tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera July 14, 2018 10:00pm-10:34pm +03
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demands issued by protesters any student yemen this victory is inspiring other communities to take action. in the city of tire is people are calling attention to other problems with local governments from corruption to lack of security. three years into the war thousands have been killed entire communities displaced the fight between who the rebels and government forces backed by the saudi u.a.e. coalition continues in other parts of the country getting control of our guidance airport is important for those who live in the area and the. one who we pray this will be the end of the crisis and the end of the protests we also hope that our brothers in saudi arabia will appreciate the demands of microbe residents and not repeat these actions. but some political analysts believe the gesture is mainly symbolic and will have little impact on the ground there needs to be serious steps to force us to hand over. the last year towards the security brought us all the
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airports in yemen rather than just one airports and expecting it to be a success story. despite handing over supervision of the port the saudi coalition still controls most of mara province. province of mazar leading to the entire south of yemen that is currently under control the coalition a seemingly small get significant move in a battle with a long road to hit ballasts al jazeera. still to come on the. face and feeling grateful the rescue tony for all those speak for the first time i had a very least from hospital next week tragedy as a critically endangered black rhinos die in kenya during a relocation designed to protect them. salvage something out of their world cup campaign details in sport.
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hello once again let's look at weather conditions across the levant and western parts of asia so these the regions all looking fine tashkent and especially stand pushing the forty degree mark around the cusp in cities all looking fine the main area of interest is really some parts of turkey and through the caucuses there will be some really heavy showers along for georgia in particular as about asia and possibly armenia to a lesser extent but georgia will see some serious flooding i suspect over the next forty eight hours generally on the side of the med it's all looking fine there beirut sunshine and highs of thirty one into the arabian peninsula and for the eastern side so looking much expect temperatures run about the forty forty one mark meanwhile here in the gulf states we've got more of a breeze picking up from the north which could be in for quite a few days know so the humidity will drop but it also means the temperature will rise so they head on through into monday forecasts of forty six degrees here in tow
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now let's head across into southern parts of africa where weather conditions looking pretty breezy on the eastern cape johannesburg looking at temperatures just eleven degrees wanted to share as possible across parts of namibia in the course of sunday but respecting cape tend to be largely dry with a maximum temperature of seventeen degrees celsius. when diplomacy fields and fear sweeps in our borders are wide open wide open to drugs terrorists we've proven that barriers are built to impose division and it's not a sixties instead of being an obstacle to go east it became another obstacle to peace in a four part series al-jazeera revisits the reasons for divisions in different parts of the world and the impact they have on both sides walls of shame on al-jazeera.
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we head into jerusalem bureau covered israeli palestinian affairs we cover the story with a lot of intimate knowledge we covered it with that we don't dip in and out of this story we have a presence here all the time apart from being a cameraman it's also very important to be a journalist to know the story very well before going into the fields covering the united nations and global diplomacy for al-jazeera english is pretty incredible this is where talks happen and what happens here matters. welcome back reminder of the top stories here on al-jazeera two teenagers have been killed in the gaza strip as israel carries out the largest daylight attack on calm
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us since the gaza war and twenty fourteen eritreans president says history is being made on his first visit to neighboring ethiopia after more than two decades of still let's say and iraq has placed its security forces on high alert as antigovernment protests spread the costs in the country south. to students have been killed in nicaragua as capital after pro-government forces surrounded young activists the students were calling for president daniel ortega to step down and tend to take refuge in a church mariana sanchez now joins me from managua you spoke to some of the students i think mary on that how they doing and how did they get out. refuge is a church that is within the campus of the university finally they were freed this
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morning but it's been a long twelve hours a long night for them as they have been shown up showed up throughout the night by these group of gunmen that have to wrong to this area where they have been since. since may when they set up barricades or they barricaded themselves in the university now they were inside this church and several of them have been wounded throughout the night last night the the cardinal and the pope's representative here has a way. to try to get. to get to them and also to try to help the emergency the ambulance. going now to his marianna that we got the gist of what she was saying mariana sanches are joining us from microsoft. saturday marks the third anniversary of
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brown nuclear deal president all shrunk poll the us out of the agreement in may one in hayworth areas stay for sanctions in november but here are paying leaders are trying to work with iran to save the historic deal that's her lopez her dial explains. that it was a moment many doubted would ever happen the signing of a nuclear deal with the ranch. three years later its survival is very much in question european powers are doing what they can to keep the deal live but the challenges may be too difficult to overcome the iran deal is defective at its core president donald trump denounced the u.s. withdrawal in may describing the deal as one sided under the agreement to run limited its uranium stockpile and nuclear program sanctions were lifted allowing to her on to resume trading oil and gas on the international market. in germany britain france along with russia and china want to make a deal work without the u.s.
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but talks in vienna have let a little progress and they may all face american sanctions if they continue to do business with iran but it ran on the other hand once guarantees much more your kitchen table what we want from the countries who signed the agreement is a clear commitment that preserves the rights of iranians that this includes all economic factors because the agreement is a nuclear political and economic deal. at a nato meeting in brussels trump seemed confident that sever that iran would in the future return to the negotiating table i know they have a lot of problems and their economy is collapsing but i will tell you this at a certain point they're going to call me and they're going to say let's make a deal and we'll make a deal but they are they're feeling a lot of pain right now. trump's administration accuses to herat of what it calls destabilizing behavior in the middle east which is one reason why iran and more specifically its role in syria is expected to feature prominently during trump's
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upcoming summit with russian president vladimir putin iran has said the u.s. can't be trusted to keep its commitments for now to han is focusing on maintaining the core of the agreement and trying to limit the impact of looming sanctions katia llopis of the young al-jazeera united nations security council has narrowly voted to impose an arms embargo on south sudan in the five years of the civil war erupts sends us back to resolution balance weapons sales sound imposes a travel ban and asset freeze on to military officials there are concerns that could further derail the peace process at least fifty thousand people have died in the conflict it's also created africa's largest refugee crisis cicero and genocide the tone boys and their football coach rescued from a flooded cave in thailand will be discharged from hospital next day the health minister says they are all recovering well physically and mentally after that
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eighteen day old jail concerns however are being raised over how they won't deal with best sudden fame in a video released on saturday some of the boys spoke of their gratitude. wouldn't even want thank you for worrying about me and thank you for going into the cave to help me out don't worry about me now i'm safe call home. i'd like to thank all the navy seals who came in to help us and thank everyone for their moral support until today. thailand's public health minister says the boy's health takes top priority. though from now on the work continues to make sure they're all healthy both physically and mentally and for them to grow up as good people in the future all sides must work together one of the international rescuers has been speaking about his role in the rescue pretty amazing experience for so sweet being involved with this rescue. some moments of. significant fear i have to say and
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then a great result and some really joyous moments to finish my king some true friends and colleagues you know and your colleagues and acquaintances over there with an amazing bunch of people to work with during the rescue from both the strike here and overseas. wildlife conservation have declared an environmental disaster after eight critically endangered black rhinos died in kenya they ran mammals were being moved to a national park the surviving rhinos are being closely watched and further relocations have been suspended lower bad has more. just two weeks after eleven black rhinos were moved to a neurosurgeon kenya three quarters of them have died early investigations indicate they were poisoned by the high level of salt in the water and then you know we've been doing this for decades moving rhinos in order to manage the populations because they are all isolated you want to prevent any inbreeding but this was
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a new sanctuary in south east we used to have rhinos there they were all put out and now we're bringing them back to that area so it's a very exciting possibility for kenya but it's ended in tragedy this is actually a national disaster kenya's tourism and wildlife minister has ordered the wildlife service to suspend the relocation of black rhinos while investigations continue. moving rhinos can be a risky process it involves putting endangered animals to sleep for the journey and then reviving them but the loss of so many in one go is unprecedented. in the past twelve years about one hundred fifty rhinos have been moved in this way but these deaths have doubled the mortality figures. the u.k. based charity save the rhinos estimates there are fewer than five thousand five hundred black rhinos in the walled all of them in africa. poaching is forcing
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wildlife parks to take such drastic measures nine writers were killed in kenya last year and three more shot dead in may and their homes removed kenya is leading the push for a total ban on ivory trading worldwide in april president of hurrican ja to order the walls largest stock of ivory and rhino horn to be destroyed. while rhino ivory fetches a high price preventing poaching remains a challenge. about a man made al-jazeera. well shank flamel is a project leader in the black rhino range expansion project for the world wildlife fund and joins me live via skype from toronto in south africa thanks very much for coming on to al-jazeera festival car i ask you about the the reason is that these are on ice myself. i understand it's to do with i thought where they were being moved to an inquiry a spring hill but the some suggestion it was the water that is quite possible
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i don't know the details of the tragedy but yes we all await that report but it is documented that black rhino drinking very salty water can die i've actually seen it once these animals were undoubtedly hopped after they capture experience very stressed and very thirsty when they were released into their new enclosure supine sure they drank rather readily and of course if the water was excessively salty they were well have died from that but i don't know you haven't got the reason that's yet of the autopsies indeed and the kenyans do have an awful lot of experience of relocating these extraordinary beasts do you think enough is being checked before rhinos are being moved to do you think that their investigation is to look at the sort of procedures esther relocation i'm sure the investigation will look at all aspects of that exercise i suppose say i just do not
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know what happened next indeed the kenyans have a great experience in moving black rhino so i wouldn't have expected the kind of result. something terrible must have happened that was unforeseen and. could have been avoided possibly i just don't know they described as critically endangered what does that mean just how endangered is the black rhino. well we have worldwide just over five thousand black rhino which is not a large number and particularly if you consider that in the late eighty's the number plummeted to just over two and a half thousand so our genetic base is rather small all brian know that exists today are descended from those that small number and so any loss is a disaster were critically endangered means is that if we humans don't help them they will disappear basically so we must do it because it can and we do that by
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a number of means one of which is what the kenyans were trying to do is create a new population of course we all know the pitch as a dreadful pitch as have rhinitis i think poached is that still the biggest threat to their own a population all around us not just the black rhino indeed i mean poaching is. really a terrible levels and the other challenge of course is that there's not enough land for black rhino so we do try to create huge populations on land on new land and obviously that's the best way we have of making them multiply faster but it is a challenge to find land and of course the disappearance of their range is one of the factors that cause that huge decline in. years we're very grateful fail and knowledge on this at the chicken area shacked level thank you so much for joining us from that black rhino range expansion project of my life and the riddle
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of. a melting iceberg in greenland is causing fear of a tsunami has large chunks of ice fall into the ocean several residents near the danger zone in the village of it have been moved to higher ground the government and police have been put on high alert as it's thought the melting iceberg could swank the entire settlement a remote village on the western coast of greenland is home to about one hundred seventy residents. still to come on al-jazeera as more and more people turn to palestine's tobacco industry we'll tell you why the government's tax revenues have gone up in smoke. on the richardson in moscow what city sets are frowns on players accounting down so it is going.
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it's a long journey from home in haiti to school in the dominican republic crossing national borders and cultural barriers to turn asylum but none that determine. discovering filmmaking talent from around the globe viewfinder latin america follows a young man who will stop at nothing to secure an education. the crossing on al-jazeera. al-jazeera. where every.
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palestinian farmers have grown tobacco for generations and this jumps try off under israeli restrictions on palestinian workers more and more people have turned to working in the industry but most don't pay the taxes on the palestinian authority says it's missing out on tens of millions of dollars in revenue every year.
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