tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera July 18, 2018 1:00am-1:34am +03
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crossing into gaza residents there are hugely reliant on the imports as the territory and you get six hours of electricity a day food and medical supplies also need permission to get through. what. still to come on the program. whether burying the victims of saturday's church see each as the u.n. calls on the government to stop using lethal force. and as the international criminal court marks twenty years its foundation we have a case for and against the i.c.c. . hello there for some of us insulin china and northern vietnam is going to be incredibly wet over the next three or four days we've got lots of cloud with us at the moment that's already given us heavy downpours over the last couple of days and now we've got another system that's working its way towards us this is tropical
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storm looks like it's going to cross high now and then eventually work its way into the northern parts of viet nam so this region has already seen to reach the heavy rain the grounds already sold in and now we're going to see plenty more wet weather and we are likely to hear reports of flooding here as we head through the next few days there's already been some flooding over parts of india the monsoons being particularly heavy in the north of our map there it looks like new delhi will see yet will rain over the next few days and that's not what we need because this is what it looks like there at the moment very high water levels that many of the roads have become almost impossible thanks to the amount of water that's falling recently and more showers still in the region as we head through wednesday and thursday through the south so we're looking at some wetter weather those more persistent rain looks like here that rain will be particularly heavy on wednesday and thursday so i think this is where there's a greater risk of seeing some flooding towards the west and here in doha just staying hot but a dry heat at the moment are temperatures of forty four. from
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are one of the top stories. is growing outcry in the united states over president. hold russia to account election meddling during his meeting with. intelligence chiefs including the former cia director. treasonous. hundreds of displaced syrians who approached a border fence that separates syria from the. heights. a new investigation has revealed documents detailing an expensive being effort by the. us. meetings between prince and former prime minister. former u.s. president barack obama has paid tribute to nelson mandela's vision for democracy and social inclusion during a special event one hundred years since the. birth. of the universal appeal of mandela's message and urged people around the world to respect human
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rights it's his most high profile speech since leaving office. through a sacrifice and unwavering leadership and perhaps most of all through his moral example mandela. and the movement he led would come to signify something larger. he came to embody the universal aspirations of this possessed people all around the world the hopes for a better life the possibility of a moral transformation in the conduct of human affairs it's good to hear the injuns by first so tell us about the main messages in obama's address. two issues came up leadership and human rights and everyone who spoke they all say that nelson mandela was a great man from the time he fought in departed from the time he was president and
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his priority was making sure that all sides africans try to have a better life when barack obama spoke he even suggested to people that remember it's not all over in the world a lot of issues things are still going wrong all over the world from different conflicts to people being oppressed to racial discrimination and all that needs to end and he told people who are watching he said it's all up to you if you want to keep his legacy alive and while you must go out there and fight for that change and that was his main message to people who are listening to him and a chance for south african to reflect on this significant anniversary what's the feeling there. it was the mood of celebration people came to remember nelson mandela to celebrate all his achievements so that because come a long way from one thousand nine hundred four when apartheid ended and they've been a lot of ups and downs over the years and right now people are concerned about the
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economy and rising poverty levels it's got some young people asking did mandela do enough to help improve the lives of the poor black majority. nasser attended the truth and reconciliation commission hearings in south africa shortly after apartheid ended she wanted to find out why government soldiers shot her brother at a train station in one thousand nine hundred three she was never really told the truth about why he died and says she can't forgive and forget she's now part of a group where people like her me to try and find a way to heal anyone and you know there were three bodies that lay on the side of the tracks the had been shot a week later we were told his remains were at a mortuary i had to go through body bags looking for him. nelson mandela so that because first black democratically elected leader made reconciliation a priority of his presidency one of his biggest achievements was his role in sitting up a truth and reconciliation commission it investigated crimes committed during
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apartheid on both sides to try and unify a racially divided nation political analysts say it worked to a certain extent at that time there was uncertainty by the country's future and whether the different races could live together but more than twenty years later south africa still struggles with the race and other challenges factions in the ruling african national congress threaten to defy the continent's oldest liberation movement millions of black south africans continue to live in shanty towns with little access to running water electricity or quality healthcare now also mandela's legacy of father and reconciliation has been threatened by social conflict in south africa this country has one of the highest rates of inequality in the world the poor black majority said they want jobs and land some south africans feel the promises of a better life for all made in one thousand nine hundred four haven't materialized in many countries fifty percent. and are they going to see
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employment in their lifetime it's a question that needs to be arsed repeatedly some young people born after apartheid are starting to ask questions about whether mandela spent too much time focusing on reconciliation instead of improving conditions for the poor. and others in her group say they admire mandela's willingness to forgive people even those who refuse to apologize for the crimes they committed during apartheid she says she still trying to find that strength and hopes today's leaders work harder to build a more racially and economically inclusive south africa the kind of country some say mandela would have wanted to see. poor black south african say they want and like we saw in zimbabwe they're also saying that it's not right it's unfair that more than twenty years since apartheid ended most of the good land is still in the hands of a white minority to the ruling african national congress is trying to impose
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expropriation of land without compensation which is taking away land from many white owners and giving it to black people without paying them now some people say that could be a bad move it will really hurt the economy and scare away investors but the a.n.c. the ruling parties and a lot of pressure to deliver to the poor and the poor are waiting patiently some of them disillusioned that since one thousand nine hundred ninety four not much has changed for the poorest of the poor or rich us or thank you very much. you're in human rights office is calling for an end to the use of lethal force against demonstrators in nicaragua it says the police and security forces have tortured and killed protesters and imprison people without due process an estimated three hundred mostly anti-government demonstrators have been killed since protests began in april. in the capital managua. i family members are burying twenty year old jayden vasquez on friday he was one of dozens of students and trenched inside
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a church for more than fifteen hours asperin military forces shot at them i was his family says he was hit by a bullet from an a k forty seven according to other students agonized for more than an hour. on this allowed ambulances to take out the wounded friday night he was not one of them died on saturday morning as the siege at the church continued. we feel helpless seeing our brothers getting killed and we can't do anything because we don't have weapons to defend ourselves and we don't really want them because nicaragua is no place for civil war. the government says students and other political opponents are terrorists and coup plotters and are responsible for the deaths of policemen during the crisis and on all this masked men who are supporting the government say they will attack anyone who builds a barricade rights groups accuse them of going around the country terrorizing the population. they say paramilitary and government supporters have attacked members
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of the national dialogue group sabotaging the resolution to the crisis group that will be. able to deal with this policy the government is not contributing to a peaceful resolution it's creating obstacles yours them to open child for real dialogue. nearly three months of protests around the country have left more than three hundred people dead and many say the crisis is far from over many analysts say the government doesn't really want to negotiate they say it will continue to respond to protests with the use of force as they did here at the church where the students took cover where you're like well i think i can say categorically that the government has obstructed dialogue the talks are going nowhere the government doesn't want to negotiate they would rather the talks broke down completely. political opponents say president and his wife vice president do you want to hold
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onto power indefinitely but the president's allies say or they just term in office ends in two thousand and twenty one and they will stay. friends of general baskets pleaded to fight the president until he leaves office in this small cemetery of the capital they bury their friend singing the national anthem for will for their fallen hero. you know scientists are just now when we get our watch. japan and the e.u. have agreed to a free trade deal that will create the world's largest open economic area accounting for a third of global g.d.p. a wide ranging agreement is a rejection of u.s. president donald trump's move to impose tariffs on imports which has raised fears of a trade war a year in japanese leaders say the deal sends a message that cooperation and fair trade a more valuable than protectionism. but the impact of today's the goes
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beyond ocean was bigger than we are maybe a sign of this and with the statement that both of you for the the and three we are showing that we are stronger and that the of when we work together humanitarian situation in yemen support city pre-dated is deteriorating a sounded coalition is attempting to take the strategic red sea port from hooty rebels caught in the middle of thousands of civilians many of whom have been forced to flee their homes damaged reports as the humanitarian situation worsens for people in yemen so does the displacement crisis at this makeshift camp between the southern port city of our then and the has the misery is apparent most of these people fled the violence in her day the province and as bad as the conditions are here things back home are even worse that's why they're not shells been raining down on us god only knows how we manage to survive. the united nations says tens of thousands of
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families have been displaced from her data as a result of the fierce fighting there while the saudi u.a.e. coalition attempts to take control of the area from who the rebels analysts say little progress has thus far been made in this military campaign. here the young try to play even as the old are constantly confronted with how dire things remain and no matter how terrible the sanitary conditions parents will do what they can to make meals for their children and to provide them with comfort. knowing him and. we tried to take shelter in one of the tense but we were denied we were told that there were no more tense available now what are we supposed to do especially since for young children we have no shelter we call of the government to consider our situation about leave our homes out of luxury we were forced out. but most of the displaced people now residing here don't believe those calls will be answered any time soon. just yet or. it will group the campaign for the united kingdom to leave
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the european union has been fined eighty thousand dollars for breaking spending rules electoral officials said the vote leave group exceeded the spending limit by funneling funds through a different youth organization called believe the founder of that group has also been fined and referred to the police but leave say the reports are politically motivated the ceremony has been held at the international criminal court to mark twenty years since its founding treaty was signed the r.c.c. was set up to provide justice for victims of the world's worst crimes including genocide and crimes against humanity but i think out of many obstacles along the way turned a hole is at the hague. critics have called it an expensive display of western arrogance with more than a billion dollars spent on just four convictions so far all of them african some member nations have threatened to quit but supporters argue the international criminal court does what it set out to do provide justice to victims and
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a deterrent to perpetrators of some of the world's worst atrocities yes the community has closed it. it may not be perfect it is not perfect by any means but we get going. focus on what happened when there was none at all as the i.c.c. founding statute of rome turns twenty this week commemorative events at its smart new headquarters in the hague look to the future we must. resolve to create a world that's six justice crimes universally applied and blindly. let the other started continue to guide us to what's that better future for all the i.c.c. was founded as a permanent court of last resort from which no leader rebel group or army could hide now despite rumblings among some of its members of beer budgetary constraints and the difficulty of arresting indictees without an international police force at
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its disposal the permanence of this court isn't in doubt but there are significant gaps in its reach and in global commitment to it big powers like russia china and the united states aren't members and while cases can be referred to the court by the un security council all of those countries hold veto powers russia is blocking efforts to send syria to the international criminal court even though the assad government really with putin's backing has deliberately targeted civilians as a way of waging this war china seems to be standing in the way of sending me and mark davis rational criminal court even though it ethnically cleansed seven hundred thousand rohingya muslims in the course of a month you know the united states is continuing to try to protect israel to protect saudi arabia so there is a very unprincipled approach to international justice all of which puts alleged war crimes in syria and gaza beyond its reach but the i.c.c.
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is broadening its scope with new investigations in venezuela the philippines georgia and afghanistan but it must also compete with the rise of nationalism and growing disdain for global institutions signs for the strengthening of international justice jonah al-jazeera the hague and catch up any time by checking out our website al-jazeera dot com. i'm on another headlines here on jazeera there's growing outcry in the united states over don't want trump's failure to hold russia to account over alleged election meddling a former cia director is among a group of intelligence chiefs who criticize trump's comments during thursday's news conference with russian president vladimir putin as treasonous trump has returned home to a media frenzy staunchly pro trump outlets and even members of his own party have
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been criticizing his performance how many times have i stood up here and told you what i think about vladimir putin vladimir putin does not share our interests but i'm a putin does not share our values we just conducted a yearlong investigation into russia's interference in our watching they did interfere elections it's really clear there should be no doubt about that dozens of displaced syrians who walked towards the border fence that separates syria from the israeli occupied golan heights israeli soldiers can be heard to tell him to go back somehow reportedly done that but others are continuing on many of them holding white flags and this is near connector where the syrian government is fighting to push out the last remaining pockets of rebels and are still fighters the u.k. based investigative agency has obtained documents revealing an expensive lobbying effort by the u.s. and britain and the united states reporting e-mails from an emirati lobbying group
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attempting to influence the b.b.c.'s coverage of the arab spring to the edges secret meetings between abd every scrum prince and then british prime minister david cameron with threats to pull out of billions of dollars worth of deals unless the u.k. designated the muslim brotherhood as a terrorist organizations. israel is tightening its siege on almost two million people living in gaza by further restricting the flow of goods into the territory it's planning to ban all fuel imports through the kerem shalom crossing which is the sole commercial crossing into gaza. iraqi police have dispersed two hundred fifty protesters who were rallying at an oil field in the southern city of basra is the latest in a series of protests against poor public services and a lack of jobs in the country. to stay with us viewfinder latin america is up next and i'll be back with more news after that thanks for watching ivan are.
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i see that we have a cup we need to make something out of. people and. their liberty bell and. basket as ice is about. just. imagining. him in the alley lodge you warm down didn't seem. to get. me to you as him in the. movie fade back. bob. when i'm there maybe now is why zero the more they walk magnum you navy mama will. bag and leisure.
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enjoying a landing are the easy ones you face fini different feeling when you got off or you and. some they're gone now fairly guided. on the same land so it sound i. can see. them with them and you know not to say. i want to live you so much. more thanks. to you saw me a number of you know nothing. more to one song i say now do you not. see where you're.
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the. message must c'mon feeling this it's. my signal. this i can invest money and i'm in so i was on my own. in the sack misho man i remember this. million happening before losing. to god scenario from ok two thousand. and eight was the icing on the supply. enough for you say hold back we're. live. on that i leave it over there bud see subwoofer don't give up on what they have to decide so long as an employee as i do for you to. save for going to be thin. oh.
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my i'm now going to be his source mcconnell. and i'm going to quote. myself most of my foot so i decided. to. go over there literally. when i discovered. somebody i knew or not. but i'm wondering you know every. part of the republic was finally given to put in there which was annoying we're going to do that and we did it and it's also the case in most of them you know i mean it was fun on. the feet up and then we got the sense they. wanted to know that i think the family think that i'm moving on and then.
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sound was. valuable enough that i know difficult meant that. coming up to the man was going to get her to struggle but it was no no i didn't ish. franklin the little girl was looking at emily. feet feel. if. she. has moved in with. me when they've made that. you know tally. and not bad looking like. they are looking to my side of me
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and you know that indicates this is a line that he sees it won't be. doing and go baden up on. the sea. your license on nuclear. bodies dumped on and you posted it into me about us. because we're going to lose you doing up here in berlin and while you. could then passing a lot of money. but what's the macos as you. see my number you're thinking of the previous night in the .
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food market dot com was a little salty not to be the whole point this is a metaphor may speak for me if i would leave. out. what. i didn't mean and i'm not very funny i think generally. i'm not going to make a difference or will meet with them if i allowed them you know i met them from scene on when you know how you got from the bat i've been calling my same way included wrong thinking one seemed to. be making much of a lie. as i will. see on someone for us this nation we're going. to do it.
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because he saw mars. rising into the woman took him. across a symbol that he was on. and this was a little model took them on them when they came out and was on the news and now i am. so i wanted to. you know to me it was absolutely the pizza guy who in the most insight he skimmed them up and so forth that you saw.
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