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tv   NEWS LIVE - 30  Al Jazeera  July 23, 2018 6:00am-6:34am +03

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you why do they just go through georgia and what invade iraq to the good people to jordan some of which well they have had to go through the golan heights so i'm in a sense in the mosque this what they you know played over here of course is that it was not only what humans who were evacuees really four hundred ten or so but also other people in the real number isn't actually new on these sites you know other personnel who were actually smuggled to safety outside the reach of the syrian army that sound right so the the way in which this evacuation took place will feed into that sense of mistrust and suspicion. that has been directed towards the white helmets why didn't they just go through jordan directly that. we don't know the the most probable explanation is that their main occasion was in the southern part of the city of their own and the syrian army actually reach the crossing with jordan
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before they could flee the old for about part made the reconsideration agreement and you know it was restored to syria and so on and so they were sort of trapped and the only way to go was for them to do with towards which we see it to be reached by the syrian army that's the most probably explanation that we actually don't know. so there is a bit of there's a shroud of. turin seeding go through all these and perhaps in the next few days we would hear more when we hear from them as details that still need to be clarified in your then ian is this the beginning of the end of the white helmets. who was as i mentioned that they've used vision because. some people in syria they might say well they were more interested in taking photographs rather than risk people citing from sample the famous photograph or on the run the creation is. the three or four
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year old kid on the back of the ambulance. somebody was good was more interested in putting him there taking pictures to incriminate the regime that's why they view the most suspicion they were affiliations as well. as suspicion affiliations the same person for example who took the picture on a major appeared in a field. put it in which the palestinian kid rolled out the lice and was beheaded by noon the zing from a fighter so. people question with a theater that these are greedy. people who are good willing or something or not now has areas are restored slowly by the syrian state. syrians that you should see are going back there is areas civil defense firefighting ambulance service and so on and so forth and these are regulated by for example the ministry of health in the history of physics on earth and as we've seen so far in the areas
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where the syrian army has regained control the white headwinds on there anymore so their only place now of existence and to speak is the northwest and syria in the province of it live in northwestern and should the syrian state treat game that part of syria as well we was just see them this week. sharing a thought so they have their act and the n.s.a.'s think tank. with the news hour live from london still ahead iraqi security forces admit to secretly holding prisoners accused of terrorism offenses also leaders of the world's largest economies won't trade tensions pose a huge risk to global growth and accusations of racism from german soccer star message ozil as he quits international football.
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tensions are rising ahead of wednesday's general elections in pakistan a candidate from the front runner imran khan's party has been killed in a suicide attack that also wounded four others gunned a poor was a candidate of the pakistan to africa and south for p.t.i. party vehicle was targeted in the northwestern province of khyber panting quite as he was leaving a political meeting pakistani taliban said it carried out the attack. wednesday's election is promising to be pakistan's most unpredictable yet with allegations of media restrictions and poll rigging overshadowing the vote some a pinch of a reports now from lahore. this is the man considered a disrupted by pakistan's to mean political parties until a few months ago but now suggest iran khan's there. is the frontrunner he's taken the lead from the washer if the former prime minister by an accountability for the rise of iran harm in the fall of the marshallese is alleged to have been engineered
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by the establishment and the metaphor for pakistan's military this is a plan and it is intended to bring about a result in this election which the planners want. it will produce a situation which will cause further difficulties for this country a weak government internally derided coalition huge challenges. it's the first election where religious far right parties are taking part in mainstream politics at their peak in the back pakistan o.t.l. pete rose to prominence for the violent sit in in islamabad it was resolved after the military became a guarantor that in the protestors and the government now it's a political force with more than five hundred candidates vying for national and provincial assemblies seats he plans to make pakistan but it was a true religious state that denies it is backed by the military and says its money come from loyalists in the millions all. the money given to us by the rangers was
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someone's individual act and has nothing to do with the party the video which was made to get viral was a conspiracy. no musharraf league has been assured of support from the allison at will demarco it was a banned group until last month and imran khan's party has welcomed in its fold. former chief a cleric who's on the u.s. terror watch list a political party is also being formed by the supporters of pastor saeed another cleric who is on the united nations terrorists list we are feeling over two hundred fifty candidates for the first time in this election and from their headquarters the muslim league is running an organized campaign but the political party insists that the u.n. is wrong and have a say has not been given the right to respond to allegations against him. how many practical people and our character is clear whether it safeguarding pakistan's ideology philanthropy and public service or the ethical support for occupied kashmir that's why people will vote for us there's also
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a religious alliance of parties which is running as well the religious parties are not expected to win many seats but they will be able to take a real votes from traditional parties the final outcome of this change the political landscape will depend on how many of the hundred six million pakistanis but just to do what will come out to cast their ballots. the other zero. former trump foreign policy aide carter pages denied allegations he worked with the russian government during the two thousand and sixteen us presidential election the f.b.i. believes page was involved in russian that collusion with the tran campaign and had him placed under surveillance trump has condemned the investigation into alleged russian collusion as a witch hunt a defense correspondent patty calling us more from washington. carter page was a foreign policy advisor to then candidate donald trump he is at the heart at the center of this entire investigation into potential collusion between the trump campaign and the russian government so now what we're seeing is what's called
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a pfizer warrant application basically if an american citizen is going to be wiretapped then the government in order to do that has to get permission from a special finds a judge these are always done in secret and we never ever see finds a warrants or their applications but the president president donald trump declassified this media organizations filed for the paperwork into the freedom of information act and over the weekend these documents were released they don't say much most of the pages look like this they are heavily redacted but it does show that the f.b.i. believed that carter was potentially colluding with the russians and possibly other members of the trunk campaign to try and win the election never publicans including the president on twitter is declaring victory because that does show that the f.b.i. used in part some of the evidence to try and get this war in the christopher steel dossier he's the british former british spy who compiled the evidence showed potential compromising material russia might have had been handed to trump because
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eventually democrats paid for some of that research republicans like to say all of it has been discredited and they say because of that the molar investigation is spread it is well democrats for their part say that steele is a legitimate credible source and that his information has been used in the past by the f.b.i. to not only lead to arrests but also convictions. the iraqi national security service has admitted telling hundreds of people for months on suspicion of terrorism related crimes despite denying the same allegations in april according to human rights watch the agency has been keeping them at a facility east of mosul a city that was retaken from my cell just over a year ago thousands of people were arrested jaring that three hour operation american sons many innocent people detained in the chaos in rights watch visited one crowded facility where hundreds of men and boys were held some for more than a year a former detainee described how people were being tortured to death while hundreds
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of protesters have been arrested in southern iraq in a bid to crack down on demonstrations that have erupted over unemployment and poor public services and ron khan has more on the day's events from baghdad. tough words directed at the iraqi government the iraqi observatory for human rights says iraq has arrested hundreds of protesters in a bid to crack down on demonstrations in the south. there is a wide scale security campian in search of the activists who took part in the demonstrations in baghdad the other governorates well human rights watch says it's uncovered evidence of iraq's national security service has been holding detainees from the war against eisel something it had previously denied human rights watch discovered four hundred twenty seven detainees in a facility in mosul run by the national security service the security service then issued contradictory statements first saying it didn't hold detainees and then insisting that it had the rights to do so to which human rights watch said baghdad
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needs to publicly clarify which authorities have the right to hold an interrogate detainees human rights organizations here say that abuse is a commonplace and i don't i don't want them a lot of these detainees are held on evidence from informants and detention centers on the outskirts of cities aren't allowed to be visited by n.g.o.s and therefore i believe it's. not detention it's state sponsored kidnapping with protests ongoing there is concern from human rights groups that more people will be detained illegally and held without charge the government here says that anybody detained is entitled to jus process under the law iran can out of their baghdad. the glasses of grain and produce names of ice bags every year and most eventually fly harmlessly harmlessly out to sea but a huge eleven million ton but we simply came aground off the remote and us wheat fronting physical break up and cause a tsunami. as report helicopters in these parts of the
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lifeline for small inuit communities they provide all services especially in times of crisis. below thousands of icebergs the result of the outflow of nearby glasses draining the greenland ice sheet. then the iceberg in question it is huge one hundred meters by three hundred white height that you can make out the settlement of a lawsuit spooled up a hillside. on the ground a community of around one hundred seventy people there are families there are children their bread is on the water as they fish and hunt and they used to icebergs drifting by but never this close and never this big. i mean double normally icebergs are not that high their low white or this one is
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very high which made it frightening. this video shows chunks of ice cascading into the water causing life threatening waves to crash into the shoreline several homes had to be evacuated there was concern for the villages power generator and fuel tanks and boats were dragged up the hillside. we measure out towards the ice but it has now shifted away from the harbor entrance not as dangerous as it was but still presenting a threat it could cause at any time fisherman canoed isn't has never seen a bug this big so close. to. it actually came pretty fast in front of the village they saw the danger and so they evacuated some houses and prepared for what could happen then there was a big wind and it blew it outside here like it's hoped the iceberg will now slowly head out to sea nudged along by wind and current evacuated residents are back in
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their homes life is beginning to return to normal making the most of the short summer a quiet time for the dogs head of a winter of sledge pulling they think about how dangerous it is to be here when there's a big iceberg in front of them and. and they cannot really sleep because they're kind of expecting that he's going to kill in a minute or an hour so of course they're like they cannot really rest but they won't change their lives for nothing and they want to stay here because of the fishing opportunities and hunting over the unities all year. so what to make of all this there's no way that you can attribute this iceberg to climate change specifically there's no doubt that there's a growing incidence of ice bread production here in greenland over the last one hundred years and occurrences and threats like this one may continue as time goes on. and add to that the changing sea ice conditions these communities are
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witnessing it is very apparent that things are shifting here in the arctic but global temperature change is more keenly felt than anywhere else although that clock al-jazeera you know suit green. still ahead for you on the program catch takes its gulf neighbors to quarter of the wrongful expulsion of thousands of its residents. jerry may have still reintegrate thousands of teenage figes recruited by pop back into society. and in sport action from one of the biggest spectacles in while swimming is two thousand has to stand on the pulse first across continental race. hello there there's plenty of hot weather across europe at the moment but there's also a few violent thunderstorms in the west and that's where we've seen things gradually
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dry up so thirty two degrees will be our maximum in paris just hot here instead the thunderstorms will be drifting their way down towards the southeast corner these have already given us a lot of hail in places and some flooding rains and so here it looks like the wet weather will still be rather active as we head through the day on tuesday as well across the other side of the mediterranean and in the northwest it's not been too hot recently thanks to the moisture in the air that's gradually drifting its way eastwards now though and so fortunate the temperatures will be just taken down a few degrees so thirty three degrees will be our maximum this time towards the east the winds are still feeding off the sea there so along the north coast of egypt it's not too hot further inland it does get hope pretty quickly there cairo up to forty or forty one degrees as we head through the next few days the central belt of africa is where all the showers are at the moment plenty of them searching through parts of sudan all the way across the central african republic and towards
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the west cameroon and nigeria where we're expecting some of the west effect of the weather during the day there's also plenty of thunderstorms rumbling towards the west on monday to. capturing a moment in time. snapshots of the lives. other stories. providing into someone else's one. inspiring documentary from impassioned filmmakers everybody's going to the. sacrifices that. is going to be so missed the. boat. on al-jazeera. when people need to be heard. right he's been refugio misled his lawyer it's not unknown. and the story needs to be toned we do stories that. i testified in the court of law
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to be sure that the bad guys up to the. al-jazeera has teams on the ground to bring new documentaries and live needs on and on the. back just a quick look at the top stories now at least fourteen people have been killed in afghanistan in a suicide bomb attack outside kabul or shortly after the return of the exiled vice president general abdul rashid dostum. rescue workers known as the white helmets have been evacuated from syria in response to the threat from advancing government
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forces. and a candidate from front runner imran khan's political party in pakistan has been killed in a suicide attack as tension mounts ahead of wednesday's general election. when other stories we're following in g twenty finance ministers and central bankers meeting in argentina a warning that heightened trade and geopolitical tensions pose a huge risk to global growth medias from the world's largest economies are calling for greater dialogue and structural reforms to counter potential shocks to the markets meeting comes in the wake of escalating trade tensions between the u.s. china and europe following a wave of tariffs introduced by president donald trump the u.s. treasury secretary saying that his country does remain open to china negotiating meaningful changes to its trade practices. i'm not going to get into any comments about what private conversations we may or may not be having but what i have said publicly are repeat any time that they want to sit down and negotiate meaningful changes i and our team are available the issue is
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a very specific issue we've said we want more balanced trade both presidents agreed on the objective to have more balanced trade and we want to have our companies have the same access to their markets that they have to us there is a reason why desirous and joins us live now no surprise there that the u.s. is sticking to its position and to bed demanding trade concessions from china tell us more about reaction there at the summit to steve newton's comments. well it's been a weekend of intense discussions and we have been hearing from different voices throughout this weekend munitions comments did not come out of surprise it basically repeats what the united states has been saying from the very beginning which is that they want free and fair trade that they're not being or implementing
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protectionist measures but they're looking for a more balanced or more equal commerce we have heard earlier on saturday the french finance minister here saying that there is a trade war going on that implementing unilateral tariffs like the united states is implementing at this point is like implementing the jungle law and that this is very very dangerous for global commerce and flow for the global economy as a whole however we notions suggested that a big could be implementing of that they're trying to negotiate some type of a free trade zone within the g seven members which would mean that the you know the european it would lift subsidies and tariffs to some of the united states products and this could deescalate the conflict we'll know more a lot more about this when the european commission president travels to the united states next week that's right and the gradual erosion of existing trade practices
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is causing a great deal of concern about the way this could impact the global economy in the coming months and years have they made any progress in diffusing those tensions and coming up with a plan to stave off that kind of damage. well the main point everyone here has made is that in spite of the tension in spite of the differences this g twenty summit is amend and once and since two thousand and eight and the crisis in two thousand and eight has focused on morning touring the global economy and working so that the global another crisis does not happen again so what we've heard from mine and finance minister in argentina and from other countries is that this has been a great success because they have been able to discuss issues that warry like for example the costs and the consequences about the devaluations have had an emerging economies of the state the current state of global infrastructure cryptocurrency is
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among other discussions so in spite of that this whole meeting with in a way taken over by the trade war most of those who participated in this say that it has achieved you need t. and of course that it has helped control the state of the world's finances thank you very much al jazeera is to raise a boat covering that g twenty summit in one as iris thank you theresa. moving on now in the international court of justice is to announce a ruling on a dispute in cats are against the united arab emirates doha accuses its neighbor of violating international laws by expelling thousands of countries since the start of the g.c.c. crisis the case is likely to increase tension in a region already beset by instability as are reports. qatar is stepping up its legal battle against the u.a.e. accusing it of human rights violations the two members of the gulf cooperation
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council the regional body created to boost cooperation and referees bats among its members has been quick polled by a diplomatic dispute so is turning instead to the international court of justice. last june u.a.e. saudi arabia and egypt sever diplomatic ties with qatar and imposed a land sea and blockade qatar alleges that its citizens were either illegally expelled or denied access to the u.a.e. where they have families own property i think it's highly likely that which court of justice will accept jurisdiction and so what qatar is seeking at this stage is is more of a cease and desist order so to prevent any further violations and to remedy compensate those that have suffered. the blockading countries
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accuse qatar of funding extremism accusations strongly dismissed by doha the u.s. fears a prolonged crisis would undermine its push to contain iran's growing influence and defeat isis i think it continues to be fractured and and dangerous i mean the amount of weaponry that's being poured into the region. daily basis the language is escalating particularly given john bolton's push against iran e. this legal action is made possible because of the four blockade in countries u.a.e. is the only one to have signed up to the nineteen sixty five international convention on the elimination of all forms of racial discrimination mike and lawyers representing the u.a.e.
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challenge the case and ask the court to dismiss it. says it remains determined to pursue all legal means to and the blockade the course case was by qatar against the u.a.e. is another sign of the ongoing tension triggered by the g.c.c. kweisi it's been fourteen months since the brocade was imposed and people feel more instability and uncertainty if differences cannot be set aside to and the worst political crisis the reason has ever seen such about al-jazeera doha. the standoff at the al aqsa mosque compound in occupied east jerusalem is over and now with most of the jewish settlers leaving the compound more than a thousand jews with that feed to ship holiday which commemorates the destruction of the ancient jewish temples in jerusalem several arrests were made after confrontations with muslim as the al aqsa mosque is considered to be islam's third holiest site jews believe the compound is where its bickel temples once stood mama
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june is outside the compound with this update. behind me you see one of the gates leading into the ellipse a mosque compound also behind me you'll notice that there are jewish settlers who are praying that's because today is a jewish holiday known as to shop that is a holiday that commemorates disasters throughout jewish history now earlier in the day there was tension here in the old city you had at one point a thousand jewish settlers that had gone into the l.f. some mosque compound they are allowed to do so twice a day and then later in the day you had about three hundred fifty settlers that went in now whenever a jewish settlers go into the enough of the mosque compound or gather around it many of the palestinians that are here many of the muslims they see that as a provocation because of that this is one of those days where there were clashes there was tension because there has been so much tension that's been escalating lately because so many different things well there was worry that it could become even worse now it's in the afternoon things have really calmed down things are
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subsided things are back to normal the way they would be any other day here but the fact of the matter is really goes to show that here at any time something that happens could lead to something much more significant. iran's president has an rouhani has said his country is growing impatient with the united states as a meeting of foreign ministry officials in tehran said president child will fail to turn iranians against the government and any pressure will only bring people closer but as the economy continues to stagnate public patience might be running out same bus driver has more now from toronto. iran's business community is bracing for bad news on august sixth more u.s. sanctions kick in worsening economic uncertainty since president donald trump pulled the u.s. out of the twenty fifteen nuclear deal the american administration is determined to block iran from the global marketplace that welcomed back after signing the international agreement in the re of the elites of warre but snug very important
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for us before dad came some years ago we have the same problem. as you know you don't have a very lengthy story we sell this so many things same as the is sometimes duration is good time to me that i have that five but. we don't have it a lot of worry about that we can handle it and find a way while european companies have started leaving one chinese entrepreneur said for her startup it's important to maintain a presence in iran and she's holding her ground well for us next chinese first south country make ice the biggest michael let me say made at least sell we still want to come we have something in the out in common as waving from china and we were recently found these special yes and you know well i stash our new policies to be all going to go away so we have got to kind of experience donald trump his pledge to subject iran to the harshest economic sanctions in modern history the
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stated goal to pressure the government to give in to american demands some here say it's to draw iran into a fight iranian say they don't want to make war they want to make business something that is becoming increasingly difficult as they continue to be caught between trump's foreign policy ambitions and their own government's unwavering defiance of the united states in a speech to his foreign ministry on sunday iranian president hassan rouhani said trump was trying to wear iran down and warned him against trying to stop iran from selling its oil. peace with iran he said would be the mother of all peace while war would be the mother of all wars but as you know you don't play with the lines till you will regret it forever you cannot carry out these measures it is out of your capability you cannot force during ins to act against their own country you have clearly shown you are against the iranian people he also said that when it comes to
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the nuclear deal most countries support iran and the u.s. is increasingly isolated in the international arena but iran's leaders know a moral victory doesn't pay the bills and even if iran is on the right side of history of the nuclear issue as long as america exerts economic influence the iranian say they will be prevented from elevating themselves of the world stanch. to her. some news from south africa now a gunman have opened fire on a minibus carrying members of a taxi drivers association killing eleven people and injuring four others but he say the victims had attended a colleague's funeral and were returning home to province when the ambush occurred officers are now investigating possible motives previously there's been tension between groups of taxi drivers vying for the same routes at least three thousand villages have been forced to leave their homes after a book attacked in lake chad near the border with misha eighteen people were killed
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and nine women abducted book iran is in control of the area across lake chad's borders with both asia and ceria. all nine years of war against buck iran in northern nigeria has taken a toll on young people especially thousands of traumatized teenagers recruited by the armed group and retired from the front line one hundred eighty three of them were recently released that says ahmed interest reports from my degree in borno state reintegration is a huge challenge. after months and years in custody these children accused of links to. are starting the long process of recovery army commanders say someone potential source said but most were ready to shoot troops or suspected members of boko haram they were all held prisoner at some time in the conflict by both sides and children are coming out of places with a lot of trauma as you know it's not a place for
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a tad what we are trying to help the government of nigeria to do is to take every child individually through a process over the habitation the united nations children's fund and the regional government are so far rehabilitated nearly ten thousand of them. there are provided medical support classroom education and skills training here in baltimore state experts say more than half a million children require i've been psychological and social support whatever level facilities got khalid looked after a few hundred at a time calculus but they pose a serious security threat unless they get the care they need the fear is some of them will read through a book or. for yonks just overheard some support reintegration is a difficult process especially to build their self-esteem and confidence. was arrested by security forces after they fled to the regional capital made to greek to seek refuge.

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