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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  September 10, 2018 5:00am-6:00am +03

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this is zero. glamour shall carry this is the news hour live from doha coming up in the next sixty minutes stalemate after swain's election with no clear winner between center left and center right blocks but a rise in support for the far right. arson in syria airstrikes continue on the neighboring hama province in syria where the hospital among the targets. save the children warns of hunger being used as a weapon of war but the child dying every minute and conflict zones this year. and
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tensions in kosovo in serbia is efforts to end a longstanding dispute stall. sweet faces a period of lengthy political wrangling after an election which ended in stalemate though big gains for the far right the center left bloc led by the prime minister so if unleavened came out with just over forty percent of the vote he has rejected calls for his resignation and says he's going to hold talks with political opponents about forming a coalition government the center right alliance led by the moderates says it's they who have been given the mandate to lead the country they won virtually the same share as the leftist outgoing government bloc the far right anti immigration. democrats led by yemeni orcus and gain support in their vote seventeen percent talks to form a new government will begin on monday but all parties have so far refused to work
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with the sweden democrats. well defacto of course i'm disappointed that a party with nazi roots could gain psion once ground it's a party that in this election has had representatives that want a journalist to die which has glorified hitler and humiliated victims of the holocaust this weekend democrats could never offer a change or improvements in society the only thing they could offer is widening the gap in society and growing hatred. tara hall has more from stockholm. where they've been celebrating here at the social democrat headquarters the center left party that's been the ruling party going into this election it remains the biggest party in the swedish politics as it has done for a century albeit with the worst result that it ever got in its electoral history it is something that illustrates the way in which this election has sealed support
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away here in sweden from the two mainstream center ground parties benefiting smaller parties particular on the extremes the extreme left doing well and of course the far right as well the sweden democrats much talked about ahead of this election they're the big winners here tonight albeit having done quite as well as they'd hoped and many fears. the center left social democrats have been the biggest party in every swedish election for a century true again this time but not by far and it's a relief it's been their worst result ever happened i think it's fine the problem now is how can we make it. how can you be government with this since it's really hard to see. how to how to make us table the government this is an election that seemed support shift from the center to the extremes coalition building will be tough one big winner has been the empty immigrant sweden democrats are not as
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big as they'd hoped the story of the night is that while the far right has become a force in swedish politics they won't be taking over just yet what would seem hairy is a political earthquake. really brought to sweep this political history and i think that they're the leaders of the two big parties social democrats and the moderate party need to listen to this single from the swedish people need to do saying is the policies that that the sweetest people want to see the rise of the far right in sweden meant voters took to the election with customer. enthusiasm even if many harbored deep concerns terrible i just want to cry when i think about it the c. . four thing is i mean yeah of course we have a lot of refugees here but we need to take care that they come from a terrible place terrible for us we can't just throw them out immigration and integration have been front and center in a divisive vote with this country's famous values of tolerance and openness at
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stake so sweden isn't in danger of becoming a fire right state and nor are the sweden democrats even likely to make it into government no party at this stage will even talk to them but they are likely to continue to exert and in direct influence on the way ahead having already succeeded to the horror of many in putting nationalism and identity politics on the swedish agenda peter waller dusky is editor in chief of one of sweden's major daily newspapers the tone has already changed it has changed a lot and i think the major change came in two thousand and fifteen after the big refugee crisis a lot of refugees came in sweden in a very short time span and the systems here didn't work properly and lot of people reacted to that and the sweden democrats sort of logical consequence of the well they searched in the polls as a result of that crisis and they've stayed on that kind of result since some swedes
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will tell you the rise of the far right is overblown that this country has never been happier or more prosperous but extrusion politics are in sweden to state now and many other swedes see trouble ahead jonah hill al-jazeera stocco. patrick oxana is a political editor and writer he says the far right anti immigrant swaying democrats have been able to attract voters on a number of marginal issues aside from immigration. being against you being against abortion and being skeptical about the climate and so on so they have added up these marginal groups and created a political movement of this content people discontent with it with the globalization of free trade as well i would like to describe the situation in sweden bit like what we saw in the german election and it's been a long term work from from russia to move to poor to these
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extreme right groups and the feed and to migration sentiments they amplified the messages of this this contempt in society we haven't seen any big operations during the election campaign but on the other hand things have gone that the well for the russian perspective with both the left party and the sweden democrats increasing their strength in in this election and they are both against nato and they were both against e.u. in this election we can see that the anthony major party is strengthening their position in parliament but i don't expect this will have any influence on security and defense during this mandate period whoever will form the government if it will be the social democratic party or the conservative party being leading the government so so i think the impact will be very minor during this man that period
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but if you will look at have for the future of course it's hard to tell the long term effects of this success in the election. syrian our russian jets and helicopters have continued their heavy bombardment in the northern and southern countryside of all in the east rebel fighters have been digging tunnels to reinforce their positions local media report that barrel bombs at a hospital out of service and neighboring hama province separate across more from an talk here on the turkey syria border. death comes from the sky here. the second day of an escalated air campaign targeting the southern part of syria's province and north and how. some people are fleeing their homes to the so far safer north. we came from the south of it we're leaving because of the bombing the jets and the artillery they're hitting us with all kinds of weapons we're heading to the north now. we expect everything
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at this stage fortunately there is no other place for us to go to because it will get worse so we are heading to the turkish border at the moment there aren't large amounts of people fleeing the bombardment and because the areas targeted are in the countryside and they are less populated now turkey fears if the military offensive moves closer towards the cities that huge numbers could flee towards its closed borders in that situation it's working hard to avoid turkey's interior minister visited the border with syria on sunday and warned against a possible new wave of refugees all of them washed away were migration that will start here will not be our responsibility alone turkey has been increasing its military presence along its border has also sent reinforcements into italy the turkish government is the opposition's guarantor in the a stone a process that has twelve observer posts inside the province if there is an all out conflict the presence of its soldiers could complicate matters there are around through a half million people in the provinces come to represent the symbolic last stand of
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the opposition inside syria around a million of those who live here now have already been displaced several times during this seven and a half year war and damascus backed by russia and iran has made it clear that it will not remain in opposition hands stephanie decker al-jazeera and. abilities a genie is an activist and he says people are fearful but defiant. people are very worried because it's collation seems to have started two days ago with airstrikes in the south and part of the countryside and the nothing part of the countryside it's a very horrible situation as people have no choices to make as the border is a closed as you said in your report and in the speaker before me and the economy can situation is very horrible as well as people. don't know
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what to do next what's coming up next and that every other day war seems to be bought more potential actually and it covers all aspects of life people are very frightened now. i have to say that they are determined i mean those who confide are determined not to leave but to stay and fight and fight because you know it can you imagine that half the population of it live. one point four million people forcefully displaced from other areas of the country and i don't know how many times do they need to be displaced so they have no other choice they are stuck in the corner. and the main concern for people here just like what happened before that health facilities are going to be the most several targets for
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the regime and its allies and the russians just like attacked and in such a small one last year in every life and two thousand and seventeen when they first started targeting hospitals and health centers and the civil defense around. before they carried out their tack with chemical weapons so that nobody could take any injured person to any health center or nearby hospitals russia's accuse the united states and dropping phosphorus bombs from or towards our province in eastern syria on saturday the kind of coniston eyeing this saying none of its units in the area are quick but white phosphorous munitions rosin jordan has more from washington d.c. . the united states and russia have been at loggerheads in recent weeks over what's happening in eastern syria that's a part of the country where the russians have almost never been since eisel first moved in back in two thousand and fourteen it's been the united states that has deployed special forces to help train and support rebel fighters as well as kurdish
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fighters trying to remove the group out of eastern syrian territory however recently russia has been suggesting that it needs to move into the area near darrow's or in order to go after what it calls terrorists the united states repeatedly has warned russia to stay out of the region and in fact says that a thirty five mile deep confliction zone around its garrison. should not be breached by the syrians by the russians by anyone else for that matter now comes this weekend when it appears that the russians are helping syria try to launch an effort to retake it live province in the far north western part of the country but the russians at the same time are now watching that the u.s. using fighter jets has been dropping false wrist bombs on targets in and around darragh zor late on sunday
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a pentagon spokesperson said that there have been no reports it has received about the use of phosphorus bombs indoors or and it also says that its forces at the garrison and tough do not have the capability and don't even have any phosphorus bombs in their arsenal a war of words certainly as the united states is sending a warning to russia and to syria to not precipitate any sort of humanitarian crisis in it look province on the other side of the country nor should the countries use any chemical weapons and their effort to retake it live for control by the central government in damascus. eighty four people have been killed in renewed fighting in yemen sports city of her data comes a day after peace talks in geneva collapsed when the rebel delegation didn't show up hospital sources say the dead include dozens of who had the rebel fighters and at least eleven government troops who data has seen heavy fighting between saudi backed government troops and rebels for several months displacing tens of thousands
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of civilians andrew symonds is in neighboring djibouti with the latest. in the space of twenty four hours it's reported that the released sixty airstrikes on who date or city and its surroundings and also the province as a whole reports from multiple sources suggest that there were scores of deaths exactly how many in which category is unclear but civilians were amongst them naturally there is fear right across the city right now this is the response of some families eventually as you know we are living in fear shrouded day and night in fear squadrons of forty five warplanes are frequently having about her had. children not crypt with fear we cannot sleep at night yesterday the shelling out the living in fear night and day the saudi coalition warplanes are homeless every single day obviously and especially a shell hit my neighbor's house it destroyed the wall where my neighbor was
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sleeping it just missed him by few inches now the greatest city has a seaport an airport naturally there military targets if there is a checkpoint if if the lines are cut between her data and santa then that's a disaster not just militarily for the hooters but in humanitarians terms it's absolute catastrophe no martin gryphus warned about this he said that people had to sort of concentrate on the economy he was really forceful in his words but had to admit that he had not got the talks together he had not been able to separate the passage of the hutu rebels to geneva that's all history now situation on the ground as ever with warfare negotiations are far out of the minds of anyone there is a fight going on a fight that's got much more serious plenty more ahead in the news hour including the human face again and swore in focus at a major photo exhibition in europe us. if these are probably move you know how we
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do which ones would sort of keep up. i know why uganda's president is telling other countries to mind their own business and sport will here with the new us open champion had to say the day after that trauma filled final. six hundred thousand children that's more than one a minute are expected to die from extreme hunger and more so in this year that's according to a report by the charity save the children and it says four and a half million kids under five will need treatment for severe malnutrition this year that is a twenty percent increase from two thousand and sixteen tens of thousands of children will likely die in yemen afghanistan and sudan but the most fatalities are expected in time a critical public of congo or three hundred thousand could die save the children war and starvation is increasingly being used as
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a weapon with warring parties blocking food and medicine leading to devastating consequences a parker reports this is eleven month old news said he's suffering from acute malnutrition a victim of yemen's three and a half year civil war hunger is weakened his immune system he's at the mercy of diseases like malaria cholera and pneumonia the war means his father hasn't been paid in more than a year at his hometown the port city of her data is on the regular result thirty five thousand children a severely malnourished in yemen the country is on the brink of famine its warring sides often deliberately obstruct deliveries of food and medicine hunger has become a weapon of war that is on the rise in the world's conflict zones. according to save the children's analysis of child hunger in the world's ten worst conflicts for the half million children under five will need treatment for this year but between
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august and december five hundred ninety thousand children are likely to miss out on treatment and die of starvation and disease without relief in the zone starts an average of one thousand six hundred a day or one child a minute. the vast majority an estimated three hundred thousand children are at risk here in the democratic republic of congo where years of conflict have displaced large numbers of people from their homes aid groups in the un have reportedly less than ten percent of the money they need to continue saving lives here in. syria have come in south sudan are among the other conflicts where hunger is rife war destroys livelihoods it disrupts food production and in some areas starvation is a military strategy. the other victims. al-jazeera
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. let's bring in donna and washington d.c. she's a senior communications officer at the world food program thank you so much for your time so. starvation and hunger is often a consequence of war but what this report is saying it is now a deliberate tactic of war when did that happen when did that change. i think it's been changing for some time. i mean if you were to break down each conflict is different the circumstances are different and there are. cases in which you may see that hunger is being used as a deliberate weapon of war and other times when it's a consequence of war that the parties to the conflict are willing to tolerate in order just to sort of further their military goals but for the people who are on the ground it doesn't actually matter where the difference between whether it's just a what the parties to the conflict consider an acceptable consequence or something
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that they're deliberately trying to do the fact is the conflict is killing them and it's it may be for some people killing them with bullets and it may be for some killing them with starvation so it's really fundamentally a problem is it has been growing and worsening for some time and with so many conflicts on the planet right now going on for so long the effects are cumulative and they're adding up and they're getting worse every year and we're seeing. basically the effects of these conflicts or reversing the progress that the world had been making in the fight to end hunger globally so what. you're right the effect is the same as a necessarily matter why you're absolutely right but having said that what can be done for there to be some sort of accountability for this not to happen particularly doing it deliberately. well i think that the world needs to make it
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very clear to the parties to this conflict that they won't accept this kind of callous brutal and vicious assaults on innocents. who want nothing more than to be able to put food on the. table in front of their family every day. you know conflicts disrupt people's ability to farm to keep their livestock jobs disappear it can lead to economic collapse that causes food prices to skyrocket so even people who are miles and miles and miles away from any active fighting will find that they are no longer able to afford the simplest of meals in south sudan for example it takes a day and a half's wages for an average person to be able to afford a simple plate of beasts of beans do i mean imagine if you were in new york that would be more than two hundred thirty dollars for for a new yorkers in
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a new yorkers wages to pay to pay for lunch and that's just not possible for people so so it's absolutely imperative that the world. makes a political commitment to ending these conflicts and to ending them quickly. there is a lot of these are they searched there are situations where there is plenty of food but there are no means to get it to the people who need it. so that the conflicts will be that the same things that leads to hunger. disruption of port infrastructure of road infrastructure forcing people to flee their homes to leave their jobs behind all of that leads to hunger and it also comparable company i'm sorry compromises the ability of agencies like mine to reach people so it makes it much more difficult for commercial markets to keep food in stock on the shelves it makes it very expensive for people to be to go to shops and
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buy it even if there is food there and as you heard in the report just before this people were maybe going for months with working jobs every day and not being paid for them so being able to afford food is an enormous challenge in a conflict situation because it tanks the economy and it's damages the infrastructure and like i said all of those. effects are cumulative they add up and they get worse and worse and worse every year the road infrastructure the port infrastructure doesn't repair itself after it gets damaged it keeps crumbling and the the yeah let me let me ask you this so if you take aside. the wars and how the wars have caused these numbers to skyrocket was there progress me being made aside from that in dealing with with global hunger. you know the thing is that in most countries there still is progress being made we had as the globally
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been making dramatic progress progress for decades in reducing hunger and reaching the goal of zero hunger and in most countries we are still making very good progress in dealing with the chronic systemic problems that keep people chronically hungry the poverty and the un unemployment and the other sort of development challenges we're making progress against those things in almost every country on earth that's just a handful of places. save the children has outlined a ton of them where things are so bad that they're actually reversing the progress they're outweighing the progress that's being made in all of the other countries on earth and that is deeply shocking and it has to stop chalice mcdonagh from the world food program thank you very much appreciate it a cleanup is under way in the southern iraqi city of basra where thirteen people have died in a week of protests at least fifteen government buildings in the iranian consulate
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or attacked protesters are angry at a lack of jobs basic services and government corruption and iraq's second biggest city police and security forces do remain on the streets. ranchera wished mary guard says it was behind artillery attacks on kurdish positions and northern iraq on saturday the democratic party of iranian kurdistan says fifteen of its fighters were killed and around forty others ensured kurdish military sources say it was the first such attack by iranian forces and more than twenty years some reports in fact that. this was the moment on saturday when iran launched an attack against fighters in the northern kurdish region of neighboring iraq the target was a camp run by a group calling itself the kurdish democratic party of iran several fighters were killed dozens more injured. in this attack in particular was a very well orchestrated very well timed it was an attack on. opposition while the
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leadership was a meeting on one hand it also demonstrates full military prowess. missiles that hit the targets were very precise the very room where the meeting was taken place and there was drone surveillance to take pictures of this so this also sending a message that this iran of today is more powerful than that you won a couple of years ago when they try to attack some targets in syria and the missiles were subject for ridicule. the group is iran's oldest kurdish movement it's been fighting for more autonomy for kurds in iran iranian government says it carried out the attacks because of what it calls terrorist teams attacking revolutionary guards in towns inside iran's own kurdish region iran says leaders of the group that attacked on saturday have been ignoring its warnings to dismantle their camps this is a rainy an attack comes just a couple of days after violence on the streets of the southern city of basra
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a jury in which the iranian consulate was one of several buildings that were attacked and burned now there's no evidence to suggest that that incident is in any way connected with this latest attack but iraqis are speculating here that this is iran's way of showing it can strike back and strike back powerfully iran's missile attack has been condemned by must both zani the former kurdish president he says he's urging all sides not to use the kurdish region to settle their confrontations iraq's foreign ministry has also criticized what it's calling a violation of iraq's sovereignty but it didn't mention iran by name in its statement this is a sensitive time in iraq with protests over corruption and lack of jobs on the streets as well as i'm going in a stalled parliament i don't run has a lot of influence here rob matheson. backed down and it's early settlers have been accused of forcing their way into the mosque compound and occupied
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a spokesman for the side for dany and custodian says israeli police accompany more than one hundred fifty settlers israel's agriculture minister yuriy arielle was among the group the site is spent a source of religious tension that is sacred to muslims but is claimed by jews is the site of a former temple. god as president has warned other countries not to interfere in the nation's politics seventy accused unnamed countries of funneling money to opposition parties opposition m.p. and musician bobby wine has been urging the united states to suspend military aid to uganda he was charged with treason after stones were silent the president's convoy last month find says he was tortured while in jail defeating in the internal affairs of other countries is a moral and breath good role model wrong because the question is what's did you hope to see that you can understand the problem with my house better
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than we do which ones if these house we do which ones would sort of keep. still head on al-jazeera and other major figure in the entertainment industry resigned so reception was salty and sexual harassment allegations the marching to a different show no big missile show no broadcast as north korea tries to keep the nuclear talks going and support the alternative way to reach the knockout rounds of a continental football competition and it will have that score. from a fresh coast to breeze. to watching the sunset on the australian outback. how i we've had
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a long spell of weather into the southeast of china things will quieten down as we go on through the next couple of they still a fair amount of cloud into those central and eastern possible the main rain bad stuff into just not a little further south was temperatures in hong kong at around thirty four degrees based on pieces of cloud and rain towards the gulf of tonkin southwest of positron also seeing some bits and pieces of cloud and right nasty little system very close to the philippines of the mind that's in the process of pushing the north live the showers that are going to continue running across borneo over towards the malay potential the usual heat of the day showers there the seasonal rays there for monday going on into choose a very little changing conditions lousy dry they notice for good parts of indonesia now we're looking at the weather looking lousy dry for good parts of pakistan southern parts of india but for northern the northeastern part of india in particular the low cloud still very much in evidence here more heavy downpours just around a dish the western gold bangladesh into the far northeast of india more of the same
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as we go through tuesday cloud does stretches way over towards the west and gets but at least it is looking lousy settled here and is fine and dry for sri lanka. the weather sponsored by qatar airways. plane mangers might hurt a manager as much. as the fines the beauty's brothers. doesn't really need to call you for that just we just see. i am matching i've only done. all. of. my nigeria on al-jazeera. in germany's capital there's a barber like no other sort of what it is. goes from.
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but as he said he changes he's moving with it. and going on the roads. the stories we've talked to here. by the people who live there. the master barber of berlin this is erupting on al-jazeera. watching al-jazeera and these are the top stories right now so when the prime minister says he's open to talks with the main opposition party after both watts failed to get a majority in sunday's election the anti immigration far right speaking democrats made significant gains eighty four people have been killed in renewed fighting in yemen's port city of new data comes
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a day after peace talks in geneva collapsed because the rebel delegation didn't show up hospital staff say the dead include dozens of who the rebel fighters and at least eleven government troops save the children as warning the. more than one child will die every minute from extreme hunger and war zones this year the charity says starvation is frequently used as a weapon of war especially in yemen afghanistan sudan and democratic republic of congo. they have us media giant c.b.s. les moonves is stepping down after a new allegations of sexual harassment and sexual assault the new yorker magazine reported the latest accusations and as one of hollywood's most powerful executives acknowledges relations with three of the women but says they were consensual six other women made accusations last month and he gallacher reports from washington d.c. . well leslie moonves is a titan in the t.v. industry he's been chief executive of c.b.s. for around fifteen years and is largely credited with turning the network from one
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of the least watched to the most watched in the united states but over the last few months these accusations of being coming forward first six women now a total of twelve women accusing leslie moonves of forcing himself on them taking ruining their careers if they didn't do what he said sexually assaulting many of those people and now c.b.s. as a network has announced that he has been fired but that's really not the end of the argument and there is the question of leslie moonves his pay package as he leaves the organization there are some reports say he will get as much as one hundred million dollars in restitution for his twenty four years of service at c.b.s. the network says they will donate twenty million dollars of whatever he gets to organizations that will help women in the workplace but this is outraged many people across the entire industry as saying that after these allegations of come forward someone like him shouldn't get
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a penny and it's important to know that leslie moonves is got paid around seventy million dollars per year as chief executive of the network and through stock options is said to be worth something close to a billion dollars but here we have again one of the prime examples of the me too movement is very much harvey weinstein like behavior c.b.s. says it has launched an independent investigation but many people crying out for a clear and transparent investigation to find out exactly what went on but this is something that will shake the t.v. industry to its core this as i said is a very influential man in the business but in total twelve women made serious accusations against leslie moonves and he's now gone. north korea has marked its seventieth anniversary with a huge military parade but unlike previous celebrations and not roll out its enter continental missiles u.s. president welcome the chester calling it a very big and positive statement has the latest from seoul. it had all the usual
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pomp of previous military displays but lacking much of the hardware especially the missiles compare this with this you believe you are looking at a military parade in april last year commemorating the birth date of north korea's founder kim il song. bristling with the medium and long range missiles it was provocatively testing on a regular basis. even at the start of the foreign relations earlier this year north korea was showing off the intercontinental ballistic missiles that had taken it to what appeared to be the brink of conflict with the u.s. now you see them now you don't this parade had far more emphasis on the development of the economy in line with leader kim jong un's promise to improve his people's living standards after years of hardship. for the large contingent of journalists
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allowed into north korea for this event has been shown apparent signs of success even if they are carefully stage managed to glue them to one continent you didn't because this is the seventieth anniversary of our country the workers in a factory here all coming together to do their best to produce more and to make the factory a success. but if kim is going to achieve real economic development he needs sanctions on his country to be lifted and the u.s. insists for that to happen he has to give up his nuclear arsenal not simply keep it hidden from view. with negotiations seemingly deadlocked kim jong un is not doing anything to further antagonize the u.s. seen here with v.i.p. guessed these young shoot from china's ruling politburo rather he is using the event to build on his developing links with the international community trying to emerge from the isolation of the past. robert bright al-jazeera seoul. and
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the celebrations ended with a huge dance and music display in pyongyang i. was the first time in five years that the so called mass games have been held to show featured messages of peace after the historic summit between the leaders of north and south korea and april only eighteen thousand children turned pages of color books to create giant images of the country's history. just as president is urging restraint as his sort of counterpart visits the region alexander virtual address to rally at thousands of people and nature of itself on sunday he served dominated city in the north of kosovo could be part of a future territory swapna to improve ties between the two countries serbia has never recognized kosovo's two thousand and eight declaration of independence so negate the reports from the trip itself. this was the message that these kosovo war
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veterans wanted to send to serbia's president aleksander had been determined to visit a serb and habited village so rounded by nobody in population the local mayor a man who had lost his entire family in a crackdown by serb forces twenty years ago made it clear that he would not be welcomed. fifteen thousand people were killed here during the war and thousands are still missing the serbian president cannot pass through here without apologising for the crimes that were committed by serbia the wounds run deep in this corner of the balkans. and patriotic fervor runs high serbia lost control of kosovo nearly twenty years ago after a bitter conflict with rebels fighting for an independent state nato is intervention eventually bought the fighting to an end but the government in belgrade has never accepted cost of his two thousand and eight declaration of independence addressing one of the most nationalist serb communities in the region
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was always going to be a challenge from east of which the community here has always railed against compromise but compromise is exactly what mr which has been urging saying that war and violence of any serve to isolate the septum unity here. they're the salt. the idea is to save our people our country our institutions to preserve peace and at least try to build bridges of trust towards the albanians to strive for. agreement even when we know it's nearly impossible because the alternative leads up to an abyss and catastrophe. the crowd may have listened and politely applauded but not quite prepared to let go of the past to the medulla we got the message that we should continue to stay here to fight for kosovo until we die even then our children will carry on. we have to continue our presence here and i believe better days are coming those hopes rest on how both serbs and albanians
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can not only live together but also thrive this is one of the poorest regions in europe and both communities are equally affected joining the european union would many here hope help financially but there is much that needs to be done for that to happen missing the only memory of them that the we have no other alternative serbia cannot continue to talk of accession to the new approach of normalizing relations with kosovo and kosovo in turn needs to fulfill its obligations prior to the parliament elections in the coming spring and in a region where the effects of war are still felt so vividly the instability in this city has blown up into conflict its leaders must tread a careful path to ensure that a peaceful solution can be made strong enough to withstand any potential unrest. al-jazeera. to russia now where hundreds of protesters have been arrested in moscow at a rally against raising the pension age they're upset about
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a plan to increase the retirement age by. the group of people mainly in their twenty's were eventually blocked by police barricades alexina vonnie whose president vladimir putin's most active opponent called a protest before he was sentenced to thirty days in jail. these actions by the police a very strange and outrageous people came peacefully without. public order and to act against them using batons and arrests is outrageous this does not correspond to the spirit of the constitution i hope the police officers will be punished and their managers will be released from their responsibility and. right prime minister alexis tsipras says on the defensive about his plan for the country's economy severus outlined his financial blueprint aiming to half the unemployment rate over the next five years that greece is but under austerity measures for nearly a decade and critics say his plan amounts and i think more than a handout reports. prime minister alexis to put us is keen
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to show that greece is turning a page for years the emphasis has been on cutting costs now he is turning to growth dropping corporate tax by four points to twenty five percent and social security contributions for the self employed by a third in an attempt to create jobs workers and consumers are set to see minimum wages rise while property and sales taxes fall. is rolling back all sturdy era tax hikes but he is doing it carefully or do them if. i did not come here to distribute benefits i came to distribute and share with you a vision of our vision for greece in a new era that is rising for our country it's not just the greeks a tax exhausted they're also headed into an election year workers came to sell an e.q. to remind the government of its promises after eight years of austerity greek workers are calling for her to have less of her they want minimum wage restored to her in
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her months public good for her and her friends new hires in health and education and they want an onerous tax burden designed to repay four hundred billion dollars in debt lifted from their shoulders. in addition c. plus left leaning cities a party faces anger for agreeing to allow its neighbor to call itself northern macedonia. a separate protests turned violent when rocks arose clashed with police just a few hundred yards from where to put us was speaking not everyone is convinced greece can revive at this cafe many were indifferent and some were angry. and then seven hundred thousand young people have gone abroad to recover their dignity their greeks only here to be taxed a tax cut of a few points is no big deal is not just trying to make the greek economy attractive to investors it's also trying to stimulate consumption it's home edition of the
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book there are strict limits to what we can spend step by step we have to start trusting our strengths again it's important to get greeks to invest in the country again. workers have traditionally supported leftwing posies if she can overcome this skepticism it will have won its gambit. facility q i still says it was behind a suicide bomb attack in kabul that killed at least seven people the blast happened close to a procession in the afghan capital group was commemorating the death of former soviet resistance leader. earlier on sunday another suspected suicide bomber was shot by police before the device was triggered to afghan migrants have been detained in germany and on suspicion of killing a twenty two year old man in the eastern town of co thin. to establish a motive the death sparked a right wing protest in the town on sunday as time of racial tensions have been high in the region following last month's killing of another man in chemist's south
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east of kovtun for which two asylum seekers were arrested. supporters of a formerly banned ethiopian opposition party are celebrating the return of its leaders after eleven years in exile patriotic and seven has been classed as a terrorist organization by the government until parliament voted to lift that label and july several other opposition parties are returning to the as part of recent reforms by the prime minister. a french photojournalist who captured the plight of civilians in war torn yemen has won the top award an international festival there in a day. the first female winner in twenty years. everyday life in conflict zones but i wanted to have a look on seeing images and a rag limps of the war in yemen displaced children sleep in a street at night neighborhoods that once teamed with life now reduced to rubble the photographs were taken last year by french photographer veronique viguerie
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they're part of a photojournalism festival in the french city of. returning which. men. strike so strike. four years of fighting between iranian back to the rebels in the saudi led coalition have devastated yemen at least fifteen thousand people have been killed more than twenty million are in desperate need few foreign journalists have been able to enter the country it took very neat one year to gain access and expose what she calls a hidden war. so it is making everything possible to for media to access. c.n.n. to us as a situation of does. being trapped. enemies on or borders the photos of one an international red cross prize for highlighting the suffering
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of civilians if you dispute could be there whether it is a lip or imagine we see the same tragedy for civilians they are prevented from leaving or they take big risks for us at the international red cross these photos help us show the reality of international human rights violations the photos of yemen or for of rare few onto a more recent war there are other conflicts that have lasted for decades and seen friend with fresh eyes is equally powerful and moving palestinian khalil hammer has been covering gaza for more than twenty years he's striking pictures are testimony of daily life my job is just to come up with. an exceptional picture or a story something different well show the conflict through the beauty so people would be able to look at a set and keep looking at it starting to think about it and the story behind it
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without getting hurt from the picture it sir.
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thank you very much one of a joke of it has beaten juan martin del potro to win the u.s. are open it's his fourteenth grand slam title the victory takes djokovic joint third on the all time grand slam winners list alongside pete sampras it's his second major of the year following his trial for wimbledon and third u.s. open success djokovic beating two thousand and nine champion del potro in straight sets six three seven a sixty six story. a serene away i'm says being fined seventeen thousand dollars for her conduct during the women's final on saturday williams accuse the umpire of being a thief and of making a sexist remark during a straight sets defeat against an army are soccer sile malik reports. i was i was a tennis great losing a grand slam final and the fame composure does help to win twenty three major titles. the was. the serena williams is
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verbal volley in the u.s. open final began when she felt empire colors dramas that unfairly want to receiving assistance from a coach in the stands her coach later said he had gestured in her direction but doubted the player would have been able to see him. i ramel scaife williams three code violations during the second set the last two which cost her a game i. can follow she i couldn't believe i did this is not i seen other men call other empires several things and i'm here fighting for women's rights and for women's equality and for all kinds of stuff and for me to say thief and for him to take a game it made me feel like it was a sexist remark all but forgotten was the play on the other side of the net.
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i thought the had outplayed the style she'd grown up idolizing a twenty year old in a grandslam fun who felt moved to apologize to wing the biggest game of who korea's so far you know everyone was cheering for her sorry i had to. do this is my dream to play serena in the u.s. open. so i'm really glad that i was able to do. i'm really grateful i was able to sleep with you. here. this was the night in new york that the so many reasons will not easily be forgotten thanks so pale molly al-jazeera will tennis right set randy walker who's also worked as the press officer at the u.s. open says williams is getting a lot of public support so i think controversy certainly gets a lot of attention you know it's all over the american television stations the
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global stations tennis is a front page story today around the globe because of this because of this controversy and serenus speaking up for women's rights i think there is a little bit of a double standard there as far as when code violations are called based on things that players say so she's going to she's the champion of of working women now because she's playing as a working woman now as a working mom and i think that now she's certainly going to be seen as more of a spokesperson for women's rights as well so i think serina as brand is actually going to be enhanced and hance by this while the morning after the night before soccer was in diplomatic mood japan's first grand slam singles champion had been in tears while being given the trophy on saturday night as a policies on crowd booed match officials. i know it's raining hard. it's in america and it's the u.s. open so i know everyone knew how badly she wanted to win the last twenty fourth and final and none for me i felt like i was
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a kid and all i know for sure if i was in the cart i would have been pulling for seen it too and alleviate your ego was the difference for world champions france as they beat the netherlands c. one for their first win in the wife a nation's league the chelsea forward smashing home a second home folly to win that game now one fund died and at least thirty seven were injured in a stampede ahead of madagascar's home africa cup of nations qualifier against senegal that happened before kick off as thousands of fans try to access the stadium the match itself ended to suit the ivory coast bouncing back after losing their opening group h. they beat rwanda suit one. have a south asian football federation cup at the semifinal stage in the maltese reach the last four in interesting style they had an identical record to great rival sri lankan only the team but she scored a goal so their fates were decided by a coin sauce them all these michael winning call them up like in a pile in the seventies. the americas of one athletics continental cup after
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winning eight events on date soon a straw for now a lot of the usa winning the men's hundred meters there with teams over a victory in the third edition of this event south africa's double olympic champion caster semenya winning the women's eight hundred meters for africa couldn't prevent a continent cinching last minute standings. italy's enjoyed of its c.e.o. so and the ducati team won on home soil at least hammering a grand prix pulsates a. crashing out here with a couple of laps to go he finished in seven states this year says when moving up to second in the moto g.p. title standings and the most sincere race at the same circuits over late is bizarre episode in the career of ramanathan r.t. he was disqualified after grabbing the brake lever of one of his rivals in twenty fifteen he was caught switching off an opponent's engine during practice starts. ok but is only sport for now more lighter i thought for me richelle carey but here.
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in an instantly shifting news cycle we receive in change in america tweet the listening post takes pools of questions the wild the devil will be of the details the kind that cannot be conveyed in two hundred eighty characters or fewer exposing how the press operates it is their language is their culture it's their context and why certain stories take precedence while others are ignored we can have a better understanding of how news is created we're going to have a better understanding of what the news is the listening post on al-jazeera. capturing a moment in time snapshots of other lives other stories. providing a glimpse into someone else's work. inspiring documentaries from impassioned filmmakers everybody's going to. be so. witness on
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al-jazeera. al jazeera is there want us to break today to see what happens next. on. fire where model barricaded all seventy three that believe to hear the movies now is changed people have gone to hear the area the mission of the national army is to sixty complex and al-jazeera stories about the people's perspective what they think is happening in their culture. al-jazeera recounts the shocking story of the assassination of count. the first u.n. envoy trying to bring peace to the middle east how is negotiations with him helped save thousands of jews from nazi concentration camps and how these mediation skills put him at the vanguard in the quest for peace in the middle east. killing the
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count on al-jazeera. street and faces political deadlock after an election the clear winner between the center left and center right blocks a rise in support for the far right. you're watching all jazeera live from our headquarters here in doha also coming up at least eighty four people were killed in fighting in yemen just a day after the collapse of the long awaited talks to end the war. the opposition leader.

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