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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  September 16, 2018 9:00pm-10:00pm +03

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this is created we're going to have a better understanding of what it is the listening post on al-jazeera. this is al-jazeera. hello from doha everyone i'm come on santa maria and this is the news hour from al-jazeera he's hoping to restart talks the un's envoy to yemen now in the capital sanaa as there are strikes by the saudi led coalition only intensify also ahead typhoon monkhood smashes into china killing two people after first blowing through hong kong and forcing the city into shutdown and at least fifty three people are dead in the philippines after the typhoon wrecks homes and cuts off towns in sport christiane al-douri scores his first goals in italy stop league after three goals
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games eventis scored twice in a two one way. so the un's envoy to yemen has arrived in the capital sanaa to once again meet leading who the rebels trying to get negotiations going between the rebels and the yemeni government there were talks planned for last week in geneva but they failed to even get off the ground after the hoop these failed to show up the rebels blamed the coalition for preventing them from traveling griffiths or working to end the three and a half year war but just as he arrived a new wave of coalition airstrikes was launched they were targeting what the positions in her data province specifically an area known as killer sixteen on the highway heading east out of the red sea port this is one of the main supply routes to the capital sanaa which is the stronghold here's under simmons in djibouti
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covering news from yemen for us let's start with what was going on there with the fighting in the data the importance i guess solve this supply road. yes this supply which has a number of checkpoints along it sixteen is an area further away from other parts that the saudi u.a.e. led coalition is attacking for instance for instance. seventeen killing sixteen going from going backwards towards a date or seven was another part where there's an immense amount of fighting going on now we have various reports multiple reports claim that they have got control of some areas of the road so it isn't a done deal the cutting off of the supply route yet and there are other very good reports about how it's going in kill or sixteen which you mentioned because that is the main choke point and that's where most of the fighting is going on but again
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further towards the data the red sea port which is so crucial for supply lines of humanitarian materials food water there's a whole range of medicines a go along this road to a desperate situation where people really are on the edge of starvation in some places so this is really not just a battle in military terms to get control of the logistical part which would hinder the the war footing of the enemy this is also a battle to cut off the civilians in the capital sana'a from any form of aid now the battle has centered around as i say killer sixteen but also there have been attacks on a radio station in which four people died there who think they say they were all civilians civilian security workers and also a staff member of the radio station now
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a military source for the coalition is suggesting that only three died and they were who three fighters the medical sources. the hospital in the area suggests that there is around thirty two who three bodies recovered in the whole process and that is not confirmed anywhere else and we have no numbers for the the coalition fighters in terms of their losses as well but this isn't just about the battlefields people are dying all over yemen for other reasons anyone trying to bring peace to yemen may not need reminding of what's at stake nevertheless those without a voice of influence are crying out loud now for her in her hundred sixty kilometers from her data they try to keep babies alive malnutrition could potentially soon be the biggest killer in this conflict nearby families are eating
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wild vine leaves to survive. we cook tree leaves we have no nutrition we will die here we have no one god. personally i don't even lease but since my salary has been cut it's only mean mean for my children even though these cars in each of us in drowsiness but what can we do. in her data the fighting has taken another quantum leap as saudi led coalition forces and government troops on the ground continue their campaign to cut all supply lines from the red sea port the saudis are accusing who the fighters of opening fire on grain silos in order to claim it was the coalition that's responsible whoever did watch the un pressure to stop the fighting has never been greater. the u.n. special envoy martin group this is now in the capital sana'a for talks with the the
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leadership what may help him is a memorandum of understanding signed by the un which gives safe passage by for injured who's these needing medical treatment it's reported they'll go to cairo in egypt but is this enough to get dialogue going even though the number of civilian deaths is still rising there is a coalition diplomatic initiative trying to convince the u.n. that her data has to be taken for the huth is to be pressurized to talk of peace this conflict is now a lethal mix of varying motivations for diplomacy fighting and suffering no one would predict the outcome and quick word on martin griffiths u.n. envoy now in yemen as you say a man with a if not impossible task than a pretty difficult one. most certainly as i was saying there no one would predict the outcome and i don't think martin griffis would be amongst
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them either but as far as he's concerned he has delivered one thing to the table of the who thing is who are now talking to him and that is that when i mentioned there was that memorandum of understanding now that is really dating back to a precondition the huth is putting forward ahead of the geneva talks more than a week ago and of course those talks didn't take place martin griffis admitted that he could not make it has he made it work now well it's difficult to answer that question as well because simply this one week of fighting and there can be a different situation on any hopes for dialogue working can anyone read what the exact motivation is of the coalition the saudi u.a.e. led coalition well possibly because what we're hearing is that there's a major diplomatic push not only on the u.n. but other sources of influence as well and that includes the united states to
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convince people that they have to take the data take it they mean invade it or do they mean surround it and besiege it federally rather than partially as they already are that is the question will they go all the way they say they want to force the who theories to the negotiating table that's what they said straight off to geneva and they're saying it now and much louder terms that they want to conclude the fighting for her data put a marker down and seoul well that's classical battle tool if you will but in terms of the risks involved in terms of more civilian deaths that's very colossal we're not hearing too much about civilian deaths in the action taken so far yes there have been some but not on the scale it would appear than before but elsewhere we're getting multiple reports of individual strikes we're dealing with one right now which is twenty four hours old a very just. hearing about it for instance where a whole number of people i.d.p.'s internally displaced people up near the border
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with saudi arabia have been digging with their hands to try and recover bodies from the house and that was on saturday and there were two children recovered from that operation and that so that is just one example of many where we have civilian deaths still taking place in yemen not as in terms of fighting is in her day but certainly not over not any by any means lol even if there is a critical situation in yemen martin griffis has a cold also mountain to climb no doubt about it come on. andrew symonds with that report from djibouti thank you. we spoke to sami hand the early editor in chief of the international interest he says diplomatic efforts for yemen are getting more complicated as the war intensifies. i think the biggest issue is that when you look at the dynamics on the ground there is nothing to suggest that any of the parties
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are ready to sit down for peace who doesn't want to give up any of the military gains that he's made particularly the capital he wants to insist on holding the capital and holding her data because it means that any conditions that are made on the table will allow them to have a greater say or a greater stake in any future government who doesn't want to actually rule yemen who wants to be like it has been a lot of lebanon it wants to be the main political power behind the scenes the part of the arab coalition is that to go to the negotiating table now essentially means defeat because they cannot dictate the terms they've been unable to defeat the whole thing is military in key strategic points so they would have to see these particular conditions to the who views but for the neutral the problem is even worse because for the neutral the problem is this if you're ford who through concessions while he is still in summer and while he is still in her day then while he is still in joe phenomena and these other cities even if you have peace even if you have a government that comes about in which he has the greatest state there's nothing stopping islam or the southern separatists from studying the whole thing model
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taking over a few cities surviving a bombing campaign from say iran or russia or whoever and then the u.n. coming in once more giving concessions a new government with them having the highest state the problem of yemen is this it's a balance between trying to solve the humanitarian crisis and defending the principle of a national dialogue that came to an agreement over a government do you protect that democratic style of coming to an agreement over a government or do you stop the humanitarian crisis at any cost this is the catch twenty two with yemen this is why it's such a horrific and such a terrible conflict because there is no easy solution either way moreover even if you look at the emmen everybody likes to talk about it as a binary between the arab coalition and between the horses but there are many people who say it was naive or they don't agree with and they despise the incredible damage that saudi arabia has done with the u.a.e. . we're moving on to the global storms at the moment and two people are dead hundreds of thousands of homes evacuated as typhoon monkhood tears through china's
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province two million people seeking alternative shelter about fifty thousand fishing boats have been recalled to port part of an effort to minimize damage as the storm carrying one hundred eighty five kilometer per hour winds sweeps through the region it's also dumping heavy rain on the area causing fears about widespread flooding before it hit china the storm pushed huge waves on to hong kong bringing the city to a standstill the territory was put on the highest alert level for only the fourth time in two decades cranes collapsed windows shattered in many high rise buildings sarah clarke was there. the eye of the typhoon hurdle towards hong kong bringing with it down force winds of up to two hundred kilometers an hour roofs were blown off and windows in some high rise buildings were blown out trees were sent flying this crime was ripped from the building and collapsed this is amazing never seen the like this it's it's eerie to see nobody walking around roads were closed and
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businesses locked up hundreds of people were evacuated from their homes in low lying areas nine hundred flights were canceled interrupting travel plans for thousands of passengers most people bunkered down and. some of those who braved the with. the city was paralyzed and forced into lockdown the worst storm in hong kong for more than a decade. these problems are still events and things but this one has caught many by surprise the strength of the winds history could shoot swells across the harbor into areas in the central lots of the seas. these moved from hotels were flooded as wives pounded the coastline the only movement on the harbor was this ship adrift all schools will be closed on monday the typhoon is now headed towards mainland china the province directly in its path. al-jazeera hong kong. and people in the philippines are trying to assess the damage mankind's left in its
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wake at least fifty three people were killed but that death toll is expected to rise still missing and thirty gold miners are believed to be trapped under a landslide as well that's a province jamila is there. to witness for ourselves the strength and scale of devastation into the end province northeast this is the town of where hundreds of civilians were evacuated from their homes days before the typhoon hit landfall. and they are eighty three year old grandmother pass it left their house of forty eight hours before the storm struck they survived but now they're afraid to go home we have the money. to be poor is the stuff or we're just corn farmers and now we have lost our home to we have to borrow from creditors now just so we can start over. farmlands and now submerged in flood waters schools used as evacuation centers are also damaged. we do further to reach the town of get around
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this is what's left of cornfields here a few hours of a thai food took a year of their earnings. a painful blue for farmers here super typhoon monk a battered much of northern luzon leaving a trail of and destruction. across an hour and communication lines have been destroyed leaving many farming communities isolated after several hours we reached the town. he took two years for jason and linda lena and to build just the frame of their home but it's all gone in an instant. it hurts to see this because just to recover what we lost we have to make painful sacrifices again indigenous comanches like this one have been living in abject poverty for
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generations and they are held back even further by natural disasters that is because the government assistance they need to start over is barely enough farming is their livelihood now they don't know how they can survive their story is one that's repeated a hundred times and more the damage in the province is extensive what we've just seen so far is just a fraction of the devastation by food has caused the full extent will become known in the coming days. jim duggan al jazeera could be in province northern philippines . meanwhile in the u.s. the governor of north carolina is warning that now tropical depression florence is actually at its most dangerous stage made landfall in north carolina on friday and since then fourteen people have died in the last twenty four hours the wind speeds have reduced as you see in fact this is a live shot from north carolina but the rain has worsened and it's making that
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widespread flooding even worse than it was hundreds of thousands of people without power dozens rescued by helicopters and state officials estimate tens of thousands of homes have been damaged. i will say this to the people of north carolina eventually the skies will clear and the flood waters will recede and when they do we're ready to take on the challenge of rebuilding our communities my promise to the people of north carolina into the towns cities farms and businesses damaged by florence is this north carolina is with you and we are in it for the long haul. we have a strong team responding to this storm in preparing for its aftermath let's get an update from fayetteville north carolina kristen salumi reporting for us about
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setting the obvious how things there christine. while it's still raining extremely hard it's just been relentless here come all the governor also said that the pressure to life is increasing at this time with record amounts of rainfall already being seen around north carolina more than sixty centimeters in some and locations now in addition to catastrophic flooding they're worried about mudslides in some of the mountainous areas of the of the state traveling getting around has become increasingly treacherous major roadways are blocked i'm certain areas because of plotting and where i am now along the cape fear river is an area of particular concern to local authorities they have ordered evacuations here for anyone who lives within a mile of the cape fear river they're very worried about the river flooding its banks. nine hundred people have already been rescued throughout the state that's
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mostly been to the north and northwest of here this is increasingly what they're worried about and they're telling people that if they don't get out of this area within an hour they're going to be on their own people are going to really have to take care of themselves i spoke to the mayor of pedro earlier today mitch coleman and this is what he said he was worried about. doing as much as you can as an organization but now we need to just mention a bubble and so we're impressing upon him not to be complacent not a thing to the worst is behind us in fact the work is in front of us we're seeing roads in downtown areas float away and all of those tributaries and for its feet and it is river so we have a problem so we're hoping for the best for the worst and we would sit in a strong message to people if you decide to stay and not a mandatory evacuation what about the day he will not be available to you and so we encourage you to do things like legal next of kin and let people know what your choices. kristin many of the extent of the damage so far.
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only rough estimates so far come on tens of thousands of structures the governor says they estimate have been affected by this missing roof doors blown away basements flooded to give you an example of just what they're worried about here two years ago hurricane matthew came through this area and that cause catastrophic flooding in this area where i am right now at that time now you can feed a cape fear river and how far away it seems. water came up all the way to this building that i'm standing next to. and it flooded the basement it was waist high the owner told me that the water was waist high in the basement of this building and this storm is predicted to dump even more rain on the area so that is exactly what they're worried about you know this is really going to come up quickly we are standing next to sound crews who are standing by with boats waiting to help people
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but again. almost authorities are warning people to stay inside if they can and if they're close to the river to get away because it's just that much of a concern and just so unpredictable in terms of the water and the flooding and where it's going to go here's more of what we saw when we were out earlier. florence arrived in the carolinas and like an unwanted guest refused to leave the storm continues to pound both states with the brain swelling rivers. but this thing will not move up the coast too in the way we continue to. raise the rescue of trapped residents continued in new bern north carolina a city that sits on a peninsula between two rivers residents elsewhere are being warned not to get complacent the risk of catastrophic flooding and mudslides remains the national weather service says more than fifty centimeters of rain have fallen in some areas with. more to come this is one major source of concern in the cape fear river
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meteorologists predict that it could reach flood levels as soon as sunday morning cresting two days later and the flood waters they could linger for weeks with businesses closed and close to a million people already without power some restless residents ventured outside to get a look i am a little bit surprised by how high it is right now because it's different like i always want to i'd like to hike and they get. pretty high for now there's not much they can do but watch and wait. christensen i mean with that report there are plenty more ahead for you on this news hour more than six million people in south sudan desperate for food but a new pay still brings a glimmer of hope and inspire we'll hear from the kenyan running a great he said a new world record at the berlin marathon.
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so that story from south sudan more more than half the population there is now relying on food aid to survive after years of civil war many have nowhere to go or having been forced to leave their homes and farms because of conflict but the signing of a new peace deal between rival factions has brought some hope that those in need of a morgan has more of this. this is a regular scene as of a hospital in south sudan's capital juba children suffering from severe malnutrition come to this world every day to be treated one of them is agnes a russia's baby girl that she's been sick since she was six months old i try to feed her but where will i find food you have to buy food here you can't farm if his money i buy food to feed my kids if not we go to bed hungry agnes's daughter is just one of the hundreds of thousands of children unicef says are suffering from severe malnutrition here five years of civil war has left seven million south sudanese relying on relief supplies tens of thousands have been killed since
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president salva kiir accused his then vice president riek machar of attempting a coup there weren't economy makes daily meals and affordable to many including millions of children says the outbreak of war in haiti that we have never seen this number before in twenty eight dealing with demented two hundred seventy thousand children suffering from sick be a good man to be sure this is a huge number and if we done this point quickly we would lose all destroyed but aid groups have complain. repeatedly to the government about being blocked from breaching those in need by the worrying sign. the latest peace deal has been fine to end the fighting and pledges made a large military action. witnesses to the signing say much needs to be done to ensure that happen safely with the signing of this revitalized agreement we should publicly acknowledged it is but one step on the road to peace one which lays the
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foundation for all that follows. agnes hopes that the peace deal works so she didn't lose her child to hunger hope shared by many mothers whose children are starving he morgan al-jazeera. just manage ok is the executive director of the sued institute's an independent research organization which focuses on south sudan he told us it's a dire dire situation for those most vulnerable. what we are seeing now is what has been experienced over the last five years of intense conflict and the multiplicity of the warring parties making it very difficult for a large number of people to maintain the normal way of life whether they are a peasant farmers or cattle keepers and the result of this is that cities like uber have now been receiving like number of children and women who are desperate for food and you see it you see i saw all over the town of baquba children
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begging on the street. cleaners and hospitals full of kids who are malnourished and cannot afford food and cannot afford medicine it is a dire aggression for an entire. population of children but also for all the other particularly women and pregnant women to be more explicit that what has been the main reason why people are so desperate for food and so they were the signing of this is the women on the twelfth of september there is a renewed hope in there or. rozas are done and people are tired and sick of war so this hope this renewed calls use optimism. is definitely what a lot of started and these are. all the implemented to be able to get these people back to their normal way of life it is not the. case where people have absolutely nothing it is a case of people being able to exercise normal economic activity for survival and
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they will be able to go back to that as soon as the peace agreement is implemented london's mayor has called for a second referendum to decide if the u.k. should leave the european union so he can says the public should have a say on the final deal he is a member of the opposition labor party has been critical of the government's approach towards for exit from remembering the u.k. do usually leave the e.u. in march. we've reached a position where there are two outcomes as a consequence of the governance to go shea sions a bad deal and by that i include a sleeve in the e.u. without knowing the terms of the future relationship sort of blindfold bricks or no deal and the independent research and taken for us shows that no till would leads to five hundred thousand fewer jobs eighty seven thousand fewer jobs in london alone and fifty billion pounds less investment in our country that's a hugely damaging to london coming up for you on this news hour. they call
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themselves seize the power they lived in this neighborhood for centuries and now they say local authorities want to throw them out i'm not certain popular reporting from southern france. also trying to save a centuries old language for the next generation this is in malaysia and in sport action from the singapore grand prix as there was hamilton aims to stay on course for a formula one world. hello again welcome back we're here across turkey we have seen a lot of rain over the last couple of days dealing with an area of low pressure in that region that is beginning to move off we are going to be seeing the rain start to ease but really on monday still the same situation as we go down towards the south though aleppo is going to be seeing a partner cloudy day at thirty three in beirut about thirty degrees in your
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forecast and then as we go towards monday things start to warm up slightly but turkey things in your forecast are going to be getting better here across much of the middle east we are going to see here temperatures into the high thirty's for doha humanity still going to be quite high in our area over towards thirty eight degrees as well but most got partly cloudy conditions at thirty really staying about the same as we go towards tuesday and maybe some clouds in the forecast for salon where the temperature for you of about twenty eight degrees and then down here across parts of africa well things along the coastline are still looking quite cloudy for cape town and clouds low clouds up here across much of the central area temperatures for you in cape town sixty degrees we do have some winds coming in from the west but very warm up across the the central regions we're going to see about thirty five to thirty six degrees there in johannesburg twenty seven degrees on monday getting warmer with more sunshine in your forecast at twenty nine and durban at about twenty three.
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capturing a moment in time. snapshots of the lives. of the stories . providing a glimpse into someone else's wild. inspiring documentaries from impassioned filmmaking this. week nice documentaries to open your eyes on al-jazeera. discover distilleries you didn't know amounts. deal with these two life changing scenes. notice the changes that affect all of us. experience our world and be a part of it. the focus al-jazeera balcones
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international documentary film festival saturday from twenty first to twenty fifth september. and on the news hour here at al-jazeera and these are the top stories the un's envoys to yemen is in the capital sanaa to meet leading hooty rebels trying to get negotiations going between the three p.'s and yemeni government talks planned for last week in geneva failed to get off the ground after the rebels were able to travel. more than two million people in china's province of been moon moved from their homes typhoon is battering the province after it left a trail of destruction already in hong kong the territory was put on its highest looks level for only the fourth time in twenty five years and before arriving in
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southern china typhoon monkhood killed at least fifty three people in the philippines hundreds of people living in remote rural communities have lost their homes and the full scale of the damage is still being assessed. now the united states has ordered the palestinian mission in washington d.c. to close the stuff bank accounts and to vacate their offices the trumpet ministration announced the closure of the p.l.o. office that is the palestine liberation organization a week ago palestinian leaders called it a declare. of war all peace smaller on this with patty culhane in washington d.c. what more details if you go patty. over here in the new developments we knew that they were going to close down the office but according to a producer who reached out to the ambassador to washington one of his aides they are confirming that ambassador who saw his wife and two children have had their visas revoked their bank accounts frozen and told to get out of the united states
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now we've reached out to the u.s. state department to see if we can confirm it from this and it's unlikely that we'll hear back from them given this is a sunday in the government isn't open but this would be just another escalation in the trunk campaigns effort to try and find something that will actually be a pressure point enough to get the palestinians to sit down and negotiate let's not forget the palestinians said they were going to talk to the trump administration after that controversial move to move the u.s. embassy to jerusalem since then every friday it seems we're seeing the u.s. come out with these paper statements and notifying congress that they're stripping away different funds different pots of money from the palestinians everything from all of the aid that goes to the u.n. to help the refugees in the region to cancer treatments closing money that goes to hospitals and now the latest was to basically take away any money that goes to programs that help try to get jews and arabs to talk to each other so they're basically piece by piece week by week trying to find a pressure point that would make the palestinians say fine we'll negotiate and this
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is all in the run up to what we expect from the president's son in law jared cushion or to unveil his big peace plan they're trying to pressure the palestinians to agree before they see it to pretty much anything that is that document so far the palestinians said they're not going to budge they are calling this latest unconscionable move that continues to constitutes an inhumane escalation so the trip of ministration try and find it and try to keep trying to find what will make them given so far the policy and so. they're just not going to this is what i was just thinking patty it is a peculiar way if nothing else to try to bring one side to the negotiating table it seems rather more the stick over the carrot and you know really using the stick quite harshly. it really is unprecedented after all throughout this entire peace process to see that six successive presidents say that they want to act as an honest broker the truth of ministration is basically gotten rid of all of that
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pretense they could to asli side and do whatever it is the israelis have wanted them to do and it's hurting actual palestinians this goes very much with the president's mindset he thinks money is the basically cure all for every problem when it comes to trade when it comes to foreign policy and now when it comes to israelis and palestinians he really does think that he can hurt them to a point that they'll basically give up all of their objections and agree to whatever is the palace to release in the us want to inflict on them i think there are a lot of critics here who says that shows absolutely no understanding of the history of the region but the trump administration is doubling down on this i also think it's important to point out when they make these announcements it's always on a friday night you know why do that's what they call taking the trash out here in the united states because on friday night nobody's paying attention to the news so it's not something that they're really heralding it's not something that they want the u.s. citizens to really pay attention to if they did they wouldn't just notify congress
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and paper statements and do it on a friday night when everybody's already started the weekend. interesting good to talk to parties in washington d.c. . now south korea's president is preparing for the first summit with the north korean leader kim jong un since his singapore meeting with donald trump wednesday in will be accompanied to pyongyang by c.e.o.'s from some of the leading south korean companies moon is looking for close to economic ties with north korea despite sanctions over its nuclear program brian with more. the big question of course is north korea's denuclearization commitment but south korean officials remain convinced about north korea's sincerity with officials saying only last week that kim jong un accepts the fact he will have to carry out this denuclearization during president donald trump's first term in office which presumably means within the next two years that does seem to be a very tall order given the extent of north korea's missile and nuclear programs
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but then this whole dialogue back and forth has seen many twists and turns so nobody i think can rule out what the coming week might bring. now the palestinian activist i had twenty years attended a political event in france after earlier being banned from traveling abroad by the israeli government israel stopped the seventeen year old from travelling earlier this month to europe to talk about her experience in jail and the palestinian resistance movement to me was freed in july after eight months in prison for slapping an israeli soldier she also had a message for the u.s. president. in the tonya when you're a seventeen year old palestinian you suffer every day promise really occupation palestinian children get arrested or killed on a daily basis at checkpoints they have a hard time going to school because of all those security checks they risk their lives on their way to school. now in the french city of perth when you're a gypsy communities historic neighborhood is being threatened with demolition so
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just because one of the poorest neighborhoods in france and local officials say it is in need of renewal and with our story. the sound check neighborhood is a maze of narrow streets and color for buildings for more than one hundred fifty years it's been home to a unique catalan speaking people who call themselves the gypsies of power but now they say the city council is demolishing the area and trying to push them out the brutal rip why destroy our history this is our neighborhood we've always lived here together it's a beautiful district so why not make it like granada was seville somewhere that tourists could come and not be scared of us instead no one helps it's dismissed as a ghetto. in the past three years local authorities have demolished more than fifty houses part of a hundred million dollar urban renewal plan they say many of the buildings are unsafe but people here disagree with the middle i've lived in this house all my
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life i was born in it and they want to destroy i'm scared because if this room in the street i want to know what to do campbell is part of a group of residents who say the neighborhood needs to be rejected. rated not demolish he says the councils ignored the area for years providing few services or petunias for people rubbish israeli collected there are no play areas for children three quarters of people are unemployed. what we want is to work with the council we want better homes it's a stay in the neighborhood a contractor victor whole community one general got it i mean some residents say city officials haven't consulted them about the plans but the deputy mayor says they have been dozens of meetings on the projects and. no one wanted to there's never been a desire to gentrify the area chased out the poor population those who want to stay can and we will help those who want to move out we're not get a wiser now but building homes that are clean and safe people here safe not only about breaking buildings it's also about breaking up our community tearing apart
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generations of family and friends. this woman says local officials i asked her to leave her house she thought she'd be gone a few days when she returned the home she'd lived in for forty years was gone and she's not been offered another isn't going through do they demolish my whole house with all my furniture everything i thought was only leaving a few days so i left all i have inside most here agree that santa jack and his people are in need of attention it's one of the poorest neighborhoods in france but what they want is to hold on to their rich past and have a say in their future natasha butler al-jazeera. a member of the russian activist group pussy riot has been flown to germany for medical treatment after what's claimed to have been a poisoning get a vessel of was taken to a hospital in moscow on tuesday with symptoms including loss of sight fellow members of the group say he was poisoned but his love and two others fifteen days
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in jail for running onto the pitch during the world cup final in moscow in july protesting against what they describe as the excessive powers of russia's police. the economic and political crisis at home forces hundreds of thousands of venezuelans to flee is an increasing strain on resources elsewhere in the region a delegation from the organization of american states is now traveling through south america trying to understand the impact peru has received more than three hundred fifty thousand venezuelan migrants more than anywhere else except colombia monday on a sunday as they went to meet a peruvian businessman who set up a shelter in the capital lima. on the floor alongside each other more than one hundred seventy venezuelans sharing three bedrooms two bathrooms and every single space there was left in this makeshift shelter on the outskirts of lima. says he feels lucky to be here. i feel blessed because
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a lot of people have to sleep on the street i don't have anything what these people here are doing is great or going to it's all free says clinical peruvian businessman who says he spent nearly thirty thousand dollars to rent and set up this shelter. or use the money to buy the stove mattresses everything i was about to buy a car but decided to invest it here because in exchange you get happiness. in a few months giving us nearly two thousand venus williams who learned of the shelter through social media have come and gone the only way to make it work with so many is with discipline he says supervisor. the space is already too small it's a challenge because people keep on coming on our motto is to never say no we open our doors to any woman. the shelter is now run with the help of private donations to be a big who has absorbed the largest number of the nostril and migrants and refugees more than four hundred twenty thousand says the government bombing that seventy
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thousand already have work permits but most are taking underpaid jobs such as street vending so many venezuelans starting a new life here has been much more difficult than they imagine. so if you have taken up president nicholas modals offer to be flown back home for free while body that there will still nearly two hundred minutes we'll as have been airlifted in a swollen precedent to just have been a swims we're living and working in slave like conditions propaganda replied the peruvian government all of it the majority of them as well as at the embassy are here to request document renewals to be able to apply for work permits nearly two million venezuelans are living abroad straining relations in the region and leading some countries to impose travel restrictions that's a shame says going in. hunger in the city don't have borders countries shouldn't impose restrictions to these people. you're going to see
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a shot of american states says no country can face this wave of migrants and refugees on the road all governments and international organizations get together to think of a regional plan people like. are already making a difference again essential. to still more for you on this news all sports news with randy actually a landmark goal for one of football's greatest sharman patter want to go what's. my name dear a place where this is can truly call it the hole. you have to plan group springing up the ones you've made sure once you know you all ends up with money managerial is resilient and is just so for us surprises the planet here yes there is yes to
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every normal. my nigeria. on al-jazeera. is a popular filming location in france when it comes to stay. worries about drugs crime and radicalization tired of negative stereotypes into work arabs managerially is reclaiming its image by putting its young brazilian behind the camera. the stories be don't often hear told by the people who the them. this is iraq and al jazeera.
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it is a language in malaysia that dates back to the sixteenth century and only three thousand people can speak it fluently now though there was a push to revive portuguese from florence louis went to malacca on the western coast of malaysia to find out more. the ruins of a fortin malacca stand as a reminder of the portuguese presence in malaysia in fifteen eleven they captured the coastal city and ruled for over a century before the dutch defeated them when the portuguese left they left behind more than just buildings filum a nursing home is descended from the portuguese she still speaks the language of her ancestors malaccan creole portuguese derived from the portuguese with words borat from other languages and a grammatical structure similar to the mill a language all here to do was in year zero two of the second it's also known by its
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colloquial name poppier christian but it's in decline spoken mainly by the older generation so saying host artist using social media to pass on her knowledge when i post a lot of our work is formed in the same. post in hmong cry bomb young girl is good morning how are you all call giving. in yourself courage to carry your new will be learned a simple few words it is something. her brother michael wrote a book together with other language experts to help people learn christan. formal instructions are rare it isn't taught in schools and exists mostly in oral form we have survived so many years ago langridge religion and i read it in saw we cannot lose him and. like many other malaysians of portuguese descent the singers have their roots in this neighborhood in malacca this is the portuguese
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settlement home to about one thousand eight hundred people descended from the portuguese academics say the community here has provided a haven for the language the children grow up hearing it being spoken if not at home then maybe at a neighbor's house. on weekends children come for classes at sarah santa maria as house. and brought up in the portuguese settlement. she teaches dance and cooking too with instructions in popular christan to preserve not just the language but other aspects of her culture the language has also caught the attention of academics who go to think beyond go to think about the perhaps they can value but done by the people right the community can find ways to share their knowledge. on perspectives dest doris' i think a very important. the older generation of malaccan portuguese are counting on the
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younger generation to keep the language alive florence li al jazeera. malaysia. andy is here. who drove the car fastest around the track today find our show wasn't expected to be lewis hamilton larrys are leading the world title but he's made a big move in his efforts away in a fifth former want world championship he won the singapore grand prix he's now forty points clear of his main rival sebastian vettel who could only manage third place david starts reports. after a stunning performance in qualifying lewis hamilton still needed to have his wits about him going into the first few corners and he did well to emerge unscathed with his lead intact for the back esteban are called was not so lucky his race ended early having been shoved into the wall by his force india teammate sergio perez. that accident needed some clearing up but crucially just before the safety car came
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out sebastian vettel was able to pass max for stop and to take second place. he was now perfectly positioned to attack hamilton. that was until ferrari decided to bring him in early for a tire change. it proved a costly decision by the team many expected to dominate in singapore vettel ended up losing time and ultimately gave second place back to stop and i. must say the strategy on the other hand was working perfectly there was a brief scare when hamilton was held up by a group of back markers to stop and try to lock up the inside but the championship leader had it covered in accelerated into the distance to claim victory it's the fourth time he's won the singapore grand prix. to watch the match what. strokes. how to describe it is
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a monumental moment and it's hard to argue he finished nearly forty seconds clear of vettel and now leads his main rival by forty points in the drive the standings we had a great start the team just never given up faith and belief in me and an invalid three m. in our ability and is a real blessing with a long race yeah i mean it wasn't looking too bad we had a good first lap and then we tried something being aggressive but it didn't work and then we ended up finishing third so finishing where we started well i it's four wins in the last five for hamilton and with only six races remaining vettel needs to start beating him and fast david stokes al-jazeera. christian eldar has scored his first goals fi events as the italian champions continue their perfect starts of the season ronaldo had failed to find the net in his first three games for you. a second off tap in here against a swallow got him off the mark i first three year old enough white to long for
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a second event says guns were going to want someone saying their position of the top of sorry out they look set speed without the risk cost for the forseeable future by the brazilian sense offer first headbutting. and then spitting in upon its face. slaton abraham of it she's one of football's biggest sharman any brought up his five hundredth career goal in spectacular style there's been many memorable ones but not soo many karate kick start this one he was playing for the l.a. galaxy gets transgressed say the thirty six year old joining me now and we know messi is the only active players to school five hundred the club and country again may well be remembered for that goal was last summer and the galaxy did lose five three. i mean for my personal objective is fantastic chimey probably have more goals than the guys on the field of games together and and of course he's huge i don't know how many scored five hundred goals in their career but i am one of
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them it came middle aged came in a try to do what i'm good at putting him behind the line and in this receded sure. it was good to know compliments to toronto because they'll be remembered for my five hundred goal. kenya's shogi has broken the world marathon record taking more than a minutes off the previous mark the kenyan one the berlin marathon in a time of two hours one minutes and thirty nine seconds is record it sent looked him down when his pace make his drops out early left him to run the last seventeen kilometers along the olympic champion still able to break the previous record set by his compassionate dennis cometti so four years ago it's the second seventh straight time with a girl in cause for this flat profile has been the venue for a new record. show he has established himself as the great systems runner in history competing in eleven marathons he's won ten of them prior to his first marathon in twenty thirteen could show you had a successful track career winning the five thousand meter world championship title
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is that same agency thousand and three last year he attempted to run the first sub two hour marathon in a special events at the monza racetrack in italy the unofficial race was paced by a car with support runners joining in for short stages he missed his target then by just twenty five seconds but does now have the official world record i am. always on the legacy i'm a bit of the disposable i remember i don't do. now we thought so but i think it's possible canelo alvarez has inflicted a first career defeat on a canary goal of kin to become world middleweight champion goal of kin had been undefeated in thirty nine fights but was on the wrong end of a majority points decision the pair arguably the best pound for pound fighters in the world right now their first meeting last year had ended in a draw alvarez's only career defeat was against floyd mayweather. it was a seriously my content to put it i did everything i did to complete my objective
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unfortunately we didn't get the knockout but thank god we walked away with a victory. to complete it because to me i don't think he really demonstrates some super great mexican boxing style yes he was not running away from me or running around this time played doesn't mean that he won this fight he didn't do anything special but most importantly i would like to congratulate him with a with one judge how to fight as a draw by the other to roll the canal or just edged it boxing journalist chris mckenna says the sport scoring system is imperfect. the problem with the sport is that it's on what the judges see to the sets is for some judges like to see different styles and judges score points differently there is that has been one of the big problems of boxing for years now that there are fans that don't truly love this or kind of lose interest in it when there's controversy and they don't feel like they've got the decision that he does it have to end it can make time to watch in a big big big big fight when especially when it's on pay per view and it's basically
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good prices but there is a mistrust i don't think this fight particularly at that at this time because it was such a close fight it's had to be too critical of the judges. angela stanford has won her first major golf title after eighteen years on the protocol stanford's big moment came in the evian championship in france the forty year old american carded a final round of sixty eight which put her on twelve under for the tournament she then watched for her rivals missed chances to force a play off on the eighteenth green. shi'ites on a hits his twentieth harmon of the season but couldn't prevent the l.a. angels losing to the seattle mariners are tani's only the second japanese player to hit twenty hundred runs in a single season no yankees all star outfielder had a team out suited on five occasions despite our sony's after the angels going down in this one six five. now the tennis umpire who i'm good serena williams by giving
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her three code violations during the u.s. open final had a different player in his sights of the davis cup carlos ramos back in the chair for the semifinal between christ and the usa. violation for smashing his racket they're. going on to lose this concert against sam querrey it meant the tie went down to the fifth set of the fifth match. caray shoes on of course beating france's tearful in that decided to set up a final with defending champions france the same two countries goals that played in football's world cup final that's why coming up in november ok more sport for me throughout the night but that is it is that nothing else a waste of a good tennis record quite frankly. thank you for joining us for this news hour julian we don't up from london but in just a few moments with more news here on out as iraq.
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getting to the heart of the matter the three big challenges facing humankind in the twenty first century and they are look real war climate change and technological destruction facing realities whatever it is they have to fear is not in me it is in the people of uganda hear their story on and talk to al-jazeera.
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the past past boss. travels the roads of mexico raising the ecological the wind. and sharing creative solutions the country's most remote. demonstrated course is a by deep in the struggle for a better speech. past passed by the cast of the viewfinder in latin america seen on outages there and from. al jazeera stands swear every.
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inside the led coalition launches a new wave of airstrikes on yemen targeting a key supply route as the u.n. envoy tries to kick start talks in the capital son not. out of there i'm julie wood all of this is al jazeera live from london also coming out type one man could smashes into china killing two people after blowing through hong kong forcing the city to shocked and. follow.

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