tv White Buses Al Jazeera September 20, 2018 9:00am-10:01am +03
9:00 am
and i have a problem and with the headlines on al-jazeera the leaders of north and south korea wrapping up their three day summit with a joint visit to mount to the korean peninsula is the most sacred mountain but they have been previous talks about starting it into korean tourism project allowing south koreans to visit the mountain via the north it rounds out a trip that saw the two leaders agree to make the potential a nuclear free ride mcbride has more from salt. this three day summit ending as it began rich in symbolism moon j.n. and kim jong un his north korean host visiting mount paid coup this is a mountainous volcano right on the border of north korea and china that is
9:01 am
spiritually very significant to all koreans a long ago moon had expressed a desire to visit the place and this does seem to be the kind of summit where dreams come true he has visited there with kim later he will then be returning after lunch to seoul possibly addressing the south korean nation and he has a lot to talk about about the events that have taken over over the past few days culminating of course in something which has still stunned people here in south korea the sight of their president addressing one hundred fifty thousand north koreans at the may day stadium in pyongyang on wednesday night it's something that simply doesn't happen but it has happened and that i think is the biggest takeaway from this summit is not necessarily the length or the extent of the agreement itself in some respects according to
9:02 am
a lot of conservative critics especially it really is lacking in detail but it is the spirit in which they have agreed on this deal we saw some of that excitement in the stadium wednesday night it has generated a lot of interest in north korea it has been widely covered in all of the official media there starting really a big feeling of excitement and anticipation of change and where this might lead to as moon has gone around north korea many of the crowds have been chanting b. unification of the fatherland as they put it in north korea it is a long held dream of many people in korea to see a re you need fight korean peninsula but you do get a sense that in the current mood the current excitement just what might be possible in the future. in other news japanese prime minister shinzo are they has been reelected as head of his ruling liberal democratic party the one paves the way for
9:03 am
him to become the country's longest serving leader promising economic growth and changes to the country's defense forces malaysia's former prime minister najib razak is expected in court to face twenty one money laundering charges facing a string of allegations linked to billions of dollars that went missing from the state investment fund when he was in office millions were transferred to personal bank accounts for the pakistani prime minister nawaz sharif has been greeted by a crowd of jubilant supporters after being freed on bail the high court ordered sharif his daughter and son in law to be released until their appeal against corruption convictions can be heard rescue workers in the philippines are continuing search efforts following a landslide in the wake of typhoon man caught family members in the mining town of gone have been waiting to identify bodies as they recovered canada's government says it needs more flexibility from the united states if they are to reach
9:04 am
a deal on renewing nafta author was pushing back against pressure from the trumpet ministration to make concessions as part of a new trade agreement saying it must its own needs must be met washington insists that an agreement must be finished by the end of september. british prime minister tourism a has told leaders that she needs them to be flexible regarding the brics that deal may defended her breaks that proposal ahead of an e.u. leaders summit in the austrian city of salzburg she also welcomed comments from the e.u. so the go she said michel barnier that he would improve a proposal on the northern irish border. those are the headlines on al-jazeera do stay with us killing the count is coming up next thank you for watching.
9:05 am
a small airstrip north of jerusalem. today it's derelict and abandoned. but for years kalandia airport was the gateway to palestine. on the morning of the seventeenth of september one thousand nine hundred forty eight a white plane carrying un and red cross markings landed here. with the first arab israeli war already raging across palestine the un mediator helpful kept burma dog had come to jerusalem. that same afternoon. as it passed through the israeli controlled part of the city.
9:06 am
his convoy was ambushed. one jeep blocked the way and three guys with machine guns came out. to us i went up to the fourth core. third one went directly to the third. shot through the window. by five pm trump bernadotte was dead. the assassination was carried out by and extremist zion. leahy. fights us for the freedom of israel. i don't think anybody in israel shed a tear above the level of the. turning to be and then to me like the state of physical and of the zionist dreams. yet only three is
9:07 am
a son a daughter had made another jet. flying into nazi germany on the biggest humanitarian efforts of world war two. he would save more than thirty thousand prisoners from the concentration camps. and eat a third of them. then the dog was not an enemy of the jews and there is nothing to suggest anti semitism in his entire record. this is the story of how peace can be frustrated by strangers. how assassination can turn the tide of history. with consequences that still scar the middle east. this
9:08 am
is the story of killing because. the village the school in the french riviera. in the winter home of camp bob tailed but i'm not the. youngest son of come to the fold can. be. the lead but taylor loves this place where his father and mother first. met in the late one nine hundred twenty s. . the riviera was and still is a favorite holiday destination for the rich and titled android families from around the world. in the winter of one thousand nine hundred twenty eight king
9:09 am
gustaf the fifth king of sweden was spending his holidays here. but at the back of his mind he had to worry. his nephew for kobo no dogs. his uncle was the king and he was everywhere down here on the riviera and he had met what he thought a very nice american family that had a young daughter my father was by that time over thirty and i think he's uncle felt it was time that for got married so he sent for him. and they were put together and my mother told me it wasn't a big success in the beginning. but it became quite positive after some time. and he proposed later on in the area and she accepted. and that's how it started.
9:10 am
in the autumn of that year falco crossed the atlantic in the company of friends and relatives from sweden's royal family. this was big news in america the first wedding of european royalty on american soil. foca bernadotte and estelle manville one marriage on the first of december one thousand nine hundred twenty eight in pleasant new york. fifteen hundred guests attended the wedding party on the private estate of astellas father a millionaire american industrialist. the father of the bride holds
9:11 am
a wedding and then quite a few of his friends came over the. territory prince ghost of all the of he was there and some of his brothers was at the wedding and another friends of my father's and of course a lot of americans were in the wedding party. after the wedding as stole sailed to europe with faulty to live with her new husband in the swedish capital stockholm. this was the world that forged a talent for mediation a to. talent which would take him to the center of world politics. in the same city almost thirty four years a. count felt had been adults of these borg had been born two days into the new
9:12 am
year of eight hundred ninety five. his father prince oscar but in the books was the son of king oscar the second king of both sweden and norway. at school in stockholm focus showed himself to be practical rather than intellectual a gifted linguist he spoke fluent english french and german it was a talent he would put to good use in later life. in one thousand nine hundred eighteen he graduated from the military academy of col . a skilled horseman he rose to the rank of major in the elite dragoon cavalry unit. but not long after his marriage he was forced to resign his commission on medical
9:13 am
grounds. shortly after when the goons words a little bit into the swedish army but an adult decided to rent the drug god and his unit's former headquarters. estelle the millionaire's daughter transformed this military office into a luxury a swan fit for a prince. but in one thousand nine hundred thirty four family life a dragoon garden was struck by tragedy. the couple's third son frederick died shortly after his birth. two years later that eldest son gustav died. he was just six years old.
9:14 am
yeah was after the loss of two of his sons kemp an adult decided to seek a new role in life. there. in one thousand and thirty seven he became the head of the swedish scout movement and . he had two sentences to guide his life. the first was rehab not come to this world it'll be happy ourselves but to make other people happy. and the second word was what is possible is already done the impossible house begone. finally. good causes
9:15 am
9:16 am
by the summer of one thousand nine hundred forty the nazis had occupied by just norway and denmark. king gust of of sweden incredibly active at the age of a seventy one attended the recent maneuvers held by his son in swedish armed forces were put on alert freed unfettered by the nazis and the russian look stand offensive. soon but an adult was mobilized. and with his country in fear of invasion he began working to integrate the scouts into sweden's defense plan training them in antioch cry. well. and as medical assistance. but sweden's defenses would not be
9:17 am
put to the test. germany did not invade sweden for at least two reasons sweden was not of very strategic importance and the second reason is that sweden was quite willing to supply the german are moments in history is with the necessary war materials. i am in particular. and sweden at least in the first part of the second word was leaning towards the nazis the even allowed the german navy to cross swedish waters. of german ethane to violate the space street so officially they were neutral in the gloomy meaning to what's germany and that was easy for the germans i mean they they got most everything they want. but securing one nine hundred
9:18 am
forty three the tide of war would change dramatically. the seemingly invincible nazi germany now found itself losing on several fronts. the allies had been victorious in north africa. and had landed invasion forces in southern italy. on the eastern front. the red army had begun a huge counterattack. pushing the german troops back west. from nine hundred forty three all woods as soon as the swedish government sends all recognized that germany is going to lose the the increasingly towards the allies.
9:19 am
so a change in this week's attitude. in october one thousand nine hundred forty three the swedish red cross by now under the energetic command to file cabinet don't. organize the prisoner of war exchange between the western allies and nazi germany but the swedish pull to gothenburg. a year later a similar intervention the total of prisoners riprap treated to over ten thousand. on their way home at last our heartfelt thanks are due to sweetie for the vital part played by that country in the organization of yesterday. full cabin adult had successfully established sweden's role as an intermediate.
9:20 am
but in germany there were other prisoners in even greater need the swedish count skills as a mediator. ally they report reported by airport get radicalized are warning of an offer right. as allied troops pushed towards berlin from the east and west. they began to encounter a concentration camps. tens of thousands of prisoners living and dying in desperate condition.
9:21 am
january nine hundred forty five soviet troops entered our friends. the largest center of the nazi industrial killing machine. rumors were circulating that hitler had given orders to heinrich himmler the commander of s.s. troops for the liquidation of concentration camps. there was to be no evidence left behind. no prisoners to tell the tale. quick and decisive action was needed. through six years of neutrality during world war two sweden had remained a country of peace.
9:22 am
unlike its neighbors norway and denmark. nothing has been able to stop the danish saboteurs were continually blowing up factor buildings starting fires directing trains and so. those called resisting the nazi occupation had been removed to concentration camps in germany. in the resisting ideology of national socialism they were a rian as long as they were not jewish people who had been put to germany into concentration camps out of political reasons because they resisted in norway or in denmark they were a reaction in the eyes of the s.s. and they were ok many of them were able to understand and to talk german. which made them more human to the s.s. because they could talk to them they could give them order they were understood.
9:23 am
exploiting this special status but not taught and the swedish red cross had already managed to get more than seventy thousand households through the closing to scandinavian inmates in nazi camps. the danish government had lists of the prisoners that had been brought to german concentration camps the list was a privilege because people in denmark knew where who was in which concentration camp and this meant that their relatives knew where their loved ones were and that the government was able to send packages for across packages with food and with clothing to people personally if you sent packages to a concentration camp without a special name on it the s.s. just took them and never gave it to the prisoners but when the official packages from the red cross came the s.s.
9:24 am
gave them to the prisoners and that made danish prisoners they had more to eat and they had a better situation. by february one thousand nine hundred forty five all privileged treatment had been overtaken by the threat of total liquidation. as the situation in the camps deteriorated the swedish government stepped in. those identified as scandinavian in turn ease in german concentration camps were to be rescued by a swedish red cross expedition. campfield had better not docked was the man who would lead the mission. the relations between sweden and germany had by historical memories been very good before the war but i think actually that they were slight depressed of a member of the king's family. to take on this work.
9:25 am
i think there must have been. the man bernadotte would have to impress was heinrich himmler the commander of the s.s. the notorious paramilitary defense falls a leading member of the nazi party he had risen to become a minister of the interior and by now the second most powerful man in germany. on it was orders it was him who had set up the concentration camps controlling them through his s.s. troops. this was the man with whom bernadotte would have to negotiate to secure the prisoners release. but how to reach him that was the crucial question. felix keston was himmler's personal masseur
9:26 am
a baltic german physician he lived in stockholm but travelled regularly to germany to treat him as chronic abdominal cramps. felix cast an act as a kind of interview during the tween ben i bought him and as soon as bella daughter offered you know this kind of deal. in the sense that this might be a chance that only to rescue him to save him as a person against revenge of course but also maintain and even increase his power he still had power you have the power over the lives of the prisoners. keston gave a green light to stockholm himmler had agreed that sweden could send an envoy to germany. on the sixteenth of february one thousand nine hundred forty five bernadotte embarked on one of the most courageous humanitarian efforts in history.
9:27 am
as stella accompanied her husband to stockholm's bramah airport as count falcon bernadotte boarded a german airplane to but. it was a journey into. the situation was desperate from the point of view of jim and woody and. from the point of the view of the nazis. of course ben adults who wanted to. take advantage of this and to pressurize the author had to concede they were nice off some of the prisoners. but to achieve this bernadotte would have to take a crucial step. negotiating face to face with. the
9:28 am
man who controlled germany's concentration. the russian orthodox church is deep pockets and the rapid expansion made its crucial role in putin's grip on power with elevating the former k.g.b. officer the same to president putin as our leader that. people in power investigates its attempted elimination by the soviet union religion has returned to the heart of the russian state the orthodox connection. we understand the differences. and the similarities of cultures across the world so no matter how you take it al-jazeera will bring in the news and current affairs that matter to al-jazeera. twenty five years after the signing of al-jazeera world
9:29 am
told the two part story of norway's role in the oslo accords whether salute the government of more words or its remarkable role in order to listen to the secret negotiations and why its promise of peace has remained unfulfilled a strong decided tone of the negotiations norway could do as a show trial or go home the price of all is low on al-jazeera. with a big breaking news story it can be chaotic and frantic behind the scenes. people shouting instructions a big your trying to provide the best most accurate up to date information as quickly as you can. it's when you come off air on things seem pinned to realize even witness history in the making.
9:30 am
an ominous of a forum in doha with the headlines on al-jazeera the leaders of north and south korea wrapping up their three day summit with a joint visit to mount pet food the korean peninsula small sacred mountain kim jong un and moon j.n. took a tour around the volcanic volcanic crater called heaven lake they have been talks about starting a tourism project allowing south koreans to visit the mountain from the north korean side it rounds out a trip that saw the two leaders agree to make the pensioner nuclear free japan's prime minister shinzo has been reelected as head of his ruling liberal democratic party paves the way for him to become the country's longest serving leader promising economic growth and changes to the country's defense forces. malaysia's
9:31 am
former prime minister najib razak is expected in court to face twenty one charges of money laundering prosecutors accuse him of illegally transferring six hundred twenty eight million dollars from a state fund a lot of it into his personal account has already been hit with seven other corruption charges last month. former pakistani prime minister nawaz sharif has been greeted by a crowd of jubilant supporters after being freed on bail the high court orders should leave his daughter and son in law to be released until their appeal against corruption convictions can be heard rescue workers in the philippines are continuing search efforts following a landslide in the wake of typhoon man caught family members in the town mining town of the gone have been waiting to identify a body use as they have recovered. canada's government says it needs more flexibility from the united states if they are to reach
9:32 am
a deal on renewing nafta ottawa's pushing back against pressure from the troubled ministration to make concessions as part of a new trade agreement saying its own needs must be met washington says that an agreement must be finished by the end of september and a british prime minister treason may has told european union leaders that she needs them to be flexible regarding the bricks that do may defended her brakes a proposal ahead of an e.u. leaders summit and the austrian city of salzburg she also welcomed comments from the hughes chief negotiator michel barnier that he would improve a proposal on the northern irish border those are the headlines on al-jazeera killing the count continues next. broke germany. ninety kilometers north of in.
9:33 am
a column in place. yet this name is in from its. synonymous with one of the most notorious nazi concentration camps. specially built to house women and children. by nine hundred forty five over one hundred thirty thousand female prisoners post through rifles. polish women with the largest group incarcerated here many of them. more than one thousand died in robin's book seventy percent of those sent in
9:34 am
to this day the deserted houses of the s.s. gods remain. homes of offices under the command of one of the most feared and powerful men in germany. i marry him. the man with whom count foca bernadotte would have to negotiate to secure the release of scandinavian prisoners. on the one hand band of dogs wanted to save as many prisoners as possible on the other hand in negotiating with the needy nazi like him well. to some extent employed recognizing him. as a kind of partner. so it's a dilemma it's a catch twenty two situation. but for bernadotte there was no choice.
9:35 am
on the nineteenth of february one thousand nine hundred forty five three days after his arrival in germany he was taken to what was then a sanatorium at home and they can not far from robin's broke he was brought here to meet him at his villar in the sanatorium grounds. at the negotiating table in the flatly rejected byrne adults proposal for the release of all scandinavian prisoners. but bernadotte achieved one major concession that norwegian and danish inmates should be moved to a camp where the swedish red cross would be able to support them. the camp was called noida in goma.
9:36 am
the camp which was nearest the danish border so he hoped that with whom he was negotiating would say ok take all the scandinavian prisoners back home and then he wanted to be as near to the danish border as he could and this was why they chose as a place. three days after meeting him the doctor was back in sweden working hard to assemble a rescue expedition. three hundred volunteers were quickly identifier. officers and soldiers from the swedish army. red cross doctors and nurses. among the burn adults one system and. swedish transport
9:37 am
vehicles were to be allowed into germany to collect scandinavian prisoners from other concentration camps and move them to knowing the government. allied forces by now in control of the skies over germany were informed of the plan . their response would give the whole campaign its name. printed up spoke to some commander of the allied forces and said ok we're doing this rescue actions and please don't bombard us and then the soldiers said no we can't guarantee you that so it's better if you take the buses white or if we can see which buses belong to your arrest your actions. and so they decided on painting the bus as white. and they decided to put the swedish flock to paint it on the roof so that the planes could see are these are not in german buses but these are going to
9:38 am
neighboring buses. on march the eighth one thousand nine hundred forty five the first column of swedish buses there white paint still wet boarded a ferry and the swedish court of moma. four days later the vanguard of the expedition reached the place bernadotte had chosen as its headquarters in germany. friedrichs through costal. the casa was owned by prince of telephone bismarck grandson of germany's chance. his wife and married tang boom was swedish. by then what of all. the four hundred. meter familiar than it ought to inspire them
9:39 am
a bit foggy about mother out there my mother was friendly with the bernadotte family. especially with copernic dr who came here a lot to negotiate with the representatives of the third reich. when he did that vulcan bernadotte always stayed here overnight or he got on with my mother all rather with my parents very well is good for. one bismarck's castle home. was ideally placed close to the danish border and just twenty kilometers from it so. both are happening here in the ten tallest. of the year for the school. board and. the white buses where headquartered in the xuxa involved forest and time here in friedrichs room question under sent out to various
9:40 am
different areas of germany to pick up prisoners from the concentration camps of today and to try wherever possible to take them back to scandinavia navin sibling. the first phase of the evacuation started on march the fifteenth the white buses divided into two platoon. around forty s.s. and get stop only as officers were attached to the expedition. the first platoon headed east to the camp but sachsenhausen over three hundred kilometers away. steve young son a swedish red cross volunteer accompanied them as a motorcycle escort and. murder because there's certain holds for. when we finally arrived in socks somehow some.
9:41 am
call the gates were opened and a lot of norwegians came out in a fairly orderly way. more men were there don't they were go first. and when they took the first steps more to preserve them towards freedom. that was an experience. huge experience parked really. the second white buses platoon headed south to duck out sean bell and mauthausen. they took with them the detailed lists of danish and norwegian prisoners being held
9:42 am
in nazi custody. the list helped the people from the rescue mission to know whom they searched in which camp so they took the lists and went or drove into the concentration camps and they could read out mr anderson mr young and so on must be here so we search for him and he is to come to the bus and we take him with us so it made it very easy in that part for the rescue action that the lists were there. but within two weeks the white buses campaign had become a victim of its own success. by late march more than four thousand five hundred danish and norwegian prisoners had been evacuated and brought to the noise of government camp. which was over capacity even before the first white bus arrived.
9:43 am
had been billed for two thousand five hundred prisoners and at the end shortly before the scandinavians were brought here there were fourteen thousand prisoners. so the camp was totally crowded and the people were dying. because no one had an own bed and there was not enough to eat and so on. the germans insisted that if the evacuations were to continue the swedish buses would have to transfer two thousand inmates of noise away to other camps. on the twenty seventh of march the swedish yielded to the german demand. the white buses designed to save scandinavian prisoners were now carrying hundreds
9:44 am
of others to an unknown future. as far as we know not many of them made it because they were so ill and dying but many many of them died during the transport in this ward buses to other concentration camps. and this was a problem for those going to neighboring prisoners knowing that those people had been brought away in order to give them space. they hadn't asked for this. they were not guilty but but they felt they were guilty because their. better life was. made other people die. this terrible task complete the white buses could return to their job of collecting more scandinavian inmates from camps and prisons scattered across nazi germany and by the beginning of april
9:45 am
one thousand nine hundred forty five some seven thousand danish and norwegians had been brought together in. but the ultimate purpose was still to be achieved getting all the scandinavian prisoners out of germany and away to safety in sweden. once more count full cabin adult the driving force behind the expedition returned to germany. himmler agreed this time to the transfer of the sick and of all female scandinavian prisoners. by the eighteenth of april more than twelve hundred six prisoners had arrived in
9:46 am
sweden. and. the following day british forces arrived at the river elbe practically within sight of knowing. by now german control of the camp that evaporate. the beautiful both of them. go through go through with it for reimbursement. the german soldiers who did it i think most of them run ahead at that point the war was almost over there was nothing they can do it. and it wasn't easy being a german soldier they will all feel if they were out on the streets they would tear
9:47 am
off anything which mocked them as being a charming soldier or. in the chaos now engulfing germany evacuation of the camp became a matter of logistics rather than a mission. danish busses had now joined relieving exhausted swedish volunteers and. by a polish twentieth hitler's last birthday four thousand three hundred norwegians and danes had been rescued from know and. most were brought to a reception center set up in a spa in the swedish city of ram luxury.
9:48 am
today this memorial beyond the waves in the grounds of the spa is dedicated to the efforts of the white buses expedition. but the white bus volunteers are not finished. the bus driver us all who came from sweden and denmark they told us that it was very cruel to see other people other prisoners who were non scandinavian just standing there seeing their white buses seeing the red cross and laughing and yelling and thinking they would be rescued no because red cross buses were arriving and then they had to say no sorry we are only taking the scandinavian prisoners. bernadotte wanted to try to save those they have been forced to leave behind.
9:49 am
to return would mean facing a danger. allied air forces were attacking virtually anything that moved on germany rather it's. on the fifteenth of april the white buses left free drugs on their most dangerous mission yet. a long trip south to to rasie and shot in what is today the czech republic. there were no the utility. we stayed overnight in tennessee and stopped and there were four hundred jews i think it was families we were picking up there and the. or the not there you're the saw and during the night while we slept they loaded up
9:50 am
the bus hosts they were everything was ready there were there were some complaints one baby carrots just what in fits and we had to throw them away that i remember. after a perilous return journey they achieved what looked impossible just weeks. in fact curating four hundred twenty four danish. the jews didn't come for us this is a fact it's nothing to make us about because a situation was and i should understand the situation in germany also under what conditions they could squeeze the s.s. and himmler but other couldn't stuff way of saying well i'm coming here too i want to rescue videos you could do it but after a while quite
9:51 am
a number of those were rescued. byrne adults next goal was ravensbruck and the release of french women held there. with the advancing soviet army just days away himmler unexpectedly agreed to the evacuation of the entire camp. women of over twenty nationalities. their holders. will make a point of ska. or there were many polish women on the other wouldn't really and among them there were three women that were while their pregnancies were well it oust. to their way and so wonderful that their little bucked that there was someone else to cards that was a pub come there was so many pregnant women over there the boy. and the german said
9:52 am
that it was a holy spirit to go. the other way if they fed him a own old phone hit the we have this chief medical officer with us on hold some with a smile and he told the person in charge one of them would probably become a mother during the night for him to know the route all those. who live here or not here get. although in the way the dome endorse. so much of apparel good so they fitted out a bus which they called been they fitted it out like a maternity ward and the three women were kept in there. with a neanderthal don't put it on one of them came first to a song about night. in
9:53 am
9:54 am
9:55 am
out of fear that that bit of news. that are. me you don't need me. after the german surrender the buses would return to bring another ten thousand prisoners to sweden. of thirty thousand lives saved by the white buses at least ten thousand jews. in the months that followed count foca bernadotte was honored by countries whose citizens had been saved by the campaign. jewish organizations were
9:56 am
among the first to celebrate his achievement. bernadotte was now an international star. three years later he was called on again. heading this time to the middle east which had been plunged into a war. of white plane with u.n. and red cross markings was carrying the brave count nephew of the swedish king organizer of the white buses campaigned on a mission that would seal his fate. was on his way to palestine and to his death at the hands of jewish militants.
9:57 am
a. al-jazeera recounts the shocking story of the assassination of counts fall to ben adult. tossed by the security council to mediate between arabs and israelis. his days with one of the darkest days in the quest for peace in the middle east. killing the count on al-jazeera. hello again it's good to have you back or here across the levant there's really not a lot of clouds or rain to talk about we did have some clouds passing across the
9:58 am
caspian right there as you can see that cool you had some clouds but things are expected to clear up really not seeing too much in terms of rain maybe a few spotty showers down along the southern coast tehran you may see some mostly cloudy conditions maybe a pop up shower too but down towards the south quite city at forty four degrees on thursday coming up about forty five degrees with baghdad also seeing temperatures into the low forty's as well well here across the gulf not too much in terms of any clouds as well but we are still seeing that very high humanity level across much of the region for doha we're going to see maybe seventy five to eighty percent in the morning time as well as into the late in overnight evenings high temps are few on thursday forty one degrees maybe down to thirty nine as we go towards friday then over towards and scott it is going to be a beautiful end of the week as we go with it seeing a temperature there of about thirty one and then doubt down here towards parts of southern africa we are seeing better conditions for cape town where you did have a lot of rain but we are seeing more rain appear towards durban sixteen degrees is
9:59 am
going to be high with those clouds in the forecast and then warming up as we go towards friday a twenty two and johannesburg sunny twenty four. the furniture. i mean this was different whether someone is selling or someone is very rich it doesn't matter we need i think it's how you approach an individual and that's it is a certain way of doing it you can't just buy
10:00 am
a story and fly out. present moon jerry and wraps up his north korea visit with a trip to the region's most sacred mountain. one of them or call this is al jazeera live from doha also coming up from a malaysian leader is in court facing new charges of corruption and abuse of power . position he did not wash a reef or tell his home to a hero's welcome after a court suspends his corruption sentence. and another homecoming but uganda's government has banned rallies marking the return of opposition leader.
99 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on