tv Egypt Made In China Al Jazeera July 19, 2018 4:00am-5:01am +03
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ation the first commercial flights from a here terry tray in twenty years have touched down in asmara to cheers and celebrations hundreds of people boarded the flights hoping to reunite with family that been separated during two decades of conflicts mohammed other has this report from at is about the dignitaries journalists and businessmen board what if you open land schools it's but of peace it's the first flight from addis ababa to there to train cup tell us more of this century this is how. we are going to. and the fact that. this. was. that and that is that. the airline operated two flights within fifteen minutes of each other because of overwhelming demand the majority on board are people separated from their funds by
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the board which began in one thousand nine hundred eighty. we caught up with that is hard to go a journalist with the state media as he packed his bags he was separated from his a chair wife and two daughters seventeen years ago she was forced to flee if the being sacked from her government job in ethiopia because of honest knowledge that he just got a good look at this and i will believe this is not a dream when i land in asmara i had never imagined the possibility of peace between ethiopia and eritrea during my lifetime the weight and lack of communication with my family was painful i felt like i had an incurable disease with us model becomes the one hundred fifty of us the notion for if you have been ellen's which is also announced because of quiet twenty four seventh's of the little known at a allies the road linking the two countries as a full funding of a to before vehicles allowed to fly again. at a train has agreed to grant access to its ports
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a boon for ethiopia which lost its main group to the sea with the outbreak of the wall twenty years ago if we start to connecting our populations we have big market. by some token it is just what it topped the push and soon fifty so it's all hope that the opening of the port and the launching to penalized was not the wood for the strings in the twenty first two years have been a trip. to new ties with its much larger neighbor with a population of more than one hundred million people also raises the prospect of revival for a trail ailing economy many are now hoping the tricky exercise of to marketing the disputed border. quickly and smoothly as the process to normalize relations mohammed atta what does it. and felt to come this far. and i'm going to hold on board the train to nowhere with allegations of political
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corruption misuse should be done these attacks on free media and civil society all hallmarks of big job obama. and me you heads gogol with a record five billion dollar fine for squeezing out its rivals but it still may or pocket money for the tech giant. hello most of europe is still enjoying a rather warm summer for some a bit too warming to keep ticking in scandinavia and then he interrupts to pieces this massive tabs been wandering around for quite a long time now there's a cold front going in this direction but this circulation is just within a regime or twenty twenty five degrees typically up to thirty even his followers moments because beyond this chart now this obviously just make it feel briefly
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cooler but to be honest not cold by any means it's just a potential for a bit of flash flooding but what the whole it's just rain in the form showers and these showers are developing now in the increasingly warm weston's out of europe passes thirty represents good high temperatures that before in madrid you see the blue around the bay of biscay well that is showers developing and they're going to be more likely over land over fronts maybe germany and switzerland and that these come friday otherwise it remains a pretty warm regime i think we're showing more interest in the death of these shots as time goes on as all of the land over the mediterranean and all over north africa is just a picture largely of sunshine young show breathe makes you feel a bit cooler places but he's thirty nine in tunis you'll notice. bit of
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a strange due to story. we just heard the city of aleppo has fallen. or should we say liberate it's. one tool. astonishing stories tode in their own words how did you know who to trust and who not to trust. a stranger came to town witness on al-jazeera. hello again here's a reminder of our top stories and al-jazeera top teenagers and their coach who were rescued from a cave in thailand have been recounting their ordeal at their first public
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appearance the boy's plea paid tribute to the diver who died while trying to rescue them. the white house has denied that u.s. president donald trump has again contradicted his intelligence community with the day off to say yes full faith in it if he were to tell reporters earlier that russia no longer poses a cyber security threat this despite his intelligence chief saying the opposite. and the first commercial flight from ethiopia to eritrea in twenty years has touched down to celebrations and us mara many on board the historic flight from b. to a united relatives and friends for the first time in years. nigerian police say they have arrested twenty two members of boko haram including some who were sponsible for the mass kidnappings of schoolgirls and she bought eight of the men are said to have confessed to being involved in the kidnappings of more than two hundred schoolgirls and twenty fourteen dozens of the girls have
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since been released but more than one hundred are still being held and police say the arrest were made earlier this month. south africa has been marking the hundredth anniversary of the birth of nelson mandela the former leader known as the father of the nation in tribute to the anti-apartheid icon many south africans have donated their time to charitable activities for sixty seven minutes each minute represents a year in which mandela fought for a new society says more from johannesburg. this country still has a lot of challenges such as inequality and poverty and nelson mandela really believe that educating all children especially poor black children is a way to alleviate poverty levels in the country but it's not going to be an easy economy isn't doing well right now there's a high unemployment levels public to levels keep rising and people are frustrated you seeing over the years more and more protests as a poor black majority start asking those promises that were made back in one
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thousand nine hundred ninety eight indeed why have they not been delivered why a millions of people still living in squalor still very very poor the ruling a.n.c. party is and a lot of pleasure to deliver people say they get increasingly tired but right now the focus for the day is carrying on his legacy one of them being education. education was the key to success and then that's education will soon have no feature. this thing at the southeast degrees is important because he teaches children. there carol what i was telling them this area is in a poor community in johannesburg the school has poor resources some of the children struggle to read and write some of the parents struggle to make ends meet they've been given new books still nations from well wishers in and around johannesburg people who also want to carry on nelson mandela's legacy of education for children and these children understand how important it is to learn and read and write. the
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organization of american states the top regional group for countries in the america says holding a special meeting on the continuing violence in iraq seven member countries of the group including argentina chile and the u.s. requested the meeting comes twenty four hours after security forces and supporters of the nicaraguan president that ortega stormed a major stronghold of anti-government protesters. with you are both in yemen say they have attacked an oil refinery in the saudi capital using a drone the drone targeted the stage on our aamco refinery in riyadh they all company said it contained a small fire which is due to an operational incident the iranian ally the rebels say the drone attack marks the start of a new stage in deterring aggression hamas says protesters sending burning kites into israel have a right to continue despite israeli threats to stop them israel says millions of
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dollars worth of crops have been destroyed and further attacks won't be tolerated charles trafford has this report from gaza. it's been almost four months since protesters inconsistency flying kites carrying petrol bombs and burning gregg's over the border fence towards israel the israeli government says they've set far too many hits his of land destroying millions of dollars worth of crops this protester insisted we hide his identity he's a member of a group calling itself the sums of the winery it's named after the man who helped thomas acquire drone technology and was assassinated in tunisia in two thousand and sixteen. we will not stop looting the balloons and co it's until israel lift the siege the ball is in israel's court we don't decide whether there is a war and we are not afraid we have suffered in a war against us every day since israel started the blockade twelve years ago.
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israel responded to the clinton balloon flying protests over the weekend by targeting dozens of from a specific unless the attacks were seen as the worst escalation of violence between hamas and israel since their war four years ago. the sons of the warre described themselves as a loose organization with around a hundred members now how must says that the youth of gaza have every right to protest in a way that it describes as normal violence until israel looks to see. a hamas spokesman told us the protests will continue despite israeli media reports of a large military operation being planned to stop them. but also what a lot of these cuts and balloons are a peaceful form of protest the used by protesters including young people they have the right to use all kinds of peaceful resistance along the border to demand the
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lifting of israel's siege. at least one thousand five hundred civilians including five hundred children who killed in gaza during the two thousand and fourteen war. protesters like this man who's actually supported by hamas and other factions in gaza say they won't stop despite israel's military threats charles stratford al-jazeera gaza. hungary's hardline prime minister viktor orban has arrived in israel for today visit the right wing politician will meet his israeli counterpart binyamin netanyahu on thursday and that's now is facing criticism over the visit as are about as previously praised a nazi collaborator who once ruled hungary while back home are bonded still fighting off allegations of corruption and nepotism is a case of helping his friends benefit from large e.u. funded projects john holl visited one of them outside budapest. in the
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village where victor all bond was born there's a smart new football stadium it's well known that he's a big football fan and it's just a stone's throw from the prime minister's weekend home the stadium is the first stop on a vintage train ride that also takes in an arboretum and a pleasant ice cream shop the train line and the stadium were built say anticorruption activists using public money with construction contracts awarded to well connected businessmen part of an elite that's grown rich through its proximity to power the beneficiaries of contractors who are actually carried out these days for all those who are people of course he said or by the government. on the day we visit a local tour group arrives to board what's been dubbed the train to nowhere. and here you get a pretty good idea of how
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a lot of money was spent on not very much if anybody did do well out of this project i'm pretty sure it was in the hunger area public. it's estimated that over eighty percent of public investment in hungary comes from the european union's so-called cushioning from its intended to help poorer members catch up with hungary increasingly in conflict with the e.u. over corruption and migration policies brussels plans to cut those funds by a quarter in its next budget is the government apparently not much we've seen that part of the blackmailing horizon for the past couple of years in order to have a budget iraq and budget you have to have the cost as all member states. and if there's not going to be consensus which is very likely to happen for the criteria of if south is going to remain then there's not going to be a budget so confident is mr all burn in fact that he's become exporting his influence supporting like minded politicians in slovenia slovakia poland and the
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czech republic the whole battle with brussels was very successful in hungary and nothing really happened in brussels which was really bad for hungary so you know in those sanctions you know anything so it was a very easy thing for four or five best to do. comparisons are often made between old and hungry and bloody me of putin's russia state control of the media the squeeze on civil society the hallmarks are certainly aware. and we may well be for a long time to come and join a whole al-jazeera in hungary and germany but varian states police have begun patrols at the border with austria until now only federal police have been carrying out the checks the state police will be looking for people trying to enter illegally but won't be able to turn anyone back instead anyone caught will be
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handed over to the federal authorities and i thought you said it's really a been removing temporary housing from a room i kept in rome the containers were provided by the city ten years ago as a temporary solution italy's far right interior minister matteo salvini has said he wants to carry out its senses of the roma community with a view to expelling anyone who's not italian. google says it will appeal a record five billion dollars fine handed by the european union the u.s.'s the tech giant used its address operating system to cement the dominance of its search engine sun again go reports. a three year investigation and direct quote five billion dollars fine a steep penalty for google accused by the european union of abusing its power as it called it an entire sector in the phone market who has engaged in illegal practices to cement its term and market position in internet search. an effective end
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to this contract within ninety days or face penalties payments at the heart of the issue is android the tech giants operating system for mobile phones used to more than eighty percent of the world's smartphones it is essential to google's future revenues. but the european commission found google have blocked competition by forcing phone makers to pre-install services such as search engine and map software as a condition of using its operation system it also paid phone manufacturers incentives if they installed google search without rival services the case would seem to prove the point that there's no such thing as a free lunch when tech giants come bearing gifts and google is finding out to its cost it's having to concede this is already the case in countries such as china and russia the french government has welcomed the decision to stop it from squeezing
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out any rivals. google will have to change their practices in terms of licensing of the virus and road software applications that in turn would have a considerable impact on their commercial policy or google has said it will appeal against the decision it may only be a fraction of its revenue but the real challenge will be if the e.u. forces it to change its future behavior so you go. paris and you can always find more on our website sarah dot com. and here's a reminder for our top stories on al-jazeera the twelve boys who were rescued from a flooded cave in northern thailand last week have made their first public appearance the teenagers and their coach appeared in good spirits as they recounted their ordeal at a news conference in china right now the boys paid tribute to the former navy seal who died in an attempt to rescue them and described the moment of miracle when
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divers found them u.s. president donald trump has again directly contradicted his intelligence community just a day off just saying yes full faith in it its old reporters at the white house that russia no longer poses a cyber security threat is also still insisting it's much criticized meeting with vladimir putin was a success and earlier the white house press secretary said chris three clarify that trump was not actually talking about russia. chances because the president after comments the president was sit thank you very much was saying no to answering questions the president and his administration are working very hard to make sure that right russia is unable to meddle in our elections this is done in the passes if we have stated the first commercial flight from ethiopia to eritrea after twenty years of war has landed safely the flights which had been called the bird of peace
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arrived in asmara to red carpet welcome those on board included people seeking to reignite with family members as well as the former at the open prime minister hollande. syrian activists say a rebel held town in the southern province of their a has come under heavy bombardment by government forces there but dozens of air strikes and heavy shelling off nawa the only hospital has been bombed to two reports of dozens of casualties of the fighting has forced hundreds of civilians to flee west towards the israeli occupied golan heights. nigerian police say eight suspected boko haram members have confessed to being involved in the abduction of the chibok school girls a massive duction of the two hundred seventy girls from their school in the northern town cost global outrage and twenty fourteen. and those are the headlines the stream is next stay with us.
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how are australia's hard line immigration policies impacting border security and how are they affecting the lives of refugees we'll hear more about the country's system of offshore prisons in today's show remember to send us your comments and questions live via twitter or you tube i'm ali could be i'm not much of a dean and you're in the stream. zero chance of resettlement that's the message the australian government has been
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sending to asylum seekers desperate to migrate into the country by boat it's been five years since australia began refusing mainland resettlement for asylum seekers sometimes described as boat people for refugees who do take the champ's they face the prospect of indefinite detention while they wait for their asylum claims to be processed in offshore refugee camps the government says its hard line stance against illegal immigration has deterred people smugglers and illegal boat arrivals but at what cost. here to discuss this is not a detention advocacy manager with the asylum seeker resource center she's joining us via skype from melbourne and london al jazeera sydney correspondent andrew thomas who covers asylum seeker policies in australia and joining us on the phone is. he's been living at mannus island for nearly five years he is an asylum seeker who received his refugee status three years ago welcome to you all should start by mentioning we did reach out to australia's government to take part in this
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conversation but they declined our requests and with fact i will start on my laptop with this quote from the government from peter dutton to be exact this is a minister for home affairs in an interview june twenty third this is how he describes the policy thus far we are in danger of days because only a month ago we stopped a still hold vessel with one hundred thirty one people coming out of sri lanka there are fourteen thousand people still in indonesia and there is excited chatter among people smuggling syndicates about the prospect of australia be available again he goes on to say it's essential that people realise that the hard won success of the last few years could be undone overnight by simple acts of compassion and bringing twenty people from menace to australia and through with those words does the government see these past five years in this never australia policy as successful.
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has the government seen these past five years as being a success in terms of their immigration policy. and i absolutely hate success yet the government is very proud that it's in the law obviously if this is seen by the other party in australia the labor party back in twenty the same when kevin rudd was prime minister but then shortly after that kevin rudd lost an election and the conservative brought a sense of government that came in on the time yeah but now in the mountain temple has run with it expanded its and really made it very proud and those comments from that integration minister a rule about domestic politics because like you don't know the international picture is over the place looks straight and the crew on necessarily cruel in many people's eyes policies but the message the policy of strengthens do not like the
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idea that bore out the trouble that's been proved in opinion poll off opinion polls while the research stands for a minority of australians who disagree with that position the government thinks the voters that are going to keep them in power are the ones you like but it's rather a sight to get back in on the stump what you had that was all about them and then through you know hearing you say that it raises a question that we put out to our audience our community we asked if you know the system is actually deterring illegal immigration and if it's working and interestingly enough we got one comment from joe diddley here saying it's illegal to deter refugees and it is immoral regardless of whether it's quote unquote work what an appalling premise natasha what do you see success as an immigration policy is this the right measure. firstly i think that it's very interesting that the government starts talking about the moment if it comes to mystically on the council and he said this is all about domestic politics and the moment the liberal
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government becomes i'm comfortable in the next six politics politically on another issue or it's something embarrassing that's occurred for them then i start talking about boats again so they can protect themselves all the time constantly side no vote in the riots we stopped the boats in the last lap all watch out there was another boat that iraq last month so it doesn't really make much sense except for the fact that it's very evident that it's government frank political football with people's lives so i think this comment that you just brought up that it's very very accurate in that even if it were successful say for a moment that it was unsuccessful and that we call this kind of behavior success which we of course don't but if we did i can say. i want to. excess at the expense of somebody. natasha of course a valid question there and one that our community members are pondering before we move on to much further i want to show a map of her audience just so they get
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a perspective on what it is we're talking about here and what you're seeing on your screens are australia's offshore prisons for immigrants arriving by boat on the man asylum facility closed on october thirty first twenty seventeen but many detainees still remain in transitional council on the island and we've got a comment actually from someone who is among those this is a to love someone who's tweets we read in our very last show when we talked about the closing of the prison there on man asylum he says i really don't have hope for resettlement i already rejected p. and g. papa new guinea and australia i won't those countries don't have respect for human beings so i hope the us will give me an appointment asylum i hope that's just one hope of one person but as these you are there talking to us on the phone and then asylum and talk to us about what it is your facing and your time there on then a. very large.
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you say killed by the system what do you mean. what i mean by q. . and a hard. to believe. in the. life always. believed to. you no answer as you're listening to that of pulls up this headline here critics warn of a humanitarian crisis for six hundred asylum seekers in an offshore australian detention camp this is twenty seventeen when you were last on our show and we were discussing refugees refusing to leave them an asylum detention center what's happened since then where we now. well i was lost in the van but in fact as the p. and g. the company get in place when team to that horrible same time and forcibly removed
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the asylum seekers and refugees who didn't want to go i'll go say i think of these would cite a site also in a moment but that wasn't much about protest as it was about anything else they realized the amount of silence was in the spotlight of media attention and frankly it rarely is that anymore because your study in the media is bored of the story they hardly touch it but that moment as camp the formal prison like the city on my solemn scruggs and the refugees are being moved into more transit camps elsewhere on the side and they knew that if they made a stand refused to go the media would cover it and to some extent they did but that was about it getting attention but it really was one of the few times that the story has broken through the australian media because even the both sides of politics doubt it will strike the adult the same policy that old saying those refugees a mouse on the road i'm not going to come to australia it was a much political the bike to follow the a.b.c.
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the national cost or no strike it is taxpayer funded the government is continually borning the a.b.c. that it's probably is at risk and many think i would want to comment that many think the a.b.c. . to some extent and then there's a quite a big coat hole at the media that it's quite and t. refugee and pro policy side that was all about getting attention and who combined the refugees for what the government would say is that yes it is tough for those refugees amounts on the roof but that they get a paycheck is that people another look at coming to studies or putting their lives at risk despite more than a thousand people who drowned by the right bank on the right so rightly or in the few years before they brought in this they were more about uncontrolled immigration by refugees the thousand people came in the city at the four twenty third thing that i want to see that start up again because they want to be seen in control. borders and so forth yeah yeah there's an immigration because they won the toss i
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see you saying yeah yeah yeah yeah zander was speaking of course we know that from two thousand and thirteen to two thousand and fourteen of course the numbers plummeted from twenty thousand to one hundred sixty but we have a lot of comments coming on the bigger picture andrew you teed up you know that idea of what is the geo political aspect of some of this why is this even you know happening even with the neglect for media coverage you know we have the street let me actually came in from sarah ruby smith she's the director of project humanity a group that advocates for refugees she said australia continues these human rights abuses knowing that the aid money australia supplies to countries like papa new guinea and nauru will guarantee they can continue natasha you know andrew's knotting i know that we know that there is more of play here but what do you make of what sarah says here you know that australia deliberately picked vulnerable countries with vulnerable populations like true colonialists nation that they are their government does whatever they see fit there. that's one hundred percent i
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have worked on and it's a good mess but i probably know the ins and outs of not rule out and what i would say is that a strike there is one hundred percent in control of the sentence so that day to day operations of people the provision of stuff every single aspect of these camps is an innocent bystander and yes they go on their responsibility to any end not true and they do that and it has to make the point that they government. control. that you can make people like you and people like me in the media it's not a question brought you know now about government but question i never lied to you nor up like never on with you or government practice it's happened to me like a benoit responsibility and because these are at least open country. that's right and i mean the kind of thing that i would go back to is something that is you said earlier he commented that seven people had died on that and that those seven people
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just with that responsibility of the israeli government so i just want to add to that in total twelve people have died under this policy so seven on man has five hundred twelve in total. horror and a lot of those people have seen the medical records that have outlined that decline atli and their mental health. disintegration to the point where. you know one man has two people in fact have set themselves on fire. so that self-immolating. a man threw himself out of a bus a number of people have overdosed and number of people have hung themselves and you can see in the in strongly in government's own records their mental health of deterioration in great detail so we have medical reports that. written about people by international medical services which is the medical contractor that the australian government used to provide health care and they are the ones who have
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not provided sufficient care or not responded sufficiently or in some instances you can see where they recommended again and again and again that a person reduced to a certain type of treatment and the if strelley in government so strongly in what a force which is a government department have declined that request for medical care and as a result the person has eventually died so that that line of responsibility is extremely clear and that as you mention what you're describing is it's conditions of nairo i want to share with our audience a couple of pictures that as these sent us moving through on my computer here it is you told us that these are the transition centers on menace island and move over to the next one here to talk to us about what it is that we're seeing these pictures that you sent of what looks like perhaps newly refurbished or newly built transition center what are the conditions like there. well basically
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does. two or three. times the center they have been will block then one. block then in two thousand and fifteen and the other two they have been built recently when we. moved out of the formal detention center. and also let me just thank you. both and to the point that he say about forty woo we have been deployed we have been denied medical access food and water for twenty four days and they want us to fight here in property. and they want us to resettle in properly any nation to the floor it is so clear that we prefer to stay inside and we will look after ourselves and we no longer need your services twenty four days we feel we had
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a family freedoms and we knew. that things that you missed for the last four years we haven't had any oxygen even to take one single step without asking their permission or without scalding one of their security guards. we have been our views and we have been disrespected where to the point. they want to force us to move on with dignity. you know what has been right to abuse. innocent people and be are not respecting be international law which is. to get war and struggle you. will. want to. research and find money. well.
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forgive me for interrupting i just wanted to stop people stop you right there for a second because i want to bring in some other voices to this conversation people who are actually in this idea of who really is controlling the situation you're saying australia is control based on your experience against our will be smith pointing out that the australian government has been very clear for example when new zealand wanted to deal directly with papa new guinea to take some refugees from menace peter dutton again suggested this would jeopardize papa new guinea's relations with australia so you know that's maybe an indication that they are very much in control but i want to also put this towards you from twitter saying the question isn't about what we had asked which is you know are there human rights violations happening but how is australia getting away with it for the last five years you know what are the un international human rights mechanisms to solve this or other governments saying to australia based on your experience there for now almost five years what would your answer be. to god how are they getting away with this. well i don't think we're going to get away with it but we can
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see in the front picture that it's running a government people to get away with it because no one will judge you as long as a strong one of the american allies no one is going to judge them. i meant more than. ten different organizations humanitarian organizations on top of that organization these u.n.h.c.r. they have visited us for more than ten times and every single time they come to the island with children and we keep reporting every single incident that happening here modify we don't see any we don't see any movement from the international community and in fact like we know it's rather nice to be country but at the end of the day below each and every country around the world not just only going. to war country like it or immediately no one is above their little bodies let me take
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you back on two thousand one detain people on money for six in how to use. sixty and how he is and i dated the day they get the compound dong and the two people buck to. i don't want even raised it was there was went on the media but the international community the brain and all we've been hearing this is a a and not security model right and he's actually there i can see answer trying to get in there andrew well i want to and i think it's very unfortunate as a starting government does become a problem like this because what you've done is the other side of the coin so i'm going to play that role for my grave with that but because i want those arguments to be you know rebuffed as necessary by natasha what they would say is a press release on prison they staple on modest like is a and in the real afraid to walk around mount a sign that grateful qur'an the red that's true i think amount of thought and
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people can walk around freely your own and all and it's a by room i can't get to that point one second is and i'm going to leave as well in theory i can go back to the countries i came from i mean is that a practical thing for somebody who is playing persecution and that's not just running government and they would say that they are resettling refugees but still with the united states promised three hundred refugees have now been resettled in the u.s. and the number that full on the amount of is dwindling what also cited is that we're making the wrong comparisons and we have to be comparing. what happens for refugees in australia and about twenty thousand refugees get resettled in australia every year through the united nations came a stright it says it's very generous that we shouldn't be comparing the minus and the rate with them we should be comparing them with those didn't have the money or the means to get on boats and come to australia and why should the queue jumpers assisted in government would call them be treated differently from a refugee stuck in
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a. camper or is it on for example and then tosser. so i said i want to politely interrupt you andrew and i want to ask you that question . because i think that this will paint the picture of something that he said earlier about the loss of dignity and the loss of humanity in the sentence as he is can you hear me yet. as. well as over the last five years as the how many times do you think. so it's provided some people in the detention camps or transit centers have referred to you by name and how many times do you think they referred to you by you a number. well in fact i'm glad that i believe you know people called my names but. not this or the government or the white on on on monitor what is the number not a name and not only me but one hundred men and two hundred every
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patient and they get for their numbers and on top of the people. on the pub but they never called my dad i have a separate argument. why you don't call my name and they say look we could be you by two stories you only had numbers you were not. well you know it's always easier to i mean do you mean i was asian i want to bring up that argument but actually if i can with the time we have andrew i want to quickly go back to something you referred to in terms of referring to these things as prison camps or detention centers we have a see flora's saying i have two responses to a question we have put on social media one i find your use of the word prison to be interesting it implies criminalization and pre-determined length of time to serve a sentence he questions australia's policy makers if they also view them as criminals within a prison system of course andrew appreciate you bringing the other side what do you
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think they would say how much does terminology factor in terms of you know keeping the australian public in support of this policy. about a year ago. and they got quite angry when i present but i suspect . countries. and. the states in their eyes. through the process. governments. who have played. down. the questionable frankly it's going to happen. i mentioned earlier as well. hundred men women and children now. more. rain in
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refugee refugee numbers on those two places because of the country's. muslim travel ban. a question. right and i will add one more thing they would say and have said this being the prime minister malcolm turnbull june twenty second interview here in australia we have one of the most generous refugee and humanitarian programs in the world the reason we can do that is because we decide the australian government representing australian people who come to australia not people smugglers are thanks to our gas that's all the time we have think you know tosh bluecher thank you to enter thomas and absolute as he's out of the final word go to larry forbes who wrote to us on facebook saying for the past twenty two years successive australian governments have worked hard to groom their electorates to make them fear and hate asylum seekers their justification is supposedly that such cruelty will keep australia's border safe he doesn't think
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threat to his radius life was mostly work for a former top israeli diplomat a must people not palestinian we'll get a rush loan over there same thing that a judge in the bay are sending them to died it's a cause coalitions and when they come and attack us it's a war zone he was attacking maybe his son goes head to head with donny and all what israel's doing is deliberately choosing to slaughter houses and al-jazeera. al-jazeera. swear every. when diplomacy fields and fear sweeps in our borders are wide open wide open to drugs terrorists we've proven the barriers are built to impose division and it's not to take to use instead of being an obstacle or dorado wastes into became
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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. twelve teenagers and their coach or rescued from a cave in thailand have been recounting their ordeal and their first public appearance the boys paid tribute to the diver who died while trying to rescue them set off that has more from china. the happy faces of what is now one of the world's most famous football teams the wild horse can finally go hold well no not for the performances on the pitch but for demo regular survival
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and rescue from the pitch black of a cave in north thailand. or try to go into the water and dig to see if we can go through but i could feel that the bottom was all sand and the top was just rocks a pulled the rope and the boys pulled me back afterwards i told one of the boys that we cannot exit this way and what was planned as a one hour visit to the cave turned into an ordeal for eighteen days and nights closely watched by news viewers around the world. we found a sunday hill and there was water dripping from the cliffs and rocks so i told everyone that we'd better stay near the water so we decided to spend the night there before we went to sleep i told him we should pray together before sleeping the youngest is only eleven years old main menu i tried not to think about food otherwise i'd feel even more hungry. after nine days they finally were found.
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and boy we heard some noises of people talking at that moment so we told each other to be quiet and listen to the noises we weren't sure so we listened and it turned out to be true i was surprised. a team of international divers finally managed to swim them to safety in what experts this cry by one of the most difficult and dangerous caves rescue operations ever remarkable stories of survival told by the boys and their coach for the first time with no food at all trying to find any clean water they could drink all the time they were trying to find a way out as they became weaker and weaker by the day. the father of the fourteen year old goalkeeper says he wants his life returned to normal as soon as possible of course i am worried we can't see in the future but i will tell my boy there when he returns to the normal world he may face things he has never experienced before i try to encourage him to make sure he will be ready to face this issues only speak
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about what he wants to say things that hurt him he should avoid the wild boars will all become novice monks for a period of nine days to pay tribute to the former tiny navy diver someone who lost his life during their rescue. di artists have made this mural in chang right to honor the extreme bravery and international teamwork of everyone who participated in the rescue operation after sharing their stories with the world the boys can finally go back home step fasten al-jazeera chiang rai. the white house has denied that president donald trump contradicted his intelligence community again just today after saying its full faith in the u.s. government agencies now asked by reporters at the white house whether russia still poses a cyber security threat trump replied no but the white house press secretary said he was not talking about russian met thing. a chance to speak with the president
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after its comments and the president was said thank you very much i'm saying no to answering questions the president and his administration are working very hard to make sure that right russia is unable to meddle in our elections as they have done in the past is if we have stated. syrian activists say the rebel held town of now why in southern province of daraa has come under heavy but bargeman by government forces the only hospital has been bombed at the reports of dozens of casualties hundreds of civilians have fled west towards the israeli occupied golan heights the first commercial flight from ethiopia to eritrea after twenty years that's at war has landed safely a flight which has been called the bird of peace survived asmara two red carpet welcome many on board were seeking to reunite with their family members. well those were the headlines but stay with us witness next.
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to him. so bit of a strange day to start the center fuse we just heard today the city of aleppo has fallen. or should we say liberated. the film is going to be between fifty and seventy minutes. so. i think we only take ten minutes out of your interview by approximation and then. write your name. so you can hear the question.
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are you ok for us yeah yeah you're right it's start ok let's talk about. sorry yellow. lab. what i think we she did about colombia about. the lead then and to be that he keeps us here one hell of. a lot of fighting with a lot of the law the men. much more ya don't know. much more yet and i follow. that i'm there. to
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see how come i just love the. zero. zero zero four autumn of do you know. how did you know who to trust you know not to trust. the hell of a lot sawfish you come us thought she wants us to spoil the yet. and the what they mean to suck women to suck without a missile with no can imagine wobbly on it could much more say i shrug off more acted on them aside and much much more to me and then fiala most of the humans among. ok i feel the norm the. out of the mcafee a hundred b.s. anyone in the home is a car felon he was
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they shun forward on. any phone. book. and absolution the minute. i am. in the sun i was going to jump off a car that comes. down it comes to some films i don't have to be in a country not how the hamster knocks and sought out for going to the hollow part of my heart all in islamic law about zero zero to five to howl about how they should join us to. enjoy math or miss out on the news so does. not.
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