tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera July 12, 2018 12:00pm-12:33pm +03
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while the united arab emirates and the forces acting continue to operate the sort of detention facility you know which are outside. the preview of the yemeni authorities and outside of the law and international actually documented a serious piece in detention facilities that he in the north of the country such as under control but what we're really calling for is quite another and on the basis of the findings of this report is that we have only what we have established in this current network official and unofficial detention facilities which are run by the un and forces allied accelerants is that these disability has always been the most egregious abuses take place and they just lots and. lots more ground still to cover for you here on al-jazeera including these two stories thousands take to the streets of zimbabwe we want the elections to be free and fair. also had fifty first
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starts legal action against a pirate broadcaster for illegally streaming matches through a saudi satellite system. probably once again welcome to the other looked at the international forecast well pleased to say we might see a little bit of useful rain into the southwestern corner of the desert southwest of the united states firm ounce of cloud here that cloud just builds up towards the prairie's it's a central parts of canada so simply some places of rain a possibility over the next day or so further west more hot sunshine thirty celsius there in l.a. county it's twenty seven in seattle and walked to one the other side of the country twenty eight degrees for new york move north of the border with similar values that . continuing that across that eastern side of canada if you show us down towards
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cal honest towards georgia still some wet weather there into parts of eastern texas maybe pushing over towards louisiana over the next process guys into the southeast and cold all the humid side i suspect the cloud and dry meanwhile just around the midwest that will continue pushing over towards colorado maybe into southern parts of utah and down towards that southwestern kona was the start of the country western parts of canada warm sunshine coming through it once on tried to get parts of the carrot be able to get a bit of cloud sweater weather there into the western side of the region just pushing across the western side of the caribbean but for the ol insist on refined and sunny. beleaguered identify paying the price for his political maneuvering. now desperate for american recognition good technique and absolutely denounce oh. good
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he's. find strength and support from their own life for oppressed palestinians living in the occupied territories kind of thing the turbulence story the struggle for palestinian whole. history of a revolution on al-jazeera. welcome back you're with our jazeera live from doha peter dhabi in the chair right now these are your headlining stories so far now on the day two of the brussels summit nato leaders will try to turn the page from donald trump's controversial comments yesterday they'll focus on ending the war in afghanistan and they will look at
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security issues in ukraine mr trump ramped up the tension within hours of the original opening statement by criticizing what he called germany's dependence on russian energy. and we're getting our first look at the twelve tied boys in the football coach in hospital since their dramatic rescue from the flooded cave system the time navy has also released new video of the complicated rescue operation. a new report from amnesty criticizes the armed forces of the united arab emirates and yemen for what they see as a system of unforced disappearances arbitrary arrests and torture in southern yemen based on more than seventy interviews the authors say there are quote cruel and unlawful practices in your way you run detention centers. there are reports of an agreement between syrian government forces and rebels in their our city the syrian state news agency says rebels will hand over their weapons people who are traps will be allowed to leave the syrian government has widened its offensive to recover south western territories including an enclave held by eisel linked fighters
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russian warplanes are backing the assault on the yarmulke basin which borders the israeli occupied golan heights and jordan u.n. spokesman stefan to cherish says the situation for the civilians is dire as they continue to leave the region. up to ten thousand people were reportedly displaced towards the daraa including utra county countryside due to the fighting in the yarmouk basin up to two hundred thirty four thousand five hundred people remain internally displaced in daraa and in throw governorates in south in in the country this includes a majority who are in camps in kenya as well as some thirty thousand to thirty five thousand who have moved into areas that have recently changed control. now with the advance of regime forces across to come the fears for the safety of hundreds of journalists and opposition activists to and surround it so hot has more from beirut
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. the syrian government says almost eighty percent of dead is under its control more towns and villages continue to surrender agreeing to so-called reconciliation deals that pave the way for a return to government rule tens of thousands of the displaced syrians have since returned home but the united nations says some two hundred thousand people continue to seek safety close to the border with the israeli occupied golan heights some there are media activists and journalists who are considered by the government to be terrorists for their involvement in opposition activities are appealing for help . some two hundred seventy journalists are trapped in the borders are closed they face imminent danger and their lives are at risk i fear they will be killed or arrested we also be given safe exit we've lost contact with many of them some of those opposition media workers are under siege in the rebel controlled
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southern half of our city since sunday army soldiers and their allies encircled the opposition enclave in the provincial capital government opponents are to be given safe passage to rebel controlled areas in the north that condition was among the terms of friday's ceasefire deal between the rebels and the russian military which was negotiating on behalf of the syrian government the opposition says the transfer to adlib will happen once the rest of the deal is implemented many syrians are afraid to live under president bashar assad's rule syrian human rights activists have documented twenty one cases of executions and dozens of arrests since government troops moved into opposition areas during their almost three week offensive and. we have seen this happen. before in alipore in eastern or even in the homes district of the region executes people despite assurances that it is no
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different we have the names of the victims and eyewitness accounts they kill children and the elderly on the basis that their sons or relatives participated in the fight against the regime. the takeover of daraa is another win for assad who now controls around sixty percent of the country but these victories are doing little to foster peace and security for all syrians russian commanders say military police are being sent to guarantee the syrian government won't exact retribution on civilians who lived in rebel areas it's a promise that has been made in the past and a promise the opposition doesn't trust. beirut syrian state media is reporting that israeli missiles targeted syrian army positions near in canet for problems defenses managed to intercept them and there was minimal damage caused the u.s. government says all eligible migrant children under the age of five will be
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returned to their parents by thursday they were separated on the u.s. mexican border under president on zero tolerance immigration policy a federal judge should given the government until july the tenth to reunite the families and warned that there would be penalties for missing the deadline. i never imagined they would separate us when i came in they took my biometrics and they told me the president changed a couple of laws and the kids were going to be separated from us they had told me that someone might have adopted him and that i would not be able to see him again. zimbabwe's main opposition party and thousands of its supporters have gathered in the capital harare calling for free and fair elections the country goes to the polls on july the thirtieth that's the first vote without robert mugabe has more now from harare. opposition leaders on the march in the capital say the voters role has a lot of ghost voters on it they say they have proof some names have been duplicated and several addresses and id numbers on the register don't exist they calling on
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the independent electoral commission to allow them to personally inspect ballot papers before elections to prevent vote rigging want to. come. into the bottle. very. very. election organizers say it is possible for some people to have the same first last name and date of birth and for security reasons it's illegal for political parties to inspect the ballot papers before elections should we continue to try and build consensus. given that exercise we've done has failed to build consensus in the first place perhaps we should just stick to our very strict constitutional mandate and exclude everyone these are things that we're going to sit down as a commission and discuss i write a voting day at the end of the month will be the first without deposed president
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robert mugabe on the ballot except for the explosion at president was rally in pull away last month campaigning has been incident free so far police say the run up to this election has been listed violence than in previous years and few cases of intimidation have been reported so far the running sonny paper hard to deny his opposition allegations is planning to manipulate voter numbers by tempering the ballot for international observers who were banned by robert mugabe have arrived for the first time. in sixteen years the european union says the disagreement between the electoral commission and opposition parties can be resolved. the prince you pay for those. phrases from something while i was against some company provided for some country star we discovered in different places is that when.
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day i mean i don't know how to define or that it's not possible for me to the from that's it's just one of those things that you feel this is yes yes i believe in this i'm so i'm not but i'm an independent on a mission for america. that's about the idea the. greatest. it's about it's about the believing in you again it's about that. as a filmmaker i would want my audience to support that when men begin first as a unit i would definitely want my audience to do a jumble with it and say yes this is what i want and. i have tried to be very honest with the film the story isn't mine yes i. repaired off from my sister was a childhood incident she was the one who planted chocolate all of them so i have
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put an element of my childhood off but i suppose in my influences that i've had. the little incidents that used to take place in my own backyard i have cried a little bit of everything to stay honest to the whole thing but still take the whole even from my point of view. i'm trying to create that language where this kid is a shy kid and he doesn't speak to that is how i ended up not giving him more. than a word the need to be i wanted him to express through the i just didn't want to shout and scream and cry just assure that his discipline i wondered something which is very subtle that he expresses but it's very an expression is a shy kid although he doesn't speak he would still stand for what is being said what is believed. the nation gives you a lot of difficulty because you know the rules but when it when it comes down the
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flipping those pages and understanding animation you know everything goes for cost at least my first five line drawings follow and for it all because i don't know what the book like i did and they were not working on it though there was this one man that i started to like and i said yes i'm going to go it's really. i can't tell you the number of problems that i phased out. bang my head was i would not have been on a mission right when again making baghdad on i laid my mind was always walking in one particular direction because i have been born and brought up but those are the images that have come across on the bank so i know what i sad over all i ever knew my exposure maybe a school little that i ended up doing the same bank owns all that by. mixing what along with digital it gives you more freedom then it kind of gave me
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the opportunity to relate going forward about going on one on a digital level and then lose these not only their shows and all luck and knowledge of the money but i'm get an image their lives with. legs if i have to visualize my kitchen. i don't visualize a dark blue because those are the on those that i haven't been in no make that when i see it i see that there could have been a better shot than i could have taken a shot sort of an establishment. you know the follow on building the nomination i just wonder do you call it what i what my mind makes me think like the immediate damage that comes to my mind is when i will go away.
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from this one film because of the kind of film and does it also tell you about the soul of this guy and i i just wanted to follow the sort i just wonder before i make . stuff is if it doesn't have structure i don't mean it's ok and i'm fine with that that are. one of the really special things about working for al-jazeera is that even as a camera woman i get to have so much input and contribution to a story. i feel we cover this region better than anyone else would be very challenging. but the good because you have a lot of people that are divided on political issues we are the people we live to tell the real stories just mended is to deliver in-depth journalism we don't feel inferior to the audience across the globe. we have a news gathering team here that is second to their all over the world and they do
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a fantastic job when information is coming in very quickly all at once we want to be able to react to all of the changes and al-jazeera we adapt to them. my job is is to break it all down and we held the view on the stand and make sense of it. this is al-jazeera these are the top stories it's the second day of the nato summit in brussels and leaders will try to turn the page from donald trump's controversial comments yesterday they'll focus on ending the war in afghanistan and they'll look
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at security concerns in ukraine mr trump ramped up the tension within hours of the summit opening on weapon state by criticizing germany's dependence on russian energy. if you look at. germany is a camp for three years this is where they get really their call to really. begin to show much of the world and from russia i think is something that they are still looking at very inappropriate we really can know what you can do about it but it certainly doesn't seem to make sense that they pay billions of dollars to russia and now we have to defend them to get russia. the thai government turns release pictures of the twelve tire boys in the football coach in hospital following their rescue from the flooded cave where the tiny baby has also released new video of the complex operation diver said the boys were heavily sedated to avoid panic as they were being pulled through a dark and narrow passage ways that were all flooded human rights group amnesty
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international has criticized the armed forces of the u.a.e. and yemen for what they say is a system of enforced disappearances arbitrary arrests and torture in southern yemen the authors say there are cruel and unlawful practices in u.a.e. run detention centers amnesty is calling on the iraqi government to immediately stop the torture and to release detainees thousands of bosnian muslims have gathered in srebrenica to mark the twenty third anniversary of the massacre there we also buried thirty five victims who were only recently identified more than eight thousand men and boys were killed in july in one thousand nine hundred five by serb forces led by general wright cold blooded. creatures football team is on its way to their first ever world cup final after a thrilling two one semi victory over england in moscow the croatian team will no face france in sunday's final lots more news than if you want to on the web site al jazeera dot com talk to me on twitter i'll tweet you back at peter dhabi one up
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next p.l.o. a history of a revolution more news in about twenty five minutes we'll see them. with over forty thousand people killed under his roof it took twenty five years to bring him to a court of law but why for so long with such a brutal dictator considered an ally of the west over not reporting to the congress that the press there were engaged in a clever still of al-jazeera unravels the history of chad's notorious former president is saying had great dictator on trial on al-jazeera. we understand the differences and the similarities of cultures across the world. so no matter where you call home al-jazeera will bring in the news and current affairs that matter to you. al-jazeera. in one thousand nine hundred forty eight the
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state of israel was proclaimed. palestine was lost. sixteen years later in one thousand nine hundred sixty four the palestine liberation organization or the p.l.o. was founded. made up of different factions the p.l.o. has been at the heart of the struggle to regain palestine ever since. the late. after years of bloody infighting the various palestinian factions began to resolve their differences. to mall to us events in the region were to prove both the solace and the setback for the palestinian cause.
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yet by nine hundred eighty seven the various factions of the p.l.o. had come closer together after the past four years of into palestinian strife. the palestinian parliament in exile the palestine national council met in algiers in april of that year a common cause help unify ranks that cause was opposition to jordan the different factions all agreed to canceled amen accords that had outlined a confederation between jordan and the palestinians but that was how it should be in that given or don't need to stay added i don't think it was in or the near as jordan tried to restore palestinian jordanian relations on a base is also political advantage to jordan has rejected them on accords because we thought it impinged on our sovereignty they agreement was abrogated of the algiers b.n.c.
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which was called the national unity session or shot at the job i feel like a stoic assault up to sooty you that the f.l.p. participated in the unification of the p.l.o. station but the syrian authorities punished the field before participating in that p.n.t. session and the senate intelligence prevented the difficulty members who attended from returning to the mass because this. national unity was the slogan of the time for the palestinians as they sought to put behind them the bitter squabbles and factional fighting of the past that national unity was about to get a huge and popular boost from an unexpected ways. in december nine hundred eighty seven in gaza and israeli driver killed four palestinian neighbors and wounded nine when his car ran off the road. the israelis termed it an accident the palestinians said it was premeditated murder. whatever the case the incident sparked an outbreak
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of palestinian protests that spread like wildfire throughout the occupied territories. the intifada or uprising was born. at the fall but that the intifada was the first time since one nine hundred forty eight of us palestinians living under occupation or at the vanguard of resistance that from one thousand nine hundred sixty seven to one nine hundred eighty seven the goals of bodies find was based on the premise that liberation would come from abroad we want exactly what the israeli people enjoy. democracy freedom and independence at the same time the intifada is a message of hope it is a message of all not only to the best in years but also to their neighbors as a base. for the first time since one thousand nine hundred sixty seven the israeli occupied palestinian territories had become center stage in palestinian affairs.
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the fact that dominated p.l.o. were quick to see the potential of this popular uprising on a fathom the men around him realize the importance of organizing cells within the palestinian territories. and i would you had labeled or walked in direct effect or would you have to go with me out of there b.t.w. you had told me very clearly that he said. we have neglected our people living under occupation and became in broiled in a tree on the outside. palestinians in the homeland were now at the vanguard of their revolution. they became the symbol of resistance to occupation and an icon of the palestinian struggle. other important developments were also taking place i made the intifada the first signs of the emergence of a palestinian islamist movement began to appear hamas was encouraged. by
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israel. to form islam excited specifically in gaza before us though because when arafat was still a super terrorist unquote before he became a super statesman and then of course later it was made a super terrorist again. how much was seen as a logical balancing act for the israelis to play against the p.l.o. increase the religiosity increase the the islamic element of palestinian society in the nationalist quote terrorist unquote element goes down. however the israelis did not seem to realize that these new islamist groups would also be intent on liberating palestine. the seeds of a new force in palestinian politics were planted a force which began to compete with the p.l.o. factions in the showdown with these radio station. this new and growing islamist trend which heralded the formation of such groups as islamic jihad and hamas found natural allies and several wealthy arab states. and.
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we attended a meeting and more than half of those in attendance would kuwaitis and not palestinians i found that surprising chairman out of first knew that how mass received support from the popular level in the arab gulf states below on the other hand wasn't allowed to solicit donations because it was bound by agreements with the host governments to receive support only from them. however support for this largest groups among the palestinians was still in its infancy wary of the new challenge how to fatten the movie had soon stamped their authority on the intifada . knew the palestinian uprising had thrown the palestinians a lifeline that could help them realize their aspirations for a home. but this but the ideas that i thought there was will be. as intifada for yasser arafat there is no such thing as an intifada for the sake of and. it's an intern. or an uprising to achieve
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a certain political goal hence he was always in a state of uprising or not it's tough to make certain that what he thought it meant initially said he did. in march one thousand nine hundred eighty eight i wish you had sent a group of palestinian commandos into israel the gunmen hijacked a passenger bus in the negev desert transporting employees to israel's top secret nuclear complex at dimona. in the ensuing firefight the three hijackers and three israeli employees were killed. the israelis were exasperated with the intifada and with the cells i was you had was organizing. they are they that we i am that i was. a month after the bus attack on april sixteenth one thousand nine hundred eighty eight and it's really commando force assassinated i was you had at his home in the tunisian coastal town of c.v. was like. far from stifling then to father i will jihad assassination had the
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opposite effect. the occupied territories erupted in angry demonstrations. abu jihad funeral was held at the young palestinian refugee camp in the mosques hundreds of thousands of mourners attended to pay their respects. five years after his expulsion from syria and after years of a bitter feud on a fast return to damascus for that. he was given their heroes welcome. it turned out to be a vote of confidence for the on a couple of p.l.o. in the heartland of a strong. feeling that stockman. stuck with that engine as if i have to stick by that shabby and. there was a tremendous turnout at the funeral of his coffin was carried for hours throughout the camp that people tried to lift a car carrying arafat off the ground as a token of their support really. he was carried on people's shoulders it shook the
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splinter groups opposed to him because it restored the stature of our fast and for the house leadership. the intifada propelled the palestinian issue onto the world headlines and back to the top of the agenda for the arab world. it was an extraordinary turn. just a year earlier at an arab summit in amman the palestinian issue had been relegated to the bottom of the agenda. now in june one thousand nine hundred eight at an extraordinary meeting in algiers and appends of state pledged strong support for the intifada and the palestinian people as opposed rapidly and. they said because. we're living. just going to add i mean i couldn't. have been. at the end of july jordan formally broke off all political and administrative ties with the west bank king hussein effectively renounced his kingdom's historic claim
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to the west back paving the way for the area to be part of a palestinian state if ever israeli occupation worked and there. and then i lend if and i. i would like them a soup you know to have a shabby infelicity feed that could see it. to be hidden what by me be mad feel the elica how or who. let the heli villas they need to step it. up that article might. be acceptable when i may. well have. all of them out before the levees and of the loom of them as seek you know. i knew how big a shabby for the steel i had. and. such in the machine. if i had. to do was in the hope
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that i have a boy i would that was to hear that i mean the world because for them to live here we had had enough and done everything possible we supported the p.l.o. but in the end we concluded that the p.l.o. had to be independent of us the palestinians were jubilant but king hussein's decision was opposed by some senior jordanian officials was our jeff the medic might have let it get her sane had concluded that he could no longer hope to regain the whole of the west bank and therefore he had to put an end to any understanding and if concessions were required then the palestinians make them not jordan that was at a kind of more however. it was an attempt to give priority to jordanian matters and step away from the historic burden of.
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