tv Death By Design Al Jazeera September 12, 2018 4:00am-5:01am +03
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it's due to be demolished by israel. telling what quite a mahler is doing to tackle one of the highest rates of childhood stunting in the wild. al are still reading in norway but that rain is receding to the west coast i think it will carry on as life has to for a long time you can see from the mad account is coming in something's going on there's still a few showers wandering around the ukraine thirty eight millimeters it's just a lot of rain in comparison with what's forgot at the system like the stuff up in norway and the show's over spain they've not actually been falling over rain gauges they look significant but they're on them and they are however that's a development day area it looks like we have showers in the eastern side of spain southern france maybe the riviera this is a jury wednesday this is just
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a bit of coastal rain otherwise lot of breeze down to seventeen in stockholm and a few wandering down towards beaucaire in or even the turkish coast of the next day or so but the development area you saw in spain they're going to show in sales of the alps but to germany and france comes thursday and the tension well once they've gone through we're down to twenty two in paris and ninety in london probably in the sunshine but the same up in stockholm it's looking like summer as well gone really drop sasa of course is still nice and hostile north coast of africa thirty one in two days look at the amount of cloud to the west and look right on this screen showers in western sahara and mauritania that's rare. whether online this isn't some abstract fish eating into their shops or if you join us on sect rather than stopping terrorism or is creating it this is
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a dialogue then just the community is wanting to add to this conversation we need a president who's willing to be a villain in a short while everyone has a voice in civil society i need to tell you i never get listened to play those in the corridors of joining the global conversation. on how to zero. welcome back a quick reminder of the top stories now hungary's prime minister viktor orban has accused the e.u. of blackmail over its threat of sanctions against his country the parliament is meeting over whether hungry should face penalties because of policies that breach core e.u. values brazil's workers' party has agreed to court orders and replace the former
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president and he's an asshole lunatic silver with these sour powder for nanda her dad as it's candidate for the october elections serving a twelve year sentence for corruption. and the situation in ad lib is under the spotlight at the united nations where russia requested a meeting to brief members of syrian forces backed by russia and iran are preparing for an all out military assault on the last rebel held province. in other stories we're watching at least thirty two civilians have been killed in a suicide attack in eastern afghanistan this happened during a large protest against the local police in the province of manga more than a hundred twenty people were injured the taliban has denied any involvement. now to zimbabwe where a cholera emergency has been declared in the capital after twenty people died and a further two thousand were infected with the disease it's led to many fairing a repeat of the outbreak that killed thousands in two thousand and eight armor toss
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as more from harare patients who are suspected of having cholera have been quarantined in zimbabwe's capital harare health officials say this is an emergency but i realize that the numbers are growing by the number of cases. to. through crowds and over two thousand cases it's not over are is that a big problem for programmers or is an evidence roll call bred through. zimbabwe's health sector and other departments in the country has been underfunded and poorly resourced for decades government officials blame the current economic crisis and say they lack resources opposition leaders say it's because of decades of corruption and mismanagement public hospitals sometimes run out of essential drugs you have a lot of what to do in offices and headquarters because you know this is if you see this issue is relieved when for quite a huge investments to leave the country. so you're working very hard to try to get
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what is the source of that money for more so. typhoid and cholera outbreaks occur regularly in zimbabwe because of dilapidated water and sanitation facilities government officials say this latest outbreak started in glenview a poor neighborhood in harare is believed some of those people who visited the area in travel to other parts of the country that's why the outbreak has spread to other provinces. zimbabwe's biggest cholera outbreak was a two thousand and eight more than four thousand people died health officials and the international community accuse the government of not responding to the emergency fast enough right now is the bombings don't know how long it's going to take to contain this outbreak how to al-jazeera. leaders of ethiopia and eritrea have reopened crossing points on their shared border for the first time in twenty years ethiopia's prime minister i'll be on the din eritrea's president of work he attended ceremonies at the eastern and western ends of the border to cement the reconciliation between the former enemies each nation nations forces which are
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currently stationed along the border also be moved back to camps to ease tensions the move also means outis ababa will now have a direct route to its former foes of red sea ports. and united states officials are urging residents to flee the coasts as a massive hurricane is moving in highways have been reversed in south carolina to make it easier for coastal residents to evacuate more than a million people have already been told to leave their homes ahead of the storm as patty call her reports. it is huge and it is powerful this is hurricane florence as seen from space now tracking toward a direct hit on the coast of the carolinas prompting all kinds of warnings she's a strong girl and she is coming to see us and i don't care what you do you better get ready because she's coming to see us officials are more specific telling one point five million people along the atlantic coast to get out to evacuate to higher
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ground florence is intensifying steadily this storm is stronger and it's getting stronger it is expected to come ashore as a category four hurricane with winds up to two hundred twenty five kilometers per hour scary statistic but likely not enough to make many leave their homes there are always those who voted to stay behind and try to make it a festive occasion just couldn't gas and supply. generator going on everything else and just hunker down and wait it out but with this storm there's more to worry about than winds it's the rain that could cause the most damage if it stalls promising scenes like this one hurricane harvey did the same in houston that is leading to officials issuing stark warnings we will experience power outages we will have infrastructure damage there will be homes damaged there will be debris on the roads this will be a storm that creates and causes massive damage to our country and it is coming in
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just a matter of days and much of what you see now could simply be gone in its wake patty calling al jazeera. around a million people have rallied in spain in support of catalan independence huge crowds flock to the city of boston learned to show their continued support for the idea or splitting from spain as well as to celebrate catalonia as national day it's been a yes since the central government in madrid declared the region's independence referendum illegal and wanted many khaki has to be jailed. activists have set up several makeshift times in front of a palestinian village in defiance of an israeli eviction order israeli judges approved the demolition of the village last week saying the homes and school in khan were built illegally european union foreign policy chief federica more greenies want israel of serious consequences if the demolition goes ahead but its myth has more from qana. on the face of it this is a typically quiet day in the palestinian bedouin village of harm but one hundred
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eighty or so people living here know that today is also the beginning of the end after a near seventy year presence living in this area because from midnight tonight wednesday israeli security forces can at any time send in the bulldozers and destroy these homes and the school that is attached to the village but has said we will face them we will confront the bulldozers together with our foreign supporters but despite this we expect the village to be demolished campaigners hope that the presence of this school that educates one hundred eighty children from this village and neighboring villages would have persuaded israel supreme court to prevent or stop the demolition order of a tactic didn't work. for me the consequences are that will be deprived of access to twenty percent of the west bank and also the use of the roads and this will cost of the north of the west bank from the middle and the south. major european countries including france germany italy spain and the united kingdom of issued
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a rare joint statement warning of the consequences of demolishing han arkham are they say that its strategic location is important to maintaining the conflict of a future palestinian state because what activists fear is that once this village has been demolished then israel will extend this small illegal settlement behind me to join with another illegal settlement on once the two are together that effectively cut sort of east jerusalem from the rest of the occupied west bank. a number of people in the world suffering from hunger is rising one out of every nine people is now malnourished this is according to a report by the un's food and agriculture organization it blames war and climate change as the main reasons behind these alarming numbers stunted growth due to chronic malnutrition is now affecting nearly a hundred fifty one million children under the age of five but while the number of undernourished people is increasing at the same time
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a the city continues to rise as of today six hundred seventy two million adults more than one in eight a considered obese or guatemala has one of the world's highest rates of stunted growth in children almost half of all children under the age of five are chronically malnourished with the figure far high in the indigenous maya community successive governments have promised to tackle the issue but as david most are reports from the modern highlands progress has been slow. inside this makeshift kitchen in guatemala highlands march to hwy prepares lunch for children her son alex looks healthy but the one year old is in medical terms chronically malnourished traditional diets here lack vital nutrients meaning children can be fifteen centimeters shorter than they should be but stunting also affects brain development and a child's ability to learn making it harder to break the cycle of poverty for the
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most of those. are children eat the same things that we eat and when there's a possibility to give them something extra you do it because you want what's best for your children i give my children what i'm able to but sometimes it's a struggle. around half of all what i'm all in children under five are chronically malnourished and in indigenous communities like marta's that number is even higher what i'm all it might be one of the region's main agricultural producers but it also has the world's sixth highest rate of chronic child malnutrition it's a combination of poverty lack of access to education and lack of access to health care that's causing the problem but one group says that they're trying something new to resolve this. and rosa de kuhn brings health care to the rural families who need it the most armed with scales and measuring board and nutrition booklets rosa visits mothers with children under two to combat stunting the ngo she works for
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focuses on the first thousand days of life raising awareness and empowering women is key but building that trust takes time. and that this mother simply don't know about child malnutrition or the importance of complementary foods it's good for them to learn how to look after their children better and you see how happy they are when their children gain weight the programs project manager says this personal approach is paying off. a lot of money as i'm about in the communities where we've been to choose this program we've seen a reduction in chronic child malnutrition by up to twenty percent over the last two or three years this is a big achievement people here are becoming more aware that this problem exists it's not just families like martinez who pay the price for chronic childhood malnutrition it's estimated that stunting cost tamala around three point five billion dollars a year but without
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a major investment by the government or private groups millions of children here will fail to reach their potential david mercer al jazeera what amala. choose day marks the seventeenth anniversary of the september eleventh attacks was to replace a greek orthodox church at the world trade center site which was destroyed during the attacks has been suspended off the project hit financial problems. reports from new york it was an unassuming structure that for more than eighty years was home to the st nicholas greek orthodox church in new york. and for decades it stood in the shadows of the world trade towers until september eleventh two thousand and one when the towers fell the debris crushed the church. we stood there frozen. by our allies. and cry
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st nicholas was the only place of worship destroyed on nine eleven well the whole history of well over one hundred years read chords. i had qualms their archives. a but also the memories of those the with chris and those now with those that were. visited the church the greek archdiocese vowed to rebuild st nicholas at the very world trade center site and this video animation shows their big plans a new church and towering shrine made for more ball and glass inspired by the byzantine churches of his stand. famed spanish architect center. was hired to design the new church he also designed the oculus structure at the world trade center site and then something happened work on the project suddenly stopped
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so the question becomes why the budget balloons to nearly eighty million dollars double what the archdiocese says raised now there's simply no money left to finish the project a plastic tarp now covers the construction site there are no signs of workers and no signs of the doors opening any time soon their course of action stopped because the origin of course fortunately were not rate. a huge cost of their own. but as tourists visit the nine eleven memorial site to the side most are oblivious to the construction site of the church the grim structure remains unfinished with nobody able to say for how much longer gabriel's andro how does either new york. and australian cartoon depicting serina williams's angry exchange with the umpire during the u.s. open final is receiving criticism for being racist and sexist it was drawn by
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cartoonist mark knight for australia's most popular newspaper the herald sun critics say the depiction of syrian williams uses outdated racist stereotypes a victorious opponent am a sucker who is half japanese is also depicted as a white long woman or perhaps the most high profile critic is high parser author j.k. rowling who responded to the cartoon on twitter saying well done on reducing one of the greatest sports women alive to racist and sexist tropes and turning a second great sports woman into a faceless prop cartoonist mark knight said he had drawn serena many times in the past without being criticized when i drew that cartoon i wasn't thinking of racial politics in america are i simply saw the world number one playa one of the greatest players of all time who i have admired and drawn many times having a dummy speech. and i can say that when i drew the cartoon it was like yeah that'll
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bad and off it weighed i did not expect it would be picked up a new case as i a symbol of racism in gender politics in america i was drawing cartoons about. russian politics in south africa before most of these people were born to have j.k. rowling trolling me as well it's something i didn't expect in life but yeah it's happening. it's crazy well as more and everything we're covering right here is there out there a dot com. top stories now hungary's prime minister viktor orban has accused the e.u. of blackmail over its threat of sanctions against his country the european parliament has been debating whether to strip hungry of its european union voting rights there are major concerns over the direction the government has been taking notably on immigration issues president let's be
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straightforward with each other hungary is going to be condemned because hungary and people have decided that this country is not going to be a country of migrants with all due respect but very firmly i have to refuse threats the blackmail and defamations by forces supporting immigrants and migrants against hungary and hungary people i must state that whatever you decide hungary will protect its borders stop illegal immigration and defend its rights and all the headlines brazil's workers' party as agree to court orders to replace former president lula to silver's its candidate for the october elections lula is currently serving a twelve year sentence for corruption will instead be replaced with former mayor for nanda who died at least thirty two people have been killed in a suicide attack in eastern afghanistan it happened during a large protest against the local police in the province of nanga ha more than one hundred twenty people were injured the taliban has denied any involvement zimbabwe
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has declared a cholera emergency in the capital harare the health minister has been speaking out saying that at least twenty people have died and two thousand others are infected the leaders of ethiopia and eritrea reopened crossing points on the border for the first time in twenty years if the o.p.'s prime minister ahmed in eritrea as president has s.f. work he attended ceremonies in the eastern and western ends of the border to cement a reconciliation between former enemies. and activists have set up several makeshift homes in front of a palestinian village in defiance of an israeli eviction order judges approve the demolition of the village last week saying the homes and school and built illegally . israel have serious consequences if that demolition goes ahead do stay with us the stream is coming up next more news after that.
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for me ok and you're in the stream today where take a look at the mothers of rink of the last night in sweden it's a new al-jazeera documentary about a group of women improving their neighborhood while battling against corrosive stereotypes well they could be a lot of will speak to the producer of the film and discuss whether sweden's reputation for tolerance and community harmony is under threat send us your comments via twitter and the you tube live chat.
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sweden ace facing a period of political limbo after the far right sweden democrats recorded its best ever general election result to finish third over a rule that performance is troubling for the country said to left center right parliamentary blocs neither of which won a majority in the national legislature the strong showing by this weekend democrats is also unsettling news for those who have settled in sweden after fleeing war and violence many immigrants live in or into being a suburb of the capital stockholm the area has long been called a crime ridden no go zone by far right politicians and some media outlets but to many including one group of somali swedish women it is simply home and they are working around the clock to improve it from within i shone in the mothers of ring to be last night in sweden have a look. some
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of the. if. they had not the minimum force. on the mom for your son for some don't sweat young. man is going to. stand. for more in the documentary and the social climate in sweden we are joined from stopped by fat money she produced the mothers of recovery and as a people the award winner also in stockholm we have had she has a visual artist whose work focuses on issues of identity and nationhood alexander
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across the leader who is a journalist and human rights activist she immigrated with her family to sweden as a young girl and settled and she joins us from stockholm and completing a line up from the swedish capital rashid missa he is a teacher and community activist whose help was key to the production of the mothers of ring to be hello everybody it's really good to have you here what a vision of sweden you present so fatima this and this going into a community telling their story allowing them to tell a story when they don't want to be labeled a no go zone what makes you want to do that. thanks for having me this the most awkward serious of the year of the very least. they wanted to do something from sweden that specifically funding to be. it was a little bit of a little bit difficult to find in the film is that we make a film on that because we're told that it's difficult to film industry be that
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after you know there is a conflict among journalists because it is possible as long as we have the martin linking be it is anything but. it's one place where the hardworking people you can from different cultures and it's it's a place that you can live a whole home after spending more time than i can actually i can see that it's home and i think my reza going back there more and more now because of the problems we managed to capture while in the in the film it was important to ensure that they could be gets a fair representation because in the media. station whenever you talk about it could be if you just google when i was doing my own research and all you see is that writing burning towers and novels in the positive story or any any simple student back to place it was important to go in and actually give the people and
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the police a federal institution and a chance to show the outside world that what you see in the media isn't necessarily the full truth. but i want to back up what you're saying with a comment from the film's director who sent us a video comment and this is what happened at the lie he had to say about why he made the film what i'm hoping for when people see this film is that they see. it and can be. a place about things happened but good people live there and. not in the way the western media portrayed us. just a cigar which is which is just not and is far from it so. i hope this. gives a little bit more balance. so alexander he talks about balance there before you dive in on that i want to read this tweet from a from nasr she says i heard that ring could be as locals allowed and i haven't
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heard team to film there only because the team wasn't from sweden's public service t.v. wrinklies locals think he is biased against them can you please discuss why they feel that way and why the media is disliked by ring i wonder not specifically looking at one channel in particular but why is there this feeling of distrust coming from someone i'd like the answer from someone who's not only from there but also is a journalist can you help us understand of our international audience. ok this is just has been since i was a kid and i grew up in the to be because media came out there and the interviewed us and they studied us and they film that's like. we were like you know animals in a zoo is so exciting and they asked us very very strange questions i have to say and then when we saw there is it was we were so sad because it always portray it
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as a let others the strangers the you know the immigrants and it was it was like the very very heart breaking to read through out in a place in a small suburb that you really really love the and you had all her friends and everybody and and when you watch t.v. you were perpetrated like it was like a big and terrible and you know we playing together or something so this distrust is nothing new i think that people weren't quite right now watching this show in chicago or even in milan back and in belgium in that there is a different suburbs around the world that are segregated than there are who are there are then lasers where migrants and refugees leave i think everybody recognizes what has went when it when journalists when media come and portray asked because we are always there on the list and one of the main
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problems is of course i mean see is back in the days when i was a kid the lack our diversity in the media there are almost no migrants in media there are not migrant wasn't minority forces there are no black people or people of color and no working class kids working there so it's also a matter of class and misdoing and you know all these factors so we grew up and it distrusting mean. and suddenly one day i heard gone media. and that was the day when me ensign friends of mine decided to start you know meaning and start doing. you tube and before i went and when i hear the news back you back in the day alexander we won't ask you how old you are so a deal there was something about this documentary which really stands out and it's just the story of these are among those who have
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a day jobs they have things to do who then in the evening patrol the streets of their neighborhood it's remarkable when you first saw it what did you what did you make of that. well i have the luxury of seeing it where premiered in stockholm and i have the luxury of watching the director and faulkner talk about it and talk about how the making of the movie made them have to challenge her own prejudice about how certain stories are told but my first reaction was of course recognition i saw so much of my mom in these moms and i saw so much of myself in these stories that are never told in the fact that we are never really truly represented and i think latching on to what alexander said about the media the fact that we we don't trust the media in the sense is that our story is never really told in a fair manner we never really get to dictate the conversation in which we are
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talked about and this is a huge part of why it's hard to trust outside media when it comes to something that's so close to your heart now i'm not i haven't grown up with stockholm so i haven't grown up or it could be but i grew up about three hours away from stockholm in a really small town and we heard stories about being could be reheard stories about no go zones well you certainly saw it he had to deal with the stories that you had we heard that it was messy and that they had to like drug issues and gang violence and that their only black people there they had taken over and we did which we did . yeah we did i mean let me not let the and who now that it's always i mean a bigger problem oh poor people that have no there it possibilities are no more and you know the problem is every time that meeting. of the they only
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interview criminal guys they never ever that's why i really want to congratulate them thank you for the supplementary. prove it because i'm so happy in this one. this evidence that we while we never ever you know force the micra women in the car it is out of our it so let me do that rashid i'm going to play this little clip i'd love to hear what you think about this this is a little clip of of the mothers on patrol and so remember this is a no go zone it is in the evening i want you to look beyond the moms and their bright orange jackets and see the fight that they break up have a look. and a leg a little. bit behind. you so you're good for them so how come you.
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never did you did that had to even. if it. was. over that's mom power your mom going to break in you know how embarrassing is that and this is the this is the reality of wrinkle free rashid so we've gone from the stereotype and it's a drug zone and it's really scary to the reality of it you live in the next neighborhood along so you know what it's like what is the story that's not getting out about this area in severe. well is a lot of stories actually. you know the mothers are the backbone of the community and so the best story never gets you also the story of the a strong civil society and drink if you have
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a lot of n.g.o.s that are engaged in social issue social issues. so there's a lot of story there a lot of football clubs in. there a lot of poetry club general could be there are a lot of extra activities that or that are arranged by the community it so and it's not backed by the government or funded by authorities. or getting economic resources from somewhere else is a vibrant community there is much lobbying kicking so in seeing that clipper community online had thoughts this is andy who writes on twitter i love that they're doing something instead of waiting for the government but should they be this is brought up in the street from ben as ever he who says at one point in the film one of the super moms tells us about a joke she makes with the police that she does their job for them is this really
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a joke how severely has swedish authority authorities failed young people of color in sweden foster i'll give that to you it was passed off as a joke but our community seems to be asking does the burden fall on these moms. the media. always put on the parents they say that they don't do anything at that there. are kids not behaving but i do believe that you have to also look at the background and look at the big picture there is there is no denying that there are by the institutional racism and there is a lot of opportunities to children. oh my god back now just now with that climber for election been very lucky basically he got one of the leader of the second most popular with from city fattening to kids born in sweden they call them sweden ball migrant kids it makes you seem how do these kids when they feel when i when i go to
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the factory and sweet and whatnot we're ever going to be seeing. the country of the community we're always with that was given us leave and no matter what we do when we when we when we where we take their jobs and when we don't we don't want to work so it's built like you know when you can just imagine for the children that were not the response really who off a slew of pressures and all the difficulty of the some of it and. not understanding how to make the best part of the got to get before all of this even to be backed up by facts and there that result write an article about that that regulation will finally and the. one report that came out a few maki here and it talks about how kids are not going to search for one of them this far and treated by who so that we if things are going to change that have to be a change and
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a modest there are often solutions and the way that approach is working is not the full solution because that's what you have to work with the police because it's it's a state so we've got what with the police and the believe in that moment they're often anything and we have to change their up. you have to actually engage with the people from the queue in the community you have to talk to them not talk about them and talk around them that's all you have to talk to them and gate with them and there's a song you can see it's a case i just have and then i was away from the point that we were able to make this moment for her to come out the way it is because she was just it's prosecuted by the people in the in the community it was very important because exactly like in alexandra. and people don't trust the media because of the been done several times for the mr presentation in the media have let people to miss process and i want to also i haven't we it's not the have started out because that also plays into the
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idea of like they the release and by the people and they let us in not and not with a lot what we haven't wanted but getting access to the people and having that we needed we needed to it took time for us to gain the trust but with we wouldn't lock someone like that but when he was absent and also in the story. can i also join in on the good to eat or do you want to die down like a lesson in alex i got a second head oh yeah. well what the the the joke that they're doing the police that the the that are doing the police job that's not uncommon for people people of color in sweden we have been having to create our own spaces and create our own opportunities and clear create our own safety for years we've never been included in in spaces where our stories are being told in a fair manner that's never been a thing so it's not just the fact that they are out there taking responsibility for
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their community and that's the part that they're doing instead of the police officers or their thirty's but in every situation in every context we always have to create our own way in our own opportunity where we're just not included in a way that is fair alexandra. and if you mean i'm thinking of the gender issue here that you have this is maybe i'm a problem i mean. you have that leaves. i mean they don't have it somehow they think they are not able to get this and that then the trust that they needed for so many reasons also a reason is because they also lack there is live in the police force but then you have the mothers and i've interviewed so many mothers around the country in so many different no go zones in like twenty you know the young as they call that xander
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let me just pick you up you said no go zones why would you say that when you're living wreck of a number of this and i can't listen no i don't use the word expression because of the use it so everybody here understands what it is i do you only think change starts with changing the language. yes but we have to know what exactly we can fix that language but i was saying i'm using that pressure right now so you understand what we're talking about so when they talk about these no go zones we see that the mothers in different places in different sucker. who are some was the most vulnerable some others and that's what i call them the least you know the mothers are the ones that can handle that and that in college of you but i mean that the interesting thing here is that all the mothers at mit so i'll let it loose and call in all the mothers and i'm sure they do it for free so i wonder maybe it's
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time for the police for the what the government or at least you should do how do. these mummers give them just because many of them are unemployment and why should they you know work for free around the country to help the police what the police cannot do so i think that's also our. you know alexander the questions you're asking i think are what's represented in this tweet from ben as a who has praise for both you and bottom a she says bottom a stock and alexandra's book are groundbreaking and i think it is very telling sweden's power balance and media environment that it took two women with immigrant backgrounds to highlight the vital aspect of the issue but she also has a question that i'm going to direct to you rashid but as ask them terms of questions i'm interested to hear the panelists suggestions for solutions we can't depend on volunteers to solve these pressing issues what are some of the things that the state can do in the coming year or two to decrease violence and crime in
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these areas and rashid in your answer of course keep in mind the elections just happened. well the government and the authorities are actually responsible for the situation we're in and the conditions that people live in today. this illusion aren't any rocket science i mean like the educational system needs to be funded well so that our kids can get a good education and this should prevent the institutional racism in the job market and they should. fix up the apartments that many of these young people live in and the condition of their part of the condition of apartments a very bad and also bad for their health. they should arrange. an extra activities for young people who are interested in arts athlete or any kind of activity that they want to and instead of doing all of things that we we are
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actually seeing they're cutting on the welfare you know in increasing the tax and so that the wealthy people can actually pay for their and welfare while the poor people aren't being supportive in the system so the solutions are not any kind of rocket science if we could show you could actually do a lot of things but there need to be a political will and to make those changes we need to also organize within those poor areas in drink you be in the other place in sweden too to get together and demand our politicians to actually make some changes so as i think changes comes from within the people and not from the irish it i have to say this is not just about somali moms on the child there are so many groups in neighborhoods not just in wrinkles but others who actually saying we are going to please our selves and make sure that our young people and we are safe let me in leave you with one more
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clip and this comes from the documentary and this is the president of the mothers night patrol listen to how she sums up the effort that she has to put in to make sure her neighborhood are safe take a look. an unknown brought on being could be for the battle me. brought on born with the brother on me in a bomb throw them in a bomb let's go about a proud day this mariel folks go at home or let a shell make in the tempest with. me. come easter bunny. ok deborah. fatma we know what that means in t.v. when you just leave it you just leave that moment because you you don't want to cut away from the emotion because this is why the way that you told the story the way the director told the story is so very important let me show you where you can see
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this story the mothers of rink at the last night in sweden you can find it at al-jazeera dot com programs this is europe and click on that also it's on you tube as well and you can watch the whole documentary it's twenty four minutes long twenty five minutes long so it's gives you some real insight in the kind of insight that you don't always get from neighborhoods in sweden thank you guests for joining us and i do want to leave us i will end with this reflection from twitter i just want to say thank you as a person writes for changing the stereotypical narrative of violence i'm educated in moral communities of color we people of color in america deal with the same criminalization ghettoisation of as our migrant brothers and sisters so continue to speak truth to power. alexandra d.-o. rashid thank you for being here on the stream we really appreciate your time a conversation always continues online you can go to us on twitter and join in our conversation there at twitter handle is at a.j.
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there's nowhere to hide let me ask you straight out here is the two state solution no upfront retellings on al-jazeera. lives in fear constantly looking over his shoulder she says she was threatened by armed men as they ransacked a home she knows who ordered the attack and why they want to develop on her community and. we can't let the men to my data we need to continue they can kill me i'm afraid of being killed i need to defend my people who've been here since fifteen sixty nine without any help from the government and now they want to destroy the forest that is part of us learned ownership in brazil is among the most concentrated and unequal in the world those who ordered the intimidation the murders are really brought to justice police suspect a lone gunman is behind fifteen unsolved shootings in the city all targeting immigrants an ethnic minority an attempted murder on
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a young life friday evening police were out in full force again after another man was shot out cycling disillusioned with the state prosecution the victim sisters strikes up an unlikely relationship with the accused letters to serial killer a witness documentary on al-jazeera. maryanne demasi in london just a quick look at the top stories for you now the european parliament has been debating whether to strip hungry of its european union voting rights head of a vote on wednesday there are major concerns over the direction the government has been taking notably on immigration issues. and prime minister viktor orban defended his government and its policies in an address to the european parliament in strasburg or ban accuse the e.u. of blackmail over its threats of sanctions you start there the. president let's be
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straightforward with each other hungary is going to be condemned because hungary and people have decided that this country is not going to be a country of migrants with all due respect but very firmly i have to refuse threats the blackmail and defamation by forces supported immigrants and migrants against hungary and hungary and i must state that whatever you decide hungry will protect its borders stop illegal immigration and defend its rights if needed we will stand up against you. and tasha butler has been following events for us from strasbourg. well hungry is far right prime minister viktor orban came to strasbourg to defend himself and his policies and he gave a very defiant speech to any peace here the e.u. parliament he said that the european parliament was basically trying to blackmail him he's already accused them of launching
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a witch hunt against hungry now what m.e.p.a. is are doing is debating whether or not to punish hungry because they say that hungary is basically eroding e.u. principles and values flouting the very foundations that the european union is built on they're talking about things like restriction of rights and freedoms in hungary and civil liberties they're also talking about the rights of refugees and migrants also been severely eroded over the last few years if you think back to twenty fifteen during europe's migration crisis it was hungry that built a fence along the border with serbia and croatia well what any piece will be doing on wednesday is voting on whether to launch article seven that is the use highest punishment if you will and what that could mean is that hungary could possibly lose its e.u. council voting rights that would be of course
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a big blow to hungary in terms of its international standing u.s. ambassador nikki haley is accused syria's president bashar assad and his allies russia and iran of demolishing the last major rebel held stronghold in the country she says russia must act to stop the looming humanitarian catastrophe in where over three million people resigned. let's not waste time with the december mation distractions and outright lies that the assad regime and their russian and iranian partners constantly use to distort this conversation let's talk about the facts on the ground in syria this month already the world has seen a clear military escalation in. russian and assad regime air forces launched over one hundred airstrikes they are using barrel bombs rockets and artillery they are targeting hospitals and medical facilities brazil's workers'
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party has is compliant with court will just replace former president luisa not suited to silver as its candidate for the october elections luna's supporters have been rallying outside the jail ways carre serving a twelve year sentence for corruption instead we are faced with former south poulomi a friend and a dot. at least thirty two people have been killed in a suicide attack in eastern afghanistan it happened during a large protest against the local police in the province of non-god more than one hundred twenty others were injured zimbabwe's declared a cholera emergency in the capital harare the health minister says at least twenty people have died and two thousand others are infected the leaders of ethiopia and eritrea reopened crossing points on their shared border for the first time in twenty years if you have his prime minister ahmed in eritrea as president ties as off work he attended ceremonies at the eastern and western ends of the border to cement the reconciliation although the top stories all have more news for you a bit later on do stay with us al jazeera world starts now.
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has sun salama joined to the palestine liberation organization the p.l.o. in one thousand nine hundred sixty three he was born in one nine hundred forty near jaffa into a wealthy family. his famous father has sand had been a commander in the arab revolt against british rule in the late one nine hundred thirty s. much shorter to give power to a third subordinate in minot c.m.'s then he sill me thought what are most allow the bill. and the father must allow another janet orlean on to shaquille j. she shared with us and hasn't said any shows up when her father is jaish what he thought about cathy ordinal money or will be more highly presence alone most of us of a while to a lot of our locks are on the law the law hasn't selamat of how cool is it that each was of impotent. his son ali is probably best known for founding the armed p.l.o. group black september which killed eleven members of the israeli
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a limb pick team in munich in one thousand nine hundred seventy two. to israel made the list after the seventy two a parishioner of twelve i was thing and figures who were involved in this operation in munich and her son was one of them who was in the list and for years the israeli tried to find him and to kill him. he also gained a reputation for his flamboyant lifestyle enjoying the beirut nightlife to the full . call we will for you work and have to gradually. what you called shock see and who behold. what killed salama was being on a most sad most wanted list but his extravagant may rude lifestyle did make him an easier target. but it emerged after his death that there was more to his role in the p.l.o. and his relationships with foreign journalists and the americans than was clear at
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the time. this is the story of a major p.l.o. figure of the one nine hundred seventy s. the man the israelis called the red prince. alley has sansa lama hardly knew his influential father but he did seem to inherit some of his daring. the old palestinian soldier for jewish militias in the one nine hundred forty s. and some of those missions were quite all day shoes. cousin salami he was joint with some other palestinian and some some german part troops and they are pressured into israel into palestine if this was. a fight the gestapo and by the german military intelligence believe he was fond of a scheme. awful scheme to poison the
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water resources of tel aviv. visit and. couldn't touch any how. general had not can physically fit with the four hundred from ten feet up on monday look at compromise. in general you a woman in the home at. the toys. you feel had on the front of the end of fresh ways with money. instead of massage and brush distance of the kandahar was. the shtetls at hand isn't harmed in that sense the have nots mccomas. ms raman in no i ought to but it's not and it's your food and. how wooden and except on what i have and you're going to have it all which is a little less than one lawn. in the school. building
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fairly our news the should. be from our wobble money been a mole it's my gun. kathy what's up there with the huffy and for thought all we really bothersome at several out of a. wolf i'll shut up with you thought of the skillet you had a look at this is a smile of that but the other the other was a need. or a market loss and i was the city. jensen's consists of for thirty minutes or waited there for this can win this war monger.
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it can head it can. be a tool in the rope many of us well we can't. have been hundreds enough to do that and you know hala suicide risk you know had my dinner on the line i'm on young folk and i had a lot of foreman when the thought of to shift. because for that one interesting that c.s.e. because until. that left. at all my dinner. for mama what i only thought even valid. here by i had my dinner salad or such salad i follow skinny militia men i should lift them up mammography. among the palestinian nationalists who founded what became the pillows fattah party was yasser arafat sometimes known as abu ammar. a seen the photographs on the
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mosque of one mark which he had i will be looking on since some are often seen in a law courts were filled kuwait's. but now mitchell had a key witness on the one i could. see and i like that it wasn't from stealing from the fire. but that get in no i would. go in the moment we're in the shift patterns tellin me mark them down last hour doesn't give a stellar immoderate ever to yet but yet she. stop. them from removing the ticket for sympathy level sixteen. generics and out of our sixteen. it's fallen star will be that of a shabby human as to how it feels to me.
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