiders but also possibly something they picked up in the caves so right now they're up there they're being cared for but again it's kind of a nice place we know the family members are up there on that same floor but there's no direct contact communication just yet now the third mission is planned for thirty first tuesday and they're hoping that those five other beds on that very special floor will be filled on tuesday night. israel's prime minister has ordered the immediate cocksure of a key economic lifeline into gaza the carom abu salim crossing is a vital access point for supplies in the besieged territory humanitarian aid medical supplies and food will still be allowed in but israeli authorities are also stepping are also stopping fishing boats from operating more than six miles off the
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coast it's in response to palestinians launching incendiary kites into israel. be that your general should go to hamas we will immediately use a heavy hand against hamas in the gaza strip in a significant step we will today close it getting so long crossing there will be more steps but i will not elaborate. so i have for you on the program president john prepares to reveal his pick for the u.s. supreme court in a prime time announcement. and the search goes on for the container of a deadly nerve agent which fatally poisoned a woman in an english town. how are we still have plenty of warm sunshine across western prosecutable lovely weather continuing here looking good for wimbledon i suspect it should stay dry throughout the tournament which you believe also dry down towards the southeastern corner of her just around the balkans around hungry rumania bulgaria and south was
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longer spells of right on the cards here low pressure to just affecting western sort of russia to see some rain coming in full football once again colder than it has been recently by colder than it has been recently to just around scandinavia a little area of low pressure here dragging in those northerly winds spinning away across the low countries as we go through choose day temperatures no higher than about twenty four celsius there for london little breezy that it has been recently but it should stay dry through tuesday stays dry into wednesday as well as similar values on those temperatures so pretty does look pretty good but a bit of wet weather there into oland since scotland but elsewhere and we settle for much of the british isles showers continue for central and eastern parts if you may notice up towards that western side of russia more sharon coming in here down towards a med is fied a dry hot sunshine in the hot sunshine stretches across the other side of the med so getting up to thirty seven in colorado the warmth staying in place here a lot awards too on the other side of the continent
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a took some share of that twenty five. with over forty thousand people killed under his roof it took twenty five years to bring me to a court of law but why for so long it was such a brutal dictator considered an ally of the west who were reporting to the congress that the press were engaged to. al jazeera unravels the history of trads notorious former president is sane dictator on trial on al-jazeera.
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a combat quick look at the top stories persons prober exit foreign secretary has resigned plunging prime minister to resign may's government into crisis johnson is the second senior minister to quit in twenty four hours as may struggles to keep cabinet united of the strategy for persons leaving the european union. eight school boys have now been rescued from a thai cave where they were stranded for more than two weeks for more boys and their football coach still inside the head of the rescue mission says he needs three more days to get them out. and israel has shut down the carom abu salim crossing into gaza it's a major economic lifeline and vital access point for supplies in the proceeds territory. now the japanese prime minister has cancelled an upcoming foreign trip as the number of people have now died from flooding and landslides increases others
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are still missing after record terentia will rains inundated many areas in the southwest ok yama region from there on the bride reports. this was the first day so your coworker and his father could return to see what's left of his house and possessions he abandoned it with his wife and young children in the middle of the night a stalled waters inundated his neighborhood. got into gaza. we were told to move to safety to leave so that's what we did we took nothing with us except what we had on . new stock on this day he showed us how the waters quickly rose to the upper floor of his house his father can't remember rains like it. was because of you that i've never experienced anything like it. is not a city that is apparent in. this part of could actually key city was one of the worst affected areas here as elsewhere the river simply couldn't handle the
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incredible surge of water and it broke its banks in three places inundating thousands of homes and sadly claiming lives with a break in the weather and waters receding emergency teams have stepped up their efforts to look for the missing the rising death toll has already made this one of the most lethal storms japan has experienced in decades at its height a broad swathe of western and southern japan were affected stretching emergency teams to the limit many people couldn't escape the unprecedented rainfall in time and had to be rescued thousands of people remain displaced wondering when they can go home along the banks of the river in karate pumps work around the clock to bring down water levels in the coming days for the cold water family rebuilding their lives will take a lot longer. it's hard to express my feelings in words tatsuya tells us and he
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hopes he'll never have to again rob mcbride al-jazeera akiyama prefecture japan. some news from syria where rebels have confirmed that government forces have surrounded opposition held areas of daraa city this is despite a russian brokered cease fire agreed on friday but there are a province united nations is calling for unrestricted access to the southwest to deliver aid to tens of thousands of people it says it desperately in need of it the fighting is displaced more than three hundred thousand civilians in the past two weeks that's the largest exodus of the seventy a whole elsewhere six civilians including four children have been killed in an airstrike by the saudi a morality coalition in yemen it happened near ties in the southwest of the country coalition air support is being used to back government forces in the fight against the who sees in yemen now a leading human rights group in the u.s. is saying it's unlikely that president donald trump's government will reunite
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migrant toddlers with their families before a crucial deadline a judge had ordered that one hundred two migrant children under the age of five who were separated from their parents at the u.s. border must be sent back to their families by choose day but the american civil liberties union which brought the lawsuit that led to the order says less than half of them will be successfully reunited more than two thousand children have been separated from their families on the trumps zero tolerance immigration policy she had pretense and is live for us in washington now so she have a federal court has been deciding whether to extend that deadline what's emerged from the hearing. or going to breakdown of the numbers from the government as you say the government says it has one hundred two children under five who've been separated from their parents who are undocumented when they crossed the border the american civil liberties union says it thinks actually that number might be higher off that one hundred two the government says ninety six should be reunited with
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their parents under that court order by tuesday however it cannot meet that number . can't get anywhere near that number it thinks it will be likely to have reunified fifty four children with their parents on tuesday which is said well short of the ninety six or one hundred two that we were that the government is mandated to reunited by by tuesday the judge has accepted though that there are logistical problems in reuniting the children and the parents by the deadline on tuesdays and now the government on tuesday by eighteen g m eight hundred g.m.t. has to provide a list of the children who haven't been reunited by tuesday and a timeframe for when the government things they will be reunited with their parents share what is the next deadline then after tuesday. well obviously that it's reuniting these remaining under fives in
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a timely manner then the next big deadline is july twenty sixth that's when the court ordered that all children no matter their age have to be reunited with their parents july twenty sixth just under three weeks time basically given the problem that the government had in reuniting the some one hundred children with their parents there is a great deal of resigned skepticism that the government is going to make that deadline is being completely clear that when the government separated these children from their parents often taking them thousands of miles away from their children to two facilities around the country they did not keep parental records as soon as they were handed over to the office for refugee resettlement from customs and border protection c.b.p. didn't give. any information about the parents they didn't didn't specify how many of these children who are now causes undocumented worst separated from their parents in many cases we hear anecdotally there's raechel simply weren't even kept
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so there is a real i mean just kind of a despairing skepticism about how these children will be reunited with their parents certainly by july twenty sixth in some cases perhaps whether they will ever be reunited with their parents all right thank you very much chad we can see there in washington. oh in other developments in a few hours' time president donald trump will announce his candidacy for the soon to be vacated supreme court seat it's the second time he's been able to choose a justice in the past eighteen months and it's significant because his decision is likely to swing the court firmly towards the right so far there are four leading contenders brett kavanaugh began his career as the clock to justice kennedy who is retiring at the end of the month the fifty three year old is a popular choice for conservatives because of his position on abortion immigration and gun rights then there is raymond catholic fifty one year old six appeals court judge he's seen as supporting originalism that's into approaching the constitution
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along the lines of its meaning at the time of enact mint forty six year old mother of seven amy coney barrett is viewed as the outside choice she's a former professor of lauren member of the people of praise religious organization and a favorite among social conservatives the fourth candidate is thomas hardy mina fifty three year old philadelphia appeals court judge he's a conservative form a cab driver and would be the only supreme court judge not to have attended either of the elites law schools yale or harvard can really how it is in washington joins us now kimberly any clue as to trump's thinking on this. we've been watching carefully because the president told us he'd make up his mind at noon here in the united states that has come and gone several hours ago and still no clear indication it appears the president former reality t.v. show star is certainly making this somewhat of a reality t.v. moment leaving us to the very last minute promising to reveal this nomination in
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prime time viewing hours that is zero one g.m.t. tuesday but here in the united states prime time nine pm so there's an awful lot of suspense an awful lot of drama we know the president has it out to for candid as you just pointed out in his words he said on sunday he told reporters that if he chooses any one of those four people his words you can't go wrong right so waiting for his final decision then on the supreme court nominee what happens after that what is the confirmation process expected to be like. well the nomination is almost the easy part the confirmation part is expected to last week's could stretch raid up until november even before the congressional elections that are scheduled to take place but the top republican in the u.s. senate says that in fact that vote will take place prior to those elections it all
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comes down to the senate where there is expected to be a lengthy battle we know that the nominee will have to appear before the u.s. senate there will be public hearings that will be written answers that will be submitted to the senate before the senate votes but i can tell you that activists on both sides are lining up because there is such a deep concern among many that this nominee because the list that donald trump put forward on the campaign trail was vetted by very staunch conservatives that there's this fear that the court with this nomination could be moving to the political right so tens of millions of dollars being spent on both sides to wage advocacy campaigns again this is expected to be a messy and lengthy battle that could stretch on for weeks if not months thank you very much with the latest on that story kimberly whole kit and washington bush police say a woman who died after being exposed to the nerve agent of a child likely received a high dose of the substance don't study just died on sunday just over a week after she fell ill in amesbury in southern england investigators suspect the
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deadly substance is linked to an attack in nearby souls when novacek was used to poison a former russian spy and his daughter in march so new reports. she was forty four a mother of three children with no apparent links to the espionage drama that has engulfed this quiet city yet just became the first murder victim and one of the most troubling poisoning cases in recent times that is both shocking and i think appalling that a british citizen has died having being exposed to another truck nerve agent but make no mistake we are determined to find out how dorm and have charlie rowley came into contact with such a deadly substance and we will do everything we possibly can to bring those responsible to justice. more than one hundred counterterrorism police officers are involved in the investigation they are working on the theory that the latest victims handle the container used to carry the nerve agent but poisoned russian
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double agent said basically powell and his daughter yulia. the u.k. authorities still hole russia responsible but while kremlin officials offered sympathies for the victim they have denied any involvement. we do not know of anyone mentioning russia or in the context of the second poisoning in the u.k. we do not know of russia being mentioned by anyone or being associated with it we suppose it would be quite upset anyway. meanwhile souls remains a city in a state of nervousness as just behind me here earlier on monday the road closed because a man had taken ill on a bus there's no confirmation that it has anything to do with another child poisoning here but it just goes to show that police here are taking absolutely no chances. yet there are those here who are trying to remain composed says can be a little bit worrying but i think we've got the best people around with putting down down the road we've got the hospital down the road and we've got the best people we
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can life is what it is yeah they're in the wrong place at the wrong time your mailman or survive it's a bit with his. dog when he's on stage in the song nice is no danger to public but . you need their republican a dog saying. and the wait goes on for more definitive answers to this deeply troubling incident so now you go. just a quick look at the top stories now person's prober exit foreign secretary has resigned plunging prime minister to resign may's government into crisis or as johnson is the second senior minister to quit in just twenty four hours as may struggles to keep a cabinet united over the strategy for britain leaving the european union johnson stepped down just hours after britain's chief breaks it a go shaye to quit in protest against may's proposal to keep the closest possible
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trading ties with the e.u. . this is not a trial we will end free movement we will end the jurisdiction of the european court of justice we will stop sending vast sums of money to the european union every year we will come on to the common agricultural policy we will come out of the common fisheries policy i believe those that is what people voted for when they go to leave and we will deliver in face with the british people. eight schoolboys have now been rescued from a thai cave where they were stranded for more than two weeks all the children have been sent to hospital after two days of rescue operations for more boys and their football coach remain in the cabin in chiang rai that the head of the rescue mission says he needs three more days to get them out. israel has shut down a key economic lifeline into the gaza strip a move hamas has branded a war crime the carom abu salim crossing is a vital access point for supplies in the besieged territory israel's prime minister
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says it's in response to palestinian protesters sending incendiary kites over the border to burn fields. rescue workers in japan is searching for dozens of people who remain missing after to wrench all rain unleashed floods and landslides in southwestern part of the country one hundred fourteen people have now died and millions have been forced from their homes more than eleven thousand homes are also without power and hundreds of thousands of people have no access to running water. and syrian rebels in saying that government forces have surrounded the opposition stronghold this is despite a russian brokered ceasefire agreed on friday united nations is calling for unrestricted access to the area in order to deliver aid to tens of thousands of people the fighting has displaced more than three hundred thousand civilians in the course of the past two weeks was the headlines i'll have more news for you later on coming up next it's the stream.
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hi i'm femi ok and you're in the stream we are live on al-jazeera and you tube something that often gets lost in reporting a serious of war the experiences of everyday people who find themselves caught up in it today we hear some of their stories. in twenty eleven mar one his and his close friends may l. and tadic joins the first protests of the arab spring in syria they marched through
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the streets shouting anti-government slogans running from soldiers and tear gas five years later one was a rebel one had been killed by government forces and one more one was a journalist and one began working with american artists and journalist molly crabapple that was back in twenty fifteen when she drew illustrations of secret voters he took in his hometown of rocker while it was under the control of i still the success of that project and the poor they developed with a seed for brothers of the garden an intimate memoir of life in syria that marwan and molly worked on together so they join us today is in ankara turkey crab apple is with us from new york hello molly hello and it seems appropriate that we connect via the internet because that's how you two connected i'm sure you got to slightly different stories mo on how did you meet molly. act so we met. through twitter. we started following each other in early twenty four june
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and then molly asked me to contribute for your question before an article she was writing about. jihadist activity on social media and birth from then we. started. to communicate regularly and we've decided to work together remarkable twitter relationship money let me show people a couple of the early tweets that probably caught your eye this one here is from our own from a twenty fourteen isis suspends education in iraq or prohibits students living in its territories from going to schools so that one was firm december twenty fourth teen another one of things early tweets. translation from our one we do not serve unveiled women hash tag iraq what was the tweets that caught your eye that made you think i need to work with this guy. well initially there was
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a small group of people you know analysts journalists some syrians as some people outside who would talk about syria but there was only one guy who had rocca as his location in his her bio yet at that time rocca was under isis occupation and i almost couldn't believe that i was like how can this guy the tweeting from you know under isis i mean isis murders journalists and so i got to know him and i realized that indeed he was tweeting under them and he was just a human of lunatic bravery. and so i started quoting him he started just giving me information about stuff like isis and in the world cup at cafes also we started to become friends because i was learning arabic and marwan had an amazing arabic literary education that he was happy to teach me a lot of and after a while i one day i asked him i was like my one do you get a cell phone photos on your phone of just daily life sort of things that you know we all have our hometowns and he said well i don't but i take some. so
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a moment to explain what it took to take some pictures in aleppo and rocca as well and wasn't so. in those the difference between taking pictures from under ice floes and pictures from rebel controlled territory is. you know my dog look and trouble like me and they might arrest you dick cheney or there are the rebels but it's no word that that serious i says. look at you immediately as a spy working for foreign intelligence and then you're going to definitely be executed. there was one time where you were asked for your phone and you had a whole lot of contacts on your phone can you tell us that story because that was a very scary moment for you. so it was
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a bit funny and i had to. back up plan and the two hours to put. he had the machine near follow him because so there was no coverage no coverage outside so there is no justification for him to take out your phone. unless you're doing something offline and that are you satisfied eating my sandwich and taking picture of. police. officer officer and. he would not if there was such specials and came to me so i started this mess sheet and we when he heard it he was like ok. so he thought he thought not only would get even a sandwich but also bring a very simple really just said very observant. money did you have any idea of the
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danger that you were asking mom to put himself in. so this guy kind of lied to me about that i asked him i was like you're not going to take any risks right to take photos and he's like oh no no it's my hometown i would never do that and then i think the first thing that crystallized to me the really mad daring that he had was he snuck into an isis hospital and he sent me photos and i was like what are you doing man and he's like oh don't worry there are no cameras and i point out like i did your father has exceeded any camera but he fortunately it was not working and i mean after that i did know the risk of it but ultimately. it wasn't me asking him to take this risk so much as my one deciding to take those risks because he had determined that night was just dangerous and he was willing to take on additional danger to be a journalist the something i want to have everybody mando had said yeah so it's
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very important that you know because part of their life yeah situation so what is what you're facing today you could be arrested you could be from bombing and if it could happen to you. so the something like that except for a limited specific moment. i mean it was far better is when to say. ok is it me or sara's time because simply i was facing similar situations. and this wasn't present what's really interesting about the front cover of the book of other than this striking illustration is that the memoir is by both of you it's not illustrated by molly and written by ma one actually says. and molly i want to take us for a couple of your illustrations as one that you particularly picked here i've got on
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my laptop which is one of the early protests in rocca why did you want to see that particular image. so many people have tried to write out the origins of the syrian revolution they've tried to reduce the entire revolution in the war to geopolitics to a matter of a fight between assad and isis or a fight between russia and iran on one hand and saudi and qatar in the u.s. on another and they forget this actually started as a popular uprising so i was very very concerned with document in those moments of early protest this drying it's the first protest that security forces and the army shot live ammunition at the protestors and to get an image like this what i did was i who are over citizen video and the citizen video it's larry you can barely tell what's going on and it's taken by people on their phones holding them vertically running away from tear gas and running away from bullets so what i would do is i would freeze frame it over and over and over i think maybe like one hundred freeze
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frames i would print them out i would lay them out and then i would draw them all together so that i create like a panorama so that i could restore what it might have felt like to stand there what it might have felt like to see these protests through my one's eyes. i want to share this thought with you it comes from our online community and it's an interesting take a. says that something like a memoir is inherently biased because a memo is so personal it will be shaped by the beliefs and opinions of the author or that can be a power forward counting of how events shape a person they must be remembered that it was a one sided account of the events that took place. i agree that of course it's among my so it's not supposed to be. too late to get back comprehensive picture of what's happening and it's about my last at that specific time and specific places so our of course there is no book
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that can cover our everything that happened of the country for seven more than seven years now. but still it's comes after a after or to. a you know a person's and temperature and what. you know what he witnessed and. what he or she saw that mahler on the porch and but for me i want it to be as that a new teacher i suppose approaching even the status my feelings from from my so you know as much as a code but when it comes to my opinions i put them dark over there but when i talked about my friends i try to be more like gentleness than. that than a friend a friend. what i was and witnessed the places i went to people i met i
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tried to give a very accurate. accurate picture of you know. it's trot and when marching starts are about myself and my emotions are put at them there and so you know these are my opinions sure let's give people an example of as a young man called apple a mature are you mad at him. rocca he's a status a member of i saw his dad was very strict needless to say and there's a little paragraph that you can share with us give us a sense of what you thought about this young man what was he doing so much this man was born into an isis fighter before isis was meant. to be slamming groups of iran and yeah. when it was still i'll khyber.
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when he grew up there and when i says that crossed the border and came to syria they started to really look at fighters from different areas who are from iraq to syria and for and the his father will the whole family was sending a mission. to iraq and i met this very. young guy. very interesting to me as well might discover that. he was being a little bit her. brand like literally l.x. playing video games but he says that happens to be a fighter and i still read us the little paragraph mark go ahead yeah. to this day i wonder what i will my dad might have been in them at their word he was too timid to be a bullet in the he didn't start her arm like a true news in
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a fighter harlem other people's fear he wasn't some sort of social awkwardness from twitter nor desperate for recognition like my nephew who farmed in the kalashnikov and then to make sure we're going to come out from beneath is so show and present and afflicted by his family's order man i've been with jenna and was simply the son of a father what happened to be and have it to this he was smart calm not just an innocent yes innocent it was the innocence the best the best talkin to me and i come up to think that there's something so i think there's something so important about the album which i had chapter because when you're dealing with a group that's not only as evil as isis but that is as showy about its evil as isis is that doesn't try to conceal it there's a tendency for people to say these are humans these are monsters with green skin
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and tails and you know horns and that's something very comforting for people because if you say that isis is a part of humanity you don't have to acknowledge the potential for evil that lurks in people and i think that what we were trying to do with the chapter saying like no these these are people these are humans they're humans that often chose to do in comprehensible evil but they're humans and they're not apart from a species. i wanted the code when he came and at the first chance. to show that they're. the one who. knows this. isn't as life which is. life and. when. it's coming and first i start marking.
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and all of these things. i want to share and so money basically corrupted this young man into being a normal teen boy smoking and playing video games but secretly there is something that. is remarkable from the way that you couldn't be in two more different worlds but somehow molly you tapped into the world that marwan was experiencing for instance as a sequence in the book where some women come into the cafe that marwan is running he's running an internet cafe he's very resource for iraq and there's this woman that you drew but also these women and these were being struck out at me can you tell me their story their story that you put into that illustration. the first woman is a woman who's she's a female isis member whose job it was she minds me of the aunts and the handmaid's
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tale it was her job to guard other women including in slaves the women and the pair of the other two women the women whose face aren't covered those you can see the women who have been kidnapped from singe are a mother and her daughter and then her infant baby and these women have been brought into modern ones cafe these are women who would soon be sold to fighters and raped and go through unimaginable horrors women who had seen trauma the likes of which no human is meant to comprehend probably seen the male family members murdered and when i drew this image my own obviously wasn't sitting around taking pictures of these women so we relied entirely on his memories and my one was so strict that he was like this is not going to be cliché i don't want something that is degrading to these women's dignity i don't want something that looks like you know some of john and child hallmarking and i don't want something lower it i want something that's true and you just i drew them again and again and again and he
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would look at them and say no make her older make her younger make her hands care less and i would just draw and draw on draw and this one i'm so proud of because i think that despite having no reference what these women look like i created something that was close to true. and i want to show our audience and pick his of. we have. a away and let me show you these pictures because due to what to read an interesting way you helped to cover with the visuals you helped each other with the way the memo was written it reads like a novel who was the pusha who was the book's iest mala. i think i could protect the birds if you have been dictated that i'm in it on a bit suspect to it's affecting my memory i promoted as the friend says when i kid but when there are no references i had to make sure that.
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the drilling step by step. stays true to my memory so that money won't have to be. there but that's a mistake and send it to me and be like the dynamic this objects here are going the same size as it look at in their right. you know right you know this is how you meant to let's try and but especially in the challengers are i mean i'm not i have a very you know small idea of arts art but i can see how difficult to convey especially facial expressions. so hard and this basically it's a quest that's why the drawing about these is it you know i meant to cross a long time to complete it because of this complexities and there's certain feeling that is not easy to. bed was also you need to give the exact
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expression a nod and ask for and it was something very similar to with how we wrote so ultimately of course it was matter ones like not one had the final say on everything but i think that all writers are eager maniacs and that's probably why most writers don't co-write something like this to do this but it started with notes that my run had taken surreptitiously on his phone when he was living under isis and he notes that he had to e-mail to himself just in case his phone was tapped and isis would see it. when he came to turkey he showed me these notes and then we laid them all out saw what needed to be filled out and then i would just sit next to him and i would interview him and i would interrogate him i would say what was it like to go through that check where what was the guy wearing how high was the wall and i would write something and i would give it to marwan and he would go and he would say no you ruined it it's not like this at all and it's not literary writing that's wrong and them and then i would go with what he wrote and i would say my run you're seriously overestimating the educational level about the
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middle east that's happening in america right now we got explain this for us no american will understand what you're saying and we went back and forth back and forth i think some sentences we wrote about ten times to the point where i don't think there's one sentence in this book nor one line that i drew that is the product of both of us i want to share with you both a video comment from christine benedict christian benedict he's a campaign manager for amnesty international u.k. have a listen thank you marwan for telling us your story and such an eloquent and vivid manner and tamale for which and pointless creations as you know we had amnesty international recently issued a report stating that the u.s. led coalition's war for annihilation in iraq or killed hundreds of civilians and u.k. needs to come clean over its role in this carnage a coalition commander wrote last year that there has never been a more precise campaign in history of armed conflict and few days ago he could
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defend secretary said our research was disgraceful unfounded and damaging if you had a message for the u.k. government regarding its attitude toward civilians in america what would it be. my one. oh it's postcard lying because that sign up for sly doesn't you know it's so much research to see to wonder the sense of the past. according to many records a number between one hundred fifty thousand people and two hundred just right at the beginning of the campaign that lasted four or four months where did those people go and why almost eighty percent to ninety percent from the heart as there were destroyed why and how could this possibly be called a liberation and then you say that you are like. a small number. twenty
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one of these all these are big you know are there and then by a cruise the number is something fifty seven i think. after reports came and that it became a joke at least you are the people the truth here let me put this to both of you this is from leno on twitter and she talks about how many people displaced from their homes in southern syria and they're now trapped between assad's air strikes and jordan. why can't anyone get these people who water medicine shelter un u.n. aid c r anyone has time to donna i mean the reason is quite clear which is that israel and jordan let people catch water i mean it's. it's not rocket science all of these problems with refugees come from two things which is first that there are bombings and there are military campaigns that are just placing people from their
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homes but second that people that the governments of the neighboring states aren't allowing people in they're not allowing people to safety in turkey they're shooting people at the border in lebanon people have rose trying to sneak over the border in the winter in jordan they close the border and you have hundreds of thousands of people in the desert being killed by scorpions there israel obviously the border also are they have closed and they're not taking refugees because these states haven't opened their border they're not they're creating an additional monetary crisis to the monetary crisis these are issues created by bombing. let me share these two comments with you there from live right now i don't think the syrian civil war was motivated by resources it began as a protest of assad's government during the arab spring another comment life veto from your land there is a difference between cracking down on protesters and destroying a country common sense should tell you that assad is not responsible for destroying
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his own country outside forces are to blame that could get us into an hour's worth of conversation but what i do want to end with just briefly my one is what do you want people to get out of your memoir your memoir a morning what do you want what's the take away in a sentence if you can. if there are you know lessons to drive from here people should rely on them so. should you not i want them stoats and conversations because again if i get a community. rating and there are comments that a tragic one. and ignorance lies yelling that's where no matter. what i've been. on thank you molly i'm just going to share this with you on again it's coming live on twitter i'm really impressed i'm motivated by my well down body keep that spirit it's just to remind you what we're talking about money
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and mom's book brothers of the dawn available right now and so watching everybody you're just aging stream on twitter and always online at al-jazeera dot com fourth slash the stream see you next.
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the sam's in archaeology graduate from iraq he's also a part time going to billings pergamon museum which includes a reconstruction of the famous ishtar gate in babylon most of the people he's showing around came to germany as refugees this is just one of several billion museums taking part in the project called the meeting point and as well as bringing people together one of its aims is to emphasize the contribution of migrants right up to the present day to western culture. because i've been here for some time i can help them with lots of things that mrs ford to me the great thing is it's not just about museums about forming a new life here and part of life is culture. from mother to daughter an ancient craft kept alive by a bustling matriarch. from start to finish. all traditions
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intertwined with new designs making this family's place unique into nazir's a rich tapestry of the threads on a just zero. although i maryam namazie and london here are the top stories this hour within the last few minutes the u.k. prime minister to resign may has named it jeremy hunt as the new foreign secretary that's off the sheet also to needing cabinet members as disagreements of a person strategy for leaving the european union threatened to to have a ruling conservative party applause the foreign secretary the former foreign secretary boris johnson resigned declaring that the brics it dream is dying just
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hours after david davis quit as brakes at minister or brennan as mall. on friday the british prime minister theresa may announced agreement for a breakfast strategy in which the u.k. would align itself closely with many e.u. rules three days later it's all falling apart the resignation of boris johnson as her foreign secretary goes beyond policy differences this has the potential to become a leadership contest boris johnson was a figurehead of the twenty sixteen campaign for bracks it and he has long held ambitions to be prime minister himself the news of his resignation came shortly before theresa may came to parliament to explain friday's agreement and she was met with laughter and derision from the opposition and stony faces from her own side in the two years since the referendum we have had a spirited national debate in the. way through past abuse occurring around the cabinet table as they have on prepress
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tables up and down the country how can anyone have faith in the prime minister getting good good deal with twenty seven european union governments when she can't even broker a deal within her own cabinet. first late on sunday david davis the man tasked with actually negotiating bracks it with the e.u. chose to resign rather than present a strategy he did not agree with in his resignation letter he wrote the general direction of policy will leave us in at best a week negotiating position and possibly an inescapable one to resubmit a reply i do not agree with your characterization of the policy we agreed on at cabinet on friday i'm sorry that you have chosen to leave the government when we have already made so much progress the internal divisions of the conservative party were one of the reasons the previous prime minister david cameron called the two thousand and sixteen british referendum and the narrow victory for the leave campaign has done nothing to resolve the political gulf between the hardliners who
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reject the e.u. entirely and. other members who want to so-called soft bricks it's staying closer to the e.u. with one such hard line a says it's not yet time for this prime minister to quit this is about policy the not about the individual who told me that the policy needs to go back to what it was before the status quo and after mr davis's departure the prime minister quickly promoted a junior minister dominic robb to replace him whether she will last long enough to appoint a replacement for boris johnson is uncertain of paul brennan al-jazeera. or in our other top stories eight schoolboys have now been rescued from a thai cave where they were stranded for more than two weeks all the children have been sent to hospital after two days of rescue operations for more boys and their football coach remain in the cabin in chiang rai the head of the rescue mission says he needs three more days to get them out. israel has shut down a key economic lifeline into the gaza strip a move hamas has branded
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a war crime the abu salim crossing is a vital access point for supplies in the besieged territory israel's prime minister says it's in response to palestinian protesters sending incendiary kites over the order to burn fields rescue workers in japan is searching for dozens of people still missing after to run children on least floods and landslides in southwestern parts of the country one hundred fourteen people have died and millions have been forced from their homes or than eleven thousand homes are now without power and hundreds of thousands of people have no access to running water and syrian rebels and dare i say government forces have surrounded the opposition stronghold this is despite a russian brokered cease fire agreed to on friday the united nations is calling for unrestricted access to the area to deliver aid to tens of thousands of people i'm next we look at the trial of former chaddy and dictator his saying have.
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this is the first time an african head of state is to be tried by a special african tribe you know. he sent our brain the president of chad from nineteen eighty two to nine hundred ninety is on trial for crimes against humanity war crimes and acts of torture. he said listen to and put africa to them she says. in last week but i say this must
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have been brought up for us a poker face must suck no to put pressure on them or lose your vote and you've got to be set up i'm sure they're up there on that shit and you're not a pundit did buy them then think i'm going to. just see her the pool. to my end of the scent of a muddy to. say there's donaghy and then the manhunt is on his unit but i didn't feel. there was a group of us who said no we are never going to give up we were going to fight this until his own heartbreak died or went to court. you'll lose a slam. dunk city.
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mid dumbs least you. did that make you nimo see most young kids from eleven said they saw or known the me. sink a victim. the people you can. set the most documenting sissay care party. right since you're nearly dead on that there may come for this immunity the victim who can do some t.v. but that's really a part of why they some of what they despair. they more discipline. do to seche a cause they couldn't dishonorably. the way the wolf.
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is an aberrated not speak a single word during the eight months of his trial. not looking once of the hundreds of victims that gave their testimonies day to day. the stubborn silence of a dictator denying the legitimacy of the court. when the police arrested him in his villa in the capital city of senegal it's an upgrade had been living as a free man for twenty three years despite having had an international arrest one. in exile in senegal since the fall of his regime in one nine hundred ninety few
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believe that he would ever be arrested. on it they didn't know he had. let's move on neville about his legal killfile a city. or two to click on he said to me who really celebrity summit do you give says yes then next a shift in africa. new african near the end up against indy car this africa. count on this in is to prove all the necessary evidence to indict is in our brain had been painstakingly gathered over fifteen years ago by a few survivors and with the support of activist reed brody. nicknamed the dictator hunter he investigated is in a breeze dreaded political police force the d.d.s. . that task to stamp out those who allegedly opposed bryce regime.
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within these buildings abandoned by the d.d.s. reed brody made a major discovery. we go into the building and there you know in room after room ankle deep tens of thousands of documents. documents had not been touched you know for seven or eight years and they were just strewn across the floor. and we started to bend down and pick up these documents. and we realized that this was these were the files of his and harbor is political police. sent out he says soon very tough it was awful. there were spying reports and they were the lists of people who died in prison i mean this was everything you know that we needed you know to to build a solid legal case if you know if i'm going to give you
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a minute because we overlooked it's over because they left with. the money the victims association actually spent six months putting these documents together and we put them in a database. we were able to count the names of one thousand two hundred eight people who died in detention or you know or killed twelve thousand three hundred forty one victims of arbitrary arrests and of torture. that did this. seem to go do you diction. i think he did mean he doesn't make it. sheepish v.z.
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. direction about how big. the cream will meet him the scent of a new sump. in fix your. simple issue on. their desk say lafever to have them piss on sat shows that you eat the pretty when you know the political markings of artistry i did this on the show i seem a normal depends on what. i don't need victim len team can fix your data. and she for meaning. and meaning what. she did show as proof of the.

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