tv newsgrid Al Jazeera August 11, 2018 6:00pm-7:01pm +03
6:00 pm
mostly over water it is creeping over land you can see and you get the white disk there so that's a bit of a concern because the potential out of that which is a tropical depression toward intents and purposes is several hundred millimeters of rain because in extreme south china otherwise you've got something just trying to catch shanghai which is equally a tropical depression in between there's not much left really to fall out of the skies are a few showers or bit of rain but still sichuan the higher ground to the west of should do which is potential for flash flooding as well that's part of the monsoon system which at the moment is pretty widespread across india and not so much in pakistan and also bangladesh the heavy rain again just catching the foothills of nepal and southwards but also a lot further south mackerras had some flooding recently and the certainly rain coming science in the forecast slowed the monsoon ease retreating but it's a very slow process still plenty of rain to come out of it some of which might be seen on the raeburn peninsula this hint here particularly you know how do you still
6:01 pm
still blowing mostly those dry and the wind directions change subtly so it's warmed up in bahrain and qatar is dry and dusty. a new village committee has been elected and is grappling with the do this task of sustaining a community but the residents of this chinese village of burning haitian and have one concern inside. the reclamation the ban on. democracy is complicated. to have a six part series five years you can do chinese democracy experiment on mt hood zero.
6:02 pm
zero zero again what you got is there has a mind of our top stories funerals have been held for three palestinians killed by israeli forces during a twenty eight friday of protest at the gaza border a u.n. delegation arrived a short time ago for meetings with hamas officials to visit as possible going efforts in lower tensions with israel talks are expected to focus on the details of a ceasefire proposal. the saudi embassy coalition says it will investigation as strike in yemen that hit a bus full of school children killing at least fifty one people this father was searching the wreckage for signs of his twelve year old son many of the remains have yet to be on identified. nations has called for a prompt independent inquiry the coalition insists it struck legitimate targets. and talk turkey as president has vowed to defy what he calls u.s.
6:03 pm
threats to his country's economy which speech follows an opinion piece in the new york times warning that the u.s. must respect the sovereignty of all their partnership could be in jeopardy right that his country would seek new friends and allies if u.s. pressure continues. in a landmark decision a jury in the u.s. has ordered a chemical giant to pay more than a quarter of a billion dollars to a school grounds keeper a california jury ruled a we've made by monsanto cause cancer it's the first lawsuit to go to trial electing a glaive phosphate linked to cancer the case could pave the way for thousands of other claims mike hanna has more from washington d.c. claim of damages this was the first lawsuit concerning life os eight to go to trial and after a month of hearing evidence and three days of deliberation the jury decided that it had caused the wayne johnson's counsel did round up pro or ranger pro field
6:04 pm
to perform as safely as an ordinary consumer would have expected when used or misused in an intended or reasonably foreseeable way answer yes it was the roundup pro or range of pro design a substantial factor in causing harm to mr chance an answer yes the size of the few minutes of damages awarded to the jury's belief that the company monsanto had acted with malice and had not responded to the plaintiff's concerns during the years to use the product as a groundskeeper what amount of punitive damages if any do you award to mr johnson answer two hundred fifty million dollars signed by the presiding dated august tenth two thousand and eight the world health organization has found in the past that by phosphate probably causes cancer but the environmental
6:05 pm
protection agency has not ruled on the matter as yet on some toes says it will appeal the case and continues to maintain that its products are not carcinogenic. but there are more than five thousand cases concerning the weed killer and it's a fix pending and following this decision. faces the possibility of more massive payouts to come by canada al-jazeera. has now called as an activist who campaigns against monsanto she says the california trial sets a precedent as the monsanto case has global implications and every aspect but santow has acted with malice aggression and they've entered india unfrocked that's why i salute them in ninety nine i'm still fighting those cases they collected dry as jeeves trauma farmers driving eighty four percent of
6:06 pm
the three hundred thousand pounds. one in the cotton better to distress and suicide extracting nearly seventy billion dollars of the legitimate royalty when they didn't have a plan that case they do not act in the high court of india and appealing in the supreme court opinion and intervening in that case still not today the e.p.a.'s totally captive to the corporations that it should be regulating and the incentive terminal was really to bring the worst record on the table the kidney failure jets which is why sri lanka and round up which is why after the cases of round up saying we don't phase it out in three years it's the public the sand the democracy and it's all that bad of a state of the word against one criminal operation which now is owned by by so it'll be interesting to see how this story unfolds and it's really good to remember
6:07 pm
i was part of my job and that went through the nuremberg trial. it's been one guess since a rally by now nazis and other far right groups turn violent in the u.s. city of solace fill the genya one person died and he got a government ports the city is still struggling to move past that weekend's events that. it began with a fight to remove statues of confederate soldiers who fought for the right to keep slaves events in charlottesville last year turned violent white nationalist support running battles with counter protesters in scenes that shocked the world when one member of the so-called right drove his car into a crowd thirty two year old had a high it was killed i'm training the next generation of activist advocates in our eyes in the years since susan boyle established a foundation in her daughter's name and remains committed to fighting racial intolerance wish is that a door to sacrifice will not be forgotten
6:08 pm
a hope that i have for the future is that i see more people waking up i see more people taking a stand old and young not just young so often times change is driven by the young and the old don't buy into it i'm seeing more cross generational awakening that gives me hope. over the last twelve months charlottesville has been through a lot of soul searching the confederate statues still stand and some here blame last year's tragic events on external forces others though say what happened is a reflection of a city still dealing with racism yeah it feels like i'm not included in the narrative of my town associate professor in black lives matter activist julian schmidt says charlottesville needs to address its past and known up to persistent problems this was an extreme example of you know physically violent example of the
6:09 pm
white supremacy which pervades every day you know as i mentioned you know we had problems with affordable housing with stop and frisk you know all these sorts of things so that the white supremacy is here and it's been here for a long time most of the reporters in charlottesville xl local newspaper covered last year's events night editor mark newton says the only positive change is the damage done to the so-called right movement but it seems like there is a lot of disarray charlottesville did a lot of damage to their kind of credibility and their ability to form a year later the city is still reeling from events that tarnish its reputation as the happiest city in america dozens of officials resigned after last year a new leadership is in place but deep scars remain and they go across zero charlottesville virginia the number of people in indonesia who died in last week's earthquake has risen to three hundred eighty seven countries our forces deliver ninety tons of aid to the badly hit island of long book almost three hundred ninety
6:10 pm
thousand people that's approximately ten percent of the population are now homeless or displaced. four hundred fifty people have been injured thirty arrested during an anti-government rally in romania on friday and right now people are beginning to gather in victory square in central bucharest on friday it was packed with thousands of remains calling on the government to step down demonstrations turn violent after riot police used tear gas and water cannon on the crowd more protests are scheduled for saturday evening. nasa has postponed the launch of a new spacecraft will make another attempt on sunday the park a solar probe will fly to the sun to collect data from inside the solar atmosphere returns he has more on a journey to last seventy years and a spacecraft designed to withstand extremes. as you might expect the key to loitering in the sun's atmosphere is not melting nasa engineers have built a carbon heat shield for the park a solar probe that's just eleven and
6:11 pm
a half centimeters thick they say it will protect the equipment of that will be surveilling the sun as it sweeps through its corona or was found the real field gets up to about twenty five hundred degrees fahrenheit which we're not going to do today but we are going to get it under degrees and what is the feeling. i see. on the temperature of the corona is just one of the counter intuitive mysteries that the park a probe hopes to solve why is it so much hotter than the sun's core several hundred times hotter science would suggest that the further away from the sun surface the cooler the atmosphere should be the probe is named after eugene parker who formulated the theory of so no wind will be present to watch the moon for the spacecraft named in his own. in one hundred fifty eight he theorized that a flow of particles accelerated into space from the sun and that proved to be true but scientists still don't know how this phenomenon occurs theoretically such
6:12 pm
particles should cool down and dissipate the further from the sun they get not speed up so the wind streams could impact satellites in space and g.p.s. radio waves and electrical grids on earth they also cause rural when they crash into the earth's magnetic field and the deflected the probe will begin its first approach to the sun in november as part of it seventy a mission we will get hotter than anything is being before we are in that three million degree plasma region in the corona well gradually will close it will take set of seven giant steps closer to the sun until we're in that final region and as it makes those dives towards the sun surface but palca so the probe will eventually become the fastest object ever created by humankind she. as an asteroid john i said space dot com and he says the spacecraft could find all it says that have been abating scientists but decades this is something that's never been done before you know nasa is going to take a spacecraft and launch it into the outer edges of the star that we think that
6:13 pm
we'll see every day and it's something that you know the hope to kind of uncover some of these mysteries of the sun that we just still even after decades and hundreds of years of observing it don't fully understand why this outer fringe this corona of the sun is still much hotter than the actual surface of the sun is this you know lingering mystery that scientists hope this machine could have survived the first big challenge is the launching and everything does have to go right for this mission to lift off nasa only has a few more days beyond that maybe another week or so in their launch window to try it once that it gets off the ground it's straight to the sun as your course when i mentioned earlier this is supposed to be the fastest spacecraft ever it's going to loop around venus to supercharge its speed as it approached sun and then it has to kind of just towed it through that atmosphere as as fast as possible so doesn't cook it has that special heat shield made out of carbon fiber foam to kind of keep
6:14 pm
her room temperature atmosphere around its instruments while it's susceptible to this super burning hot of the sun so you know if all of those calculations work and if the material can survive it's going to work out just great. without zero these top stories you know of him being held for the three palestinians killed by israeli forces trying at twenty five friday a protest at the gaza border the u.n. delegation arrived a short time ago for meetings with hamas officials and visits as possible ongoing efforts to lower tensions with israel told to expect it to focus on the details of a cease fire proposal. the saudi embassy coalition says it will investigate an air strike in yemen that had a bus full of school children killing at least fifty one people his father was searching the wreckage for signs of his twelve year old son many of the remains
6:15 pm
have yet to be identified the united nations has called for a prompt independent inquiry the coalition insists it struck legitimate targets turkey's president has vowed to defy what he calls u.s. threats to his country's economy. one speech follows an opinion piece in the new york times warning that the u.s. must respect the sovereignty of the partnership could be in jeopardy he wrote that his country would seek new friends and allies if u.s. pressure continues. all of its wrong to try to bring turkey in line for a pastor and once again calling all those america is the pity you but you choose a pastor over your strategic partner in nato the russian forces in syria say they've shot down to rebel drones they say at defenses were deployed at the base and latakia province no casualties or damage was reported as the syrian state t.v. report that israeli drone was also shot down near damascus. we were the syrian army
6:16 pm
is threatening a major assault on the last remaining rebel held province dozens of civilians have been killed by intensifying as strikes the bombing targeted parts of spilled over into areas in western aleppo leaflets have been dropped warning people to accept government rule the number of people in indonesia who died in last week's earthquake has risen to three hundred eighty seven the country's air force has delivered ninety tons of aid to the data hit island of lombok food medicine tents and blankets will be given out to residents in affected areas almost three hundred ninety thousand people are homeless or displaced those are your headlines more news here on al-jazeera after work on china's democracy. getting to the heart of the matter unless we have new generations growing up to understand better our relationship with an up for a while then soon there will be nothing left facing realities or our friends and
6:17 pm
allies played a positive role and if i think any risk aversion for taking this pier there story on talk to al-jazeera tens of thousands of demonstrations erupt across china each year driven by anger over corruption and the illegal sale of communal land most protests failed to make an impact but in two thousand and eleven one village defied the odds. you can see religious rose up demanding the return of their lead and calling for their leaders to step down after decades of corruption. and made a crackdown activist shreds implore died in police custody. but if you can achieve the end thinkable the right to choose their own good leaders.
6:18 pm
6:19 pm
6:20 pm
other was going to food. although although. we were friends of the be dealt with the old soviet the hordes of us here and gone to settle with him. and you'll see when the. souls on of this are. going to want to go on. do not want. those who made. the hall those are going on. so all. so this is the wall agin made him. so they wouldn't. know as it's hanging on
6:21 pm
6:22 pm
6:24 pm
you for. the double the fun. so she wouldn't be so diploma in the publishing of a. woman to know my love for you know since you will. probably will listen to all of them. she's on the. thing about once a day those involved the. if if if. saloon in the scene sung diesel's whom we look for deep. at the the scene
6:25 pm
6:26 pm
6:27 pm
6:28 pm
all of them. i mean answers that you can see how. far seeing the sun to. go when you've been to sense when we. see the wind he saw a woman. in the. whole. chain these things out of control you know i did. and i said and said i oh. and then i'm in the hay so he's doing it in such misery that you know. he was a big shot i think he's the one brother to me since if i see. you
6:29 pm
sitting. at the booth with the. shell by this. change will. just see. jodi we shall. see what you mean to me was. told will. also tell you that all ten or. so the zero zero would be starting multiple children off aapc doesn't lie on military policy and so often . just. being. so close those isn't free zone call and it's. yours or portal island.
6:30 pm
6:31 pm
6:32 pm
tom in the. cauliflower a while. before i was you know once you know. what you. did. you you. let me go i said so you didn't get my hands on me. that was how you out it was going to. put. the let me tell you that it was how. happy i was that was. somebody somewhere down right away. because when i. was young i am. well i told them i
6:33 pm
was like you never knew i would think what. you want to do well you might think a political biblical i. was a little way out told me they don't know how i would know not how much you let me tell you just. need i did the can you do you that you. can do to help me out although i don't see what it was like i thought somebody was going to homecoming basically wanted to go to meet up i go out to the microphone i'll come get somebody i don't want to see what he was he didn't know how much i want to tell them to who i don't know about by doing so will get you oh gee i thought it was a. she was
6:34 pm
a go i want to hear about the book ok. i'll be well she thinks it's all over i'm a died. i told the hotel have to go though i've been good so seeing go home we're going to go yeah takes will be on the way i was using was below the belt would you bother. by. i don't know my dog's body my wife and i don't know why yes why did i why. would lho want to let me go whoa whoa i'm not really i was wrong oh yeah logan was who knew where the knee was no clue he's gotten the. moon landing you. owe. me you. know. i'm.
6:35 pm
55 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on