tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera July 12, 2018 12:00am-1:01am +03
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so has the last force is the new foreign secretary would he just say. what is that hold he just he just looked like he was not which is a lot after all. why on opinion why do you think that is they. have been any sort referendum on the on the on breaks it won't be helpful at all because i forget one of the reasons why we had drugs in the first place is because people felt empowered that if i sign through election system we live in a country where if you live in where i didn't act for example with your conservative votes out you've got no chance in your part of town and by stars there are places in across the u.k. where you live in a conservative area in your neighborhood so your part doesn't count. but it wrecks that referendum with the referendum it was a fraud and it was and so my people it was one vote one punch and then many people saw in power not as a way to express i think if you went through the us the decision i mean it turns that it was so much you know is that say for example you had another referendum and
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then it was rejected and then it was like. the side what the not the. referendum i think you know i mean that's not the way to go forward i think there is enough among the public doesn't want to get on with it i think i would just go to some of them on the left saying and again you know when we even when the media the way the media describes i think it's all we talk about every manus will breakfast at the moment talk about the hottest breaks it will break its head off and also languages again what it does is it puts these two different concepts like this during the referendum and i think seeing as how we don't break one of the key findings of phrasing the few things that might operate is divided between young and old between cities and towns between those who are graduates and young graduates and i think the more we keep inviting back to two years ago the more that those divisions are more exacerbated and i don't think. the way you move forward i think we need to unify i think if we want to rejoin if we want to think about saying that you don't think we have to be. rejoining the european union maybe for my generation where
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when we're out of i think it's a little bit about repressed and you know i don't think i think people lose i mean people don't even try that was why would they trust in the future again. keeping that in mind i want to share two perspectives one of the i think the one that may not this is hayden who says it is same i was on a march a few weeks ago with hundreds of thousands of people of all political persuasions hoping we could gain a people vote the mood was optimistic and defiant personally u.k. labor have disappointed me greatly but i like others will not be deterred now they got pushed back this is tom who says in the country the silent majority still want brecht that people vote are deluded if they think the new referenda. could be one especially after the establishment have tried to shaft them i manda that's holy i wish it were limited eluded. i mean personally think more deluded is boris you know like we've just gone there everything he's ever said and even hunt is related and
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rob the new. secretary have these visions that are just so on representative particularly of what younger generations want but i think what's really interesting there was an icon of the wording in the second tweet it picked up on being in london and it's all about in london for the march where a hundred thousand people came to that march when i was one of the organizations that helped organize it and my friend richard they came buses came from all over the country like the way was from liverpool from calls from devon from norfolk like this wasn't the london metropolitan elite marching through london it was a genuine variety equal like rich poor black what walking through london because they were so annoyed at the thought that we're going to lose jobs are gone the economy is going to be like nobody can point to a good news story out of it right now and it takes quite a lot to get a hundred thousand people from all across the country walking through the streets of london in a protest gotta say jonathan as
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a professor of economics who was studied right said and the economic impact it may have on the united kingdom and on europe of course as well would you like to also one of the guess who is not a professor of economics. well i mean i think the question i'd like to ask methody in particular reason i have some sympathy with this point if you as i said i don't think he's right if you get a tie for second referendum but the divisions east coast of that which come through very clearly in that they are but how is this that i as an economist and my political science colleagues deficiency come he said that they're there they're not they're not me we're not produced by breaks it and nothing in the economic analysis that that i've done or anybody else has done just that they will be sold by brags that if anything they are likely to be made worse by breaks it. when we question not i'd like to ask a mr you have given that grade say it is and i suspect he actually grazer this
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president is not the solution to the divisions essential economic divisions of the u.k. why is it that we should be doing and how is it exactly that we can with breaks that hanging over us and i likely to absorb some much of the political and policy energy ate in the u.k. or even a few years you know how do we get over how do we have he say wait for this but i actually thought it very difficult of course you know i wish i had that step. saying can't just assume that question and say go for it and i admire you even try rob to get harry i know that our quest is other that methane is thinking up the response and i think that's right it's a. system of just make clear from the start you know i'm someone you are going to remain probably will still be liking the main part of the european union i just don't think you do i think going against that with us that the i think will open us
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into a very dangerous room you know we're very lucky in the u.k. where you are that people are not usually skeptical about the outcome of elections a number of parts of the world is a big problem where people don't even trust the elections and i think that if we tried to go back to ross i grieve donovan i think there are big problems and we just and it is so we have on the all party parliamentary group on a back to breaks it for young people and we just our nation mightn't be on whether young people believe that this current government will be able to deliver. in the future generations and many young people who don't get it don't believe that their voices are being heard and they don't feel that you know this government will take the pursuit of breaks it. live up to reach a generation because some of the issues like amanda mentioned a matter of movement of course a massive major issues but you know i think we need to have a real conversation with with the european union about looking about how we can actually go forward and i think part of the problem with threes may's government is right out the outset there will die out lot of different options that were on the
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table and i think that particularly the conversation i had with the european union when i went to meet with them off there are. reports on which i've been there isn't a real opportunity to think about crane it was both. i know i sound like a break and when i say this you know when we talk in the region male model what we talk about this model these models didn't exist before this race on the weekend more though i'm so why can't we have you came with that what's large generation look i mean to me you know i said our votes remain i wish never the boss. i think they are big about my generation of the generation i don't care about the politics of it so what. do you think you know. and amanda and jonathan thank you often i'll go super fast let me show you something here that's a countdown clock from the think tank that does that as part of the u.k. and a change in europe how many days hours minutes and seconds before breaks it actually happens. and we end our conversation with this live
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comment on you tube from blue green who says there can only be our hard bracketed sentiments of the e.u. over breakfast our clear back to punish the u.k. at every turn anything last that hard. against u.k. one person you thank you guest thank you for community this will not be the last time i am sure we will be discussing black side and we will continue our coverage online and i will as well and to watch a movie and i will see you next time. it's like the wild west they can do anything and that's really hard for them because the
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old powerful internet is both a tool for democracy and a threat somebody who controls ten thousand dollars hundred thousand voices and they distort the debate in the echo chamber world of fake news in cyberspace the rules of the game have changed there are no precedents people out investigate disinform ation and democracy part two on al-jazeera. being located outside that western centric sphere of influence we're able to bring a different perspective to global and that. when you peel away all of the lists of cold the military and the financial darkening you see the people in those words and those policies are affecting. motion on their faces the situation they're living in that's when our viewers can identify with the story. from mother to daughter an ancient craft kept alive by
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a bustling matriarch. from start to finish. all traditions intertwined with new designs making this family's place unique into an easy as rich tapestry. thread on al-jazeera. hello i'm sue turton in london with the top stories here on al-jazeera u.s. president donald trump has told nato leaders they must increase their defense spending to four percent of their economic output as double his previous demand and the alliance his current targets earlier trump launched
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a surprise verbal attack on germany accusing it of being controlled by russia because it by so much russian oil and gas james bays reports from brussels. never has the u.s. commitment to its nato allies look to the shaky is this even before the summit had started president trump used his breakfast with nato secretary general to attack his allies focusing on one in particular germany is totally controlled by russia because they were getting from sixty to seventy percent of their energy from russia and a new pipeline and you tell me of that's appropriate because i think it's not and i think it's a very bad thing for nato and i don't think it should have happened and i think we have to talk to germany about it the secretary general looked taken aback made the lawrenceville trying to bite me but the president kept up his extraordinary attack but germany as far as i'm concerned is captive to russia because it's getting so much energy from russia so we're supposed to protect germany's. energy
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from russia chancellor merkel who's just survived a bruising political battle at home had this response to this fresh assault. that's entitled to its months i have myself witnessed that parts of germany were controlled by the soviet union and i am very happy that today we are unified in freedom as the federal republic of germany and that's why we can say that we make our own policies and we make our own decisions. despite that comment she looked as though the ferocity of trump's words had affected her she was hardly smiling as she interacted with the others. the president and the chancellor of ordered each other out walking at different ends of the procession then what's known as the family photo at a time of family feud as helicopters flew overhead the tension was high the leaders
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clearly aware of the current divisions are among the most serious this alliance is faced in its almost seventy years of existence. finally when chancellor merkel and president trump actually met the language was much more conciliatory than earlier we have delusions. perhaps the president decided to back down he's been known in the past to avoid confrontation in face to face meetings or the two decided to declare a truce for now either way damage has been done to us germany relations and to the image of unity they wanted to project james pays out just zero at nato headquarters in brussels zimbabwe's main opposition party and its supporters have much of the country's electoral commission to demand reforms it says are vital for a credible vote this month the movement for democratic change insists there needs to be a deal on how to design print and store ballot papers to ensure the system is fair
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the country will pick a new president and members of parliament on july the thirtieth in the first election since one gabi was forced to resign late last year the first pitches have been released of the twelve time boys on their football coach being treated in hospital it follows a john mattick rescue mission to free them from a cave they were trapped in for more than two weeks barely to be monitored in hospital for at least seven days. haiti's prime minister jack guy laugh entente has given no indication he will resign despite widespread antigovernment protests there have been four days of unrest over the government's plan to raise fuel prices in the impoverished nation which have left several people dead the world cup semifinal between england and croatia has gone to extra time and english fans erupted in cheers as their team went one nil up in the opening minutes but croatia
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i i think i i think i think i'm i this morning i woke up and then i. and somehow linking to my comment on made me feel safe but i don't think if anything got around me. the habit of always having that come out always me had become a part of my life i think it was a cut of i. cut the good of the job out of that. i'm going to go after the guy that i want to
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the twenty three years old. some people might say the war started one particular reason. others may say it's sort of thought on as a reason. but no matter what reason it began and what is more important we walk a bun found ourselves closer to this more than it were. when this war broke out i was filming the surgery on the board to film i was doing quite an accomplishment and i asked that they took to the hospital right away if i could join to implement soon it was may come into first day of the war with the first day with a non-secure. cut
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a. despicable kid must. be a lot of it would do and they would never got to stand up and wouldn't. have been told. how to strip. the comments that get it in the government down. now. being with someone else feels like the most convenient thing to do under the circumstances. and it's made me feel i was escaping my fear. as i didn't want to sit at home with sixty members of my family seeking shelter in our house. only those a crew was reluctant for me being there.
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the time was moving as fast i think i was driving. i never imagined i would be interested to ation. it was the first time experience i must say. i was never on the free. i witnessed that impulse on the news. how lives were being saved. it douglas twenty minutes from getting the call to arrive to the hospital. which seems like a little. bit
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that's the home of the family and i'm alive and by all i must. be alone i'm alone. as the war good wars. more and more features are now the significance of one to the hospital. within a few days the place has turned into a person. transmitting that a distant from the more i. think. it was five of them because i felt i. was it.
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was on but most. or they would just open it all so i kept silence. was. sitting next to close miking. and made me feel more comfortable in this situation. the silence he excluded of hold me and deflected his long life experience. everyone looked up to him specially thing and listen experienced team members. they were. all right. i've read.
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