tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera September 21, 2018 1:00pm-2:01pm +03
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but of smugglers out of the us if you didn't own the theory is that all money this is returned to the. postcards automatically not transferred to the thousands. said to him he says that migrants are facing refugees are facing consequences that smugglers adult that's true and that's that's very true and i think there was my colleague. this esteemed that there is no to the station there is no it's very arbitrary detained of course. that's given a zation of just people trying to seek refuge fleeing countries of war by itself for me it's a big mistake. in terms of traffickers and smugglers it's particular as you know need be is now a problem for bicycle a tough time politically the law and order in force meant is not in place so and most of these things and the traffic going to is also so much going to be shit so
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the fact that there is no law and order to control that so if they're victims of more fall on the refugees and migrants i'm going to leave this summer and you abraham in any sally it with some order that was sent to sally on today from a man who is in detention right now i think it really focuses our minds on what is going on in libya have a listen. sane being dismissed eight straight from the day she is seen tearing through three we are like in this place like four hundred thousand refugees asking for your help most of us and we have like eight pregnant and more than two in children's and i mean underage even displaced no food no water we are not reach there for seven mins days they were out around us for three weeks we are asking for the world to help us again and again but no change until
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now please we need an evocation as much as you can and we are. asking the world for how but fortunately that's all the time we have for this conversation today but you can continue to follow sally's reporting on twitter at sallie h a y d now from libya we had to the koreas. she doctors. at the moment. south korean president
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jay n. has just finished a historic three day trip to pyongyang for talks with his north korean counterpart kim jong un visit is only the third for a sitting south korean president since a division of the korean peninsula and comes as nuclear disarmament negotiations between north korea and the u.s. have started to a halt so is the reapproach between the neighbors in danger or just getting started joining us to debrief istream on what happened when kim met kristin is the founder and international coordinator of women cross d.m.z. and jody town is a research and i don't understand managing editor at the stimson center hello ladies good to have you here it's a have you back again christine so where are we now in thames of the moods of the korean people how do you describe it. i mean it's extraordinary i received messages from my my allies my partners in south korea the women's peace
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organizations as well as north koreans especially you know including a friend that is a defector here in the united states and everybody is very poised they are inspired i mean i was moved to tears watching president moon address one hundred and fifty thousand north korean people who stood on their feet throughout the entire speech waving and cheering i think that we are in a new era for the korean peninsula and we have commitments from both leaders to not only remove the threat of nuclear weapons from korea but also. the threat of war and i think that their commitment to move forward in actionable ways from demanding the t.m.c. to setting up a reunion center for separated families just tangible things that are really moving progress between the two koreas christine there's someone who might agree with you on twitter this is my who says it is
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a breakthrough however they need to be given time the world wants north korea to quickly to nuclearize i guess they will do that in their own time and pace at least their opening jenny i'm wondering if you feel similarly do you see this as a breakthrough. i think it is a breakthrough in the into a korean relation ship and and the problem is is that there is now a lot of things on the agenda that will require cooperation from the united states in order to really move forward and make good on some of the promises that have been made and i think this is where we run into problems is that you know south korea is moving forward at a pace much faster than what the u.s. government is comfortable with and i think there's already some misinterpretations and misunderstandings of what happened at the summit as it relates to u.s. d.p. r. k. negotiations on denuclearization and these mystery steps gens are really going to cause problems in the future because it does create false expectations of what those next
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steps actually are and i think these are the things that really need to get hashed out now between the u.s. and and and north korea directly christine. well i think that north korea has signaled that they would dismantle two key sites one is the long range missile launch pad and then the other is the younger nuclear reactor which have long been the ire of washington d.c. but what we know is that north korea has said that that is contingent on progress made with the united states i mean you can see the images of libya and the political chaos that that country is in you see the situation what happened in iraq and now what happens with iran and north korea also has its own history to look at where eighty percent of the country was devastated by an indiscriminate u.s. bombing campaign so i think it's really crucial i think especially for americans
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who are watching the show is you're not going to see the denuclearization of north korea unless there is progress towards peace and that's why i think it's urgent right now to be advancing the conversation about a peace treaty and put it on the table. you know i got it and he may just push back a little bit and i think this is where we need to be very careful and we're christian matters is because what north korea did in that are clear reason is they did promise to commit to dismantle. the launch pad it so which is being used as not to let launches in the past but they did not commit to shutting down young guns that use that as an example and they basically reiterated that this is a process that can move forward and on an action for action basis and use shutting down young man as an example and the problem is is that you know secretary pompei iowa has already sort of claimed this as a victory of north korea committed to do this and that's simply not true and you
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know as much as it's great that there is renewed enthusiasm for negotiations going forward if we don't have a clear understanding of what has been committed in order to measure progress we're going to have a lot of frustrate. early on and so i think it needs to be we need to be very careful as to what has actually happened what's on the table what still needs to be negotiated before you know we get too far ahead of ourselves and people get really frustrated well i mean i don't disagree with that i just think that it's important to make the case that having face to face meetings and dialogue and actual diplomatic peace process is what is going to yield the breakthroughs that we see between north korea and south korea and unfortunately we don't know what state the united states is because we see many competing messages coming from the bolton camp or some from the more probing gauge went camp within the trumpet ministration and so i think that's where we have to really say that the policy of maximum pressure
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which has just been about punishing sanctions which have not obviously impacted the regime or stop north korea from advancing their nuclear weapons program has totally failed and what we need right now more than ever is supply and dialogue and meeting face to face and i my i think the majority of koreans around the world would say let's begin by declaring end to this war so that there could actually have some movement between the us perfect place to pause this conversation i hear what you're saying are you joining us well i think our community would agree we're going to pause this here for now though thank you to christine and jenny and our community for being with us on the stream. so when the queen as we head to london.
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it's absolutely not the case that everything in the museums african collections was founded on only to whatever phrase you want to use but obviously there are certain circumstances or certain events that happened. and set examples like that that influences where that material would come into the collection and in the same way today where there's a euphemism wouldn't have come into the collection in the same way now of course it's not just the bronzes that have ended up in western museums under questionable circumstances. the models and many more facts are at the center of often very nasty disputes between western museums and the country that they've been taken from today we're going to meet a woman who has come up with a novel way to confront the often uncomfortable stories behind some of the world's
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most prized exhibits alice proctor welcome to this story so excited to have you on after seeing your work i want to start with our community who love this topic mostly because they come from countries that want their artifacts back so this is one person coming out of nigeria and things that they have in their museums are better looted they should explain how they got them but they never do they just put them there with little or no details to say where they were looted from britain still has ninety nine point nine percent of the things that belong to my ancestors my own in exact scientific presented to there but how did you come up with this idea. so i've been writing these to us for the n.l. and when i started them they came from a place of frustration i had studied art history at university and i was surrounded by people all the time who worked in museums and art galleries but didn't necessarily want to have these conversations so i had
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a map background of museum education i had the information that i needed to do this work and i just started running the tours to see what would happen so when they first found it was secret the galleries had no idea that we were running them at all. i'm still not working for the museums i do this independently so it was a way of bringing the information that i had and appealing to an audience that i knew was there so these are uncomfortable our tours not not my description you are description of what is on an uncomfortable our tour give us a little show and tell we're going to show and you're going to tell. go right at a swim put on screen they go oh there we go ok so this is a painting of a man called william fielding this is in the collection of the national gallery fielding was one of the first british tourists to travel with the east india company in the sixteenth so this is at a time when britain is expanding its colonial power its creating trade networks
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that will become the routes to imperial control over india and large parts of south asia and fielding travels with the company as a tourist he goes and comes back and dresses up so this is kind of a seventeenth century cultural appropriation in the way that he's dressed in this painting he's wearing a combination of european clothing and the silk jacket and trousers that he's brought back to india with he has a son of an accompanying him in this painting we know that two savants travel from india back to england with fielding we don't know their names we don't know anything about them but one of them has been included in this painting presumably as part of an illustration of his well traveled. these connections in these influences that he is now performing back in britain so i want to share this thought from andrew who takes it from an interview with you andrew says she says
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there is always one side of the story that has been privileged over the other so this question is there are ongoing efforts to interact with people on the other side of the story and get to know how they feel being quote unquote robbed by europeans for many years i want to use that to pivot to a question for you alice and what do museum officials think of this that they ever talk to you about incorporating this into some of their own to yours. so there are certainly some institutions that are more receptive to this than others and to be clear there are plenty of museums that do we just possess communities to discuss the best way of displaying these objects and to begin negotiations to what repatriation most museums are doing now and most museums that i guide in don't actually work with me they make it very clear that i'm an authorized i don't participate in that at all i just want to make sure that people understand what you're doing you know you kind of it's kind of sneaky so you go into one of the old
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gus museums in the united kingdom in london and you have in your own seeing kurt tour that's going on that's not official i'm not telling people your your truth as you see it the sort of let's get down to basics the reality behind the pictures and colonialism and the empire etc so it just reminds me of a scene from the black panther. where the museum is you know going into you and then an artifact is taken out and you know that belongs to a condom and your kind of doing that i am but will not steal israel yet and i'm talking much more differently about colonial history. i try and use the space museum so create an area where we can have these conversations it's so much more powerful to talk about dispossession to talk about representation in front of the objects and to think through the ways that they've been manipulated by the institution the fact that they have multiple meanings to different people and every
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individual who comes into that space will see something different and we'll gauge that story in a different way so yeah they are essentially sneaky to us although the museums do know about me now obviously i'm a death we know about you now. so this cover we got in live from piano on you to return the ancestral artifacts they're worth millions so speaking of that tell us about one more those white cups that we dishonor scream about a minute ago what are those. so that is the white cup a shot at a high in the middle ampara and these are slightly trickier objects because they're an antique when they are quiet by the british so this cup dates from as you can see on the screen sixteen fifty seven and it's a quiet by the british suck at eight hundred fifty seven so some of your viewers might know that that's the date of what leiter referred to as the first indian war of independence or the subway rebellion depending what side you're on it's a moment of enormous conflict that transforms the history of the british in india
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and is one of the key moments that leads towards the end of the east india company aggregation all the. queen victoria as the empress of india ok so those cuts are acquired by someone working for the studio company in very very g.b. of circumstances and they come to that u.k. via his collection alley so again it's next summer i mean london i'm signing up for a secret tour at alice thank you so much look you're on my website on my laptop here and you will see alice's work on the whole website it's the exhibitionists dot org and our minor to our community if you have a story you'd like to see other stream us at a data stream. to . move.
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caring for relatives with. hope of finding any survivors of a ferry capsized in tons and tons of lake victoria at least ninety people are confirmed dead but that toll is expected to rise as hundreds of others remain missing. by three countries uganda and kenya said to have sunk between akureyri and decor islands on the lake south east. as a tragic history of maritime disaster as over the years with overcrowding often playing a role in one thousand nine hundred six more than eight hundred people died when the. lake victoria is considered one of the worst ferry disasters of the last century and in two thousand and eleven nearly two hundred people drowned off an
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island in the indian ocean. eight hundred people when it sank and many survived. and for one year later one hundred forty five people were killed in another ferry disaster in the same area. well let's talk now to catherine sawyer he's in nairobi in neighboring kenya and catherine's this is now a situation where we're simply going to see that death toll keeps rising absolutely and the situation is still very fluid things are moving very fast we have just had an affidavit from the regional a commission of ones or this is where this tragedy the area where this tragedy took place and he says that this operations have moved from rescue to recovery he said that so far just this morning forty six more bodies have been recovered forty four people have been rescued since yesterday thirty seven of them a deal in hospital he also said that the ferry was carrying more than four hundred
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people that is clearly an overload and in line with what we've been hearing from witnesses on the ground who was saying that it appeared that the ferry was overloaded they were it was a market day so many people with their goods there were vehicles in the ferry bags of cement animals as well all of them being transported from one island to another where the market was a we also i spoke to the district commissioner of ones a who said they are still waiting for more divers from other parts of the country to come help with this recovery effort the locals have been very helpful a fisherman using their bows to try and lend a hand to the rescuers who are already there he also said there have made an appeal for more vessels to come to that part of lake victoria to help ten this ferry around it is deal facing down so the situation rocket lee changing the
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death toll as you mentioned expected to rise and do we know an official investigation into what has happened has begun yet catherine. well we're not sure whether investigations have began but what we do know is dr president mughal fully issued a statement last night and he said that this investigation is going to start immediately and i think the focus of this investigation is going to be this issue of overcrowding this as you mentioned in the introduction is not an isolated issue we've had several theories of size in the last few years and all these blamed on overcrowding so this is an issue that the investigators are going to focus on they're going to be scoring the offices trying to see whether there are any records there we are being told that there ticketing office stuff might have been on that ferry that capsized that he had his data with him so investigators are going to be
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trying to see whether they are there is any backup records perhaps they're also very likely going to be looking into this see what the next all of this ferry but we're also told that he had recently undergone through a series of tests and servicing as well so a lot of people really looking to the government to make sure that this investigation is done speedily to make sure that there are measures in place to ensure that this a tragedy doesn't happen again there's going to be a lot of questions going forward to the government questions that the administration needs to answer very quickly in these governments or many thanks for that update from nairobi. that investigation by the associated press news agency appears to show a systematic campaign by the chinese government to strip young wiegand muslims of their language and culture it comes after the un said an estimated one million muslims in the shin jan wage and had been rounded up or of being held in so-called
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re-education camps something the chinese government denies and a hand has more. when many petrov old with her husband and young baby to turkey to visit his sick father she lived for if they had children with family the oldest was eight the youngest just three but that trip appears to have coincided with what the united nations says was a systematic campaign by the chinese government to round up muslim league is indeed the minorities under the pretext of countering terrorism and religious extremism made it says chinese authorities weren't just targeting adults her children were apparently taken to the soften it she hasn't heard from them since then o'hearn on the vocal only after i got the news i was so upset i one of them to grow up with me . isn't true every time i think of them i think of the things that have happened i feel horrible isn't a day when i haven't cried. all the so many pages now living in exile unable to
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return to sion jiang she believes her children were swept up in a large scale campaign aimed at replacing the muslim leader identity with the chinese one something the chinese government denies. consistent measures are intended to promote stability development harmony and at the same time strike against ethnic separatists and terrorist opposition movements according to the law . abdulrahman i mean doesn't buy the official chinese line from cash he fled china five years ago after what he says was repeated her arrest meant for his activism and writings since then his wife was a restated and he hasn't heard from his five children his daughter is thought to be at this so-called bilingual school but a sign at the front gate tell students to speak only mandarin on campus. to stimulation obviously it's brutality it's even worse than being killed what the
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chinese government's doing is torture. some analysts say china is repeating now widely condemned colonial practices of taking children against their will from their indigenous communities weavers you the education system as one of the primary threats to their future as a society is a weaker society and to their families to get there they made it describes an overwhelming sense of despair and i want to tell them i was so sorry all. dispirit being separated from the children she loves despair that the next generation of week may be stripped of the language and identity they hold so dear miriam holland dizzier leader of yemen's hoofy rebels has called on his supporters to stand firm against the saudi and led coalition trying to defeat them as thousands of people filled the streets of the yemeni capital sana'a to celebrate the fourth anniversary of the who these takeover of the city the u.n.
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is trying to mediate a peace talks to end the fighting between the government and who pays the contractors killed more than ten thousand people and left millions displaced. and the interview with al jazeera the u.s. actually general antonio terrorists are in new his calls for all parties to avoid a major escalation in the who controlled city of data. our concern is first of all humanitarian concern elation to a battle for a day that needs implications for the civilians and it is also a concern about the harbor and the possibility of harvard to suffer if the conflict . you know they the becomes acute so that is why we have been recommending to the parties to avoid a mess of battle and to do that because obviously in the planning of the calculations that might exist on one side or the other there is this reality that is very worrying which is the dramatic humanitarian situation. in yemen yemen is
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a very complex situation you have of course the hutus and the government you have. the visions in the south and clearly different perspectives in addition to it from the you will you from the government of the time now you have a tribal reality that is complex with alliances that shift you have this presence so it's a very complex situation in the country that is why it is so important to come to an agreement between the hutus and the government of the coalition it's a first step it will not solve all your many problems it's a first step to create the conditions for a united. central government in yemen to be able to deal with all the different contradictions and problems that rule still remain. that the enemy is present tran die acquiring has died at the age of sixty one years says he passed away in a military hospital after a serious illness his last public appearance was on wednesday when he met chinese
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officials kwang was vietnam the second most powerful figure in the frontrunners to take over as texas general the communist party about morgan takes a look at his life. randy frank's time in office was brief but marked by domestic crackdowns and a bid to stabilize relations with the united states who were sworn in as president of vietnam in april twenty sixth in the sixty one year old had been a public security minister and police general areas which had been the focus of criticism of the nation's human rights record under his rule vietnam launched a crackdown on corruption and dissidents posting on social media. abroad one try to stick to vietnam's policy of non-alignment whereby the nation doesn't rely too heavily on any one superpower and exploits rivalries to its own gain he courted various international leaders from poland to iran and was the last head of state to see cuba's fidel castro before his death but vietnam's maritime disputes with china
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in the south china sea and its long term concerns over its know the neighbors territorial ambition has seen its edge a little closer to the united states one time billions of dollars worth of deals with the us president donald trump and pursued a trade pact after the us pulled out of the transpacific partnership once enemies on the battlefield won and u.s. defense secretary james mattis discussed the prospects of military corp in march as a sign of his growing relationship and maybe carrier with five thousand soldiers and pilots on board anchored near the port city of the land this was the first time that had happened since the end of the vietnam war in one nine hundred seventy five and the historic visit carried a message to another superpower now that was a very significant decision. and very astute because the. heart of the united states navy and so was about to clues into sauce china sea
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as a show of defiance against china the rule of president is largely seen as her money but posting was seen as a stepping stone to becoming the communist party chief and best the nation's top leader. still ahead have on al-jazeera we meet nigeria's money wives young girls sold into slavery to repay their parents debt. i'm a list of them getting colombia's coffee region where farmers are abandoning fields like the one behind me due to the very low international price of the bean. hello again welcome back to international weather forecasts we're here across the philippines we're looking at some better conditions over the next day a lot of those clouds are moving towards the south china sea and are going to see a break in the weather you can see right there luzon not looking too bad but as we
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go towards sunday we are going to be watching what's happening out here in the pacific very carefully you notice of there towards the top of the chart a tropical storm symbol that means we have a psych cycle that is forming but we don't expect that storm to make their way its way towards the philippines we may see some clouds we may see a few showers with some feeder bands but that storm is expected to make its way to the northwest maybe affecting the uco islands over the next few days while here across australia for alice springs about one hundred sixty days since you saw the rain the last time and there it is right there that area of clouds producing some showers over alice springs what we are going to be seeing over the next few days is that is going to be pushing over here towards the east you back to sunshine has to make your way toward saturday twenty six degrees there but here in brisbane about twenty four degrees for you on saturday but then those clouds push through maybe some rain showers in in the area as well maybe twenty five degrees as we go toward sunday and down towards melbourne we are going to be seeing some southerly winds few at about eleven degrees in perth a nice and warm day if you were temperatures of twenty one degrees.
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a clan the star and world of illegal trade what you have here is not just archaeological objects you're talking about a political dimension where the spoils of war are smuggled and sold to auction houses and private collectors buying or selling artifact is where finance is the be headings and muslims in the middle east don't sal don't cry that's one quick solution. trafficking on al-jazeera.
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top stories this hour rescue efforts on the town's named shores of lake victoria have now turned into a recovery operation after a ferry capsized on thursday at least ninety people are confirmed dead but that number is expected to rise as hundreds of others remain missing. an investigation by the associated press news agency appears to show a systematic campaign by the chinese government to strip. language and culture it says they're being separated from their families against their will. and the president of vietnam has died in hospital following illness. he was one of vietnam's three most powerful leaders but his presidential role. the british prime minister is facing increasing criticism back home from her own party rivals and local media they just mystery's him a performance at a youth summit in salzburg as
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a humiliation after european leaders rejected have deal the two sides remain devices with divided with just six months to go european council president. called . proposal on the workable deal called the checkers plan is the only one on the table. yes concerns have been raised i want to know what those concerns are there's a lot of hard work to be done but i believe that there is a willingness to do a deal but let nobody be in any doubt that as i've always said you know we are preparing for no deal there is no counter proposal on the table at the moment that actually deals delivers on what we need to do and respects the integrity of the united kingdom and respects the result of the referendum ever about the shirt of the viewer that why are positive elements in that proposal. just
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a framework for economic cooperation. not least because it risks undermining the single market the question needs something more than only good intentions i mean we need a. clear and precise guarantees. and parts of africa girls as young as five earth still being sold to throttle their parents debt part of a tradition known as money marriage is the so-called money wives can face decades of slavery and sexual exploitation as their past from one owner to another advantage with reports from the town a better they in one area where money marriage is widely practiced practiced. resort is one of nigeria's top tourist destinations but in the shadow of the mountain some nigerians continue an ancient tradition with child protection workers say condemns young girls to a life of slavery and sexual exploitation. i couldn't richard is
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a missionary who rescues girls who have been sold off for so called money marriages the money goes to buy outrightly you know an uncle can even be trucked to girl the flesh is born and a man will wait it will if it takes forty years in the new in demand days the brothers can still go to get their brothers money wife if there are hundred homes in better of it you would have hardly ten that do not have one or two more name marriage money marriage practice going on there so you have over ninety eight percent of families involved in this kind of marriage the history twenty one young women in the past nine years community leaders say the practice was banned years ago that it was there but it is stopped that's right in one thousand and their money a woman talking about it was not done people come up to say i am looking for a way after mary. in the family you are like in their family when
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you are in their family maybe someone is sick or one isn't there it has a mother in the police or that damn william william william was in one thousand one and it's true also i was. five year old miracle was married for money just a few weeks ago she now lives with some missionaries who say she's pulled by the marriages happen she was bored to please her teenage sister who died was herself a policeman wife couldn't have a baby with our own or. rosita he was rescued nine years ago. i was about ten years old when i think you mean. my father day when i was seven years and when i was ten years think into me. rose has received psychological counseling and taught some skills she says she's found confidence has a new boyfriend and the baby. but says our past stands in the way of true happiness
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. the boy parent yet only appointed him is somebody my new wife will get married so i mean the baby does not be the. victims through the practice of selling girls into slavery and forced marriages still continues in some communities around here and encouraged by the elders only a few of them get rescued and organizations working to support the victims say they've been threatened on many occasions and want to stop their work that when i couldn't reach it's missionary work for the greece chapel of nigeria and collision course with people here i don't have a music group they're working around me but i can't go to assess my bank anymore because i've been promised that any time on scene on the ranch i would regret ever commented that i rely on many here say money marriage could take a long time to write again before that happens countless numbers of young girls
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face a life or pitch in poverty illiteracy and slavery i would decrease al-jazeera better over. the white house says it's authorized new cyber operations against foreign countries ahead of november's midterm elections the move is part of a new cyber strategy the white house as well as allow the government to protect the nation u.s. intelligence officials say they expect a flurry of digital attacks in the lead up to the sick of november vote. high stakes standoff is underway in washington over the u.s. president's pick for supreme court a woman who's accused brett kavanaugh of sexual assault says she's prepared to testify a publican's have told her she has until friday to decide whether that will be critical hane reports. do you swear that the testimony you're about because confirmation seems certain brett kavanaugh poised to cement a conservative supreme court for a generation i do until this woman went public with an allegation she says cavanagh
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sexually assaulted her in high school christine blasi forward once the federal bureau of investigation to look into the matter any witness who lied to them would be committing a serious crime but republicans said no they said that the gate is about six times more. that's not true the f.b.i. could investigate if president donald trump told them to he won't i had the floor republicans had demanded that she testified next monday her lawyer responded she'll testify next week just not on monday where i'm focused right now is doing everything that we can to make dr ford comfortable with coming before our committee democrats say this is just simply unfair and charge republicans don't actually want to know the truth someone who is lying does not ask the f.b.i. to investigate their claims we have to get to the bottom of this as americans
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before we put someone on the supreme court for life this is high stakes and not just because of what it will mean to the highest court in the land right there are women took to the streets in record numbers after trump became president angry at his treatment of women if republicans are seen to be mistreating a woman now with less than two months until the congressional elections they risk this year showing up next at the ballot box way. a point brought home thursday by a fresh round of protests and arrests over this controversial nomination. political hand al-jazeera washington. one of the biggest banks in the u.s. says it plans to lay off more than twenty six thousand workers over the next three years wells fargo is trying to recover from a series of scandals that started in twenty fifteen involving employees opening fake accounts and selling unnecessary insurance. coffee prices
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are at a twelve year low and as a result columbia and follows a struggling to make a decent wage now coffee produces a calling on big companies like starbucks and nestlé to subsidize farmers as under has more from rivera i leave your coffee planes are as lush and loaded with beans as ever yet for the first time he's considering leaving them on the tree let's start with the situation as it is right now we can't continue producing we are running out of fertilizers we can't pare debts or pay the workers we've reached our limit the price buyers pay for a leave us pressures arabica beans has fallen to less than one us dollar a pound that's less than what it costs to grow the coffee in colombia's mountainous labor intensive coffee region you've got going to. i've seen people crying over what they're being paid for a bag of harder and beans people just crying out of desperation the. current prices
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mean that farmers make less than one cent of the u.s. dollar for each cup of coffee sold across the world farmers here in colombia are wondering for just how long they'll be able to work at these prices there's already gave up like the owners of this field that abandoned it two months ago. it's very painful it's devastating because we spent all of our life growing coffee. with the wood carving. these are new plants that just started producing last year so much work such a big investment yet the situation is so bad that these people decided to let the beans rot. this mall representation of farmers held a sitting in front of the embassy of the european union in bogota to bring attention to dear situation. says he's giving up hope so. i'm not sure what we're going to do what i do know is that it's not sustainable and that we might be close to the end of the road. the colombian government said it's
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considering emergency financial help for the growers but unless farmers receive a more fair share of the cut their beloved java will leave them with nothing but a bitter taste i was in them. if they were out simon's disease awareness day and people live longer more wanted to vela pain the disease in the waiting is caring for alzheimer's patients is an emotional and financial challenge for many families and health workers are warning that industry won't be able to cope if the number of patients continues to rise while brunell's reports the martha di caring for her ninety one year old mother is truly a labor of love she wants my attention twenty four seventh's you'd like a three year old florencia garcia was diagnosed with alzheimer's disease twelve years ago martha with her job to take care of her mother i didn't know where
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to start i didn't know what was going to happen i didn't what to do there was nothing out there she needs care around the clock i cook i believe. my doctor i'm her nurse my friend. i sleep in the room with her because i'm afraid. get up and fall five point seven million people in the u.s. have alzheimer's treatments are emerging but there is no cure it's only going to get worse because people are living longer communities like this will bear a heavy burden of alzheimer's disease in the coming decades research shows that latinos and latinas are one and a half times more likely to develop alzheimer's disease the non let's you know whites alzheimer's among latinos in the u.s. is projected to increase eight hundred thirty two percent by twenty sixty things
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for the most part are not ready for the wave of alzheimer's that will impact what the communities families part of that is because of low levels of awareness. to increase awareness advocates have produced a tele novellas style a video series about a family coping with the disease but society as a whole is not ready for the surge in alzheimer's completely unprepared we knew it was coming we've known it was coming for thirty years that we're unprepared on all levels we don't have the investment in research we have a totally unprepared health care workforce martha diaz has advice for caregivers don't do it alone attend a support group we talk with our stressed out we cry we listen to each other. we help each other. define smart as life and that's fine with her
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i have no regrets. no regrets the dairy don't have or. i don't know what's going to happen to me a disease without a cure but with the treatment. these are our top stories rescue efforts on the towns and insurers of lake victoria have now turned into a recovery operation after a ferry capsized on thursday at least ninety people are confirmed dead but that toll is expected to rise as hundreds of others remain missing catherine soy has the latest from nairobi in neighboring kenya so far jack this morning forty six more bodies have been recovered forty four people have been rescued since yesterday thirty seven of them a in hospital he also said that the ferry was carrying more than four hundred
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people that is clearly an overload and in line with what we've been hearing from witnesses on the ground who were saying that it appeared that the ferry was overloaded they were it was a market days to many people would be a good there would be a cold in the ferry bags of cement as well all of them being transported from one island to another and investigation by the associated press news agency appears to show a systematic campaign by the chinese government to strip young. culture says that being separated from their families against their will. the leader of the rebels has called on his supporters to stand firm against the saudi and coalition trying to defeat them that as thousands of people filled the streets of the yemeni capital sanaa to celebrate the fourth anniversary of the who take over the city un is trying to mediate peace talks to end the fighting between the government and who
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sees the conflict has killed more than ten thousand people and left millions displaced. the president of vietnam has died in hospital age sixty one the government says it has been sick for several months he was one of vietnam three most powerful leaders but his presidential role was ceremonial. the british prime minister is facing increasing criticism back home from our own party rivals and from local media they've just mystery's amaze performance as an e.u. summit in salzburg as a humiliation of the european leaders rejected have breaks it deal the two sides remain divided with just six months ago european council president donald tusk called maes plan workable as i headlines say with us one on one east is next. you stand the differences. and the similarities of cultures across the world.
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al-jazeera. little boy or. out in the deep blue sea in the oceans wild inhabitants can be a magical experience. these are a wide ranging intelligent socially complex predators you can't forget when you see an orca breach right in front of. the ball. at that sound it's just absolutely. it's like they're breathing. but these majestic creatures along with other marine life are being hunted to supply an unprecedented demand for entertainment in china but we're seeing in china
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is a very rapid explosive growth would be the labrat marine theme parks and a lot of these places do not have the expertise to be doing what they do. and inside these popular aquariums we find evidence of widespread neglect and abuse. i'm steve cho on this episode a one on one as we go behind the scenes of china's marine theme parks expose the dark side they don't want to see. this film. i think it's a very thick headed. what xander indulge in china. and the stands are until i center stage i don't. i and
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high flying building i love the crowd. i'm. all these shows have been common in western countries for decades in china aquariums are new and exotic. places where the growing middle class can get close to wild animals and entertain. but for the animals in china's marine theme parks insiders tell us pleasing the crowd have been told. by. your actions when the ones in. some. of. the letter and no one
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ensure you mean tarbush or for all i bought was all i was there for. over two years one on one east investigated china's multibillion dollar aquarium industry. examining more than fifteen marine parks and interviewing more than a dozen insiders we uncovered widespread abuse. new. order tobis you go to ground. zero being worked at two of these koreans training seals and dolphins oh yes i've heard about one thing you want to use your judgment calls or just all clear just how close a shot was here. and in chickens or is a whole. change. generation deafens how their shells were for sure though you'll be off in a fashion all the other lot you just don't remember how. rather than happy
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cooperative animals being says he found them often sick and distressed when they weren't performing he was ordered to lock seals in tiny cages and dolphins that would normally swim hundreds of kilometers a day in the wild were constrained in tiny tanks do you turn around don't want to for him a chance harnesses don't you know the war may have to answer you can how to tell you how often i shall open your program over time the wood and patricia you told your children to also tell it to you. to call you for her truth and he will the war go to her attention that will talk alone because she got to come up higher than a ocean before we come back up and running with the wrong approach of being poor boy. our staff tell us beating them with sticks is common practice and that's not all being says the performances are physically punishable. you tell your slit
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although you are you a child as i had time to do for you by our time i mean you were well told are you sure you are strictly clear all of the real trial knows how much better no push you watch or was taught or shows will surely see ya as his childish truth to it was new to me what turns you into a top. and a pretty miserable death. at one aquarium our investigation found a freezer full of carcasses. a secretly recorded conversation with the marine parts that reveals how he died. knowing this. for a minute. or. the vet goes further ask him to keep. high rates of premature deaths under wraps we're
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going on. more secretly recorded footage reveals six turtles unfed and dumped in bins. we also discover arctic fox is on display in obvious distress. but. this man will call levy was responsible for feeding and caring for animals at a major marine park. the degree of suffering he discovered shocked him. and she went home. for. the little woman. was one. home.
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from. a war you. know you see the ocean being with you through the. bullshit walks zero zero zero on the bridge or the walls you have. zero. zero. zero zero zero. zero zero zero zero machine in. the film dozens of seals blind from cataracts and suffering from skin diseases. too sick to be shown to the public they are left in shallow dirty water in areas called dying rooms. and tom in the old home and then torture. your new border city. north. mind the abortion being committed by the.
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court and common for the bushes i'm sure. she means business for you says. high court. record all. trainer being confirms what lee found and blames the blindness not only on the lack of natural light but on the aquarium shows themselves. want to. rule no one. also here. to for a walk sure. told her all that small children taught to which we have. any say is the marine parks failed to provide anything close to adequate care for their animals. have to be able to submerge and these are these guys seem to be sitting on
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the bottom of the tank and they're halfway out of the water. we show these images today only rose one of the world's most well known marine mammal scientists and. they're swimming in their own feces. that looks like it's like a concentration camp. they're being cruel to these animals to keep them. from and that's just cruel and it would meet the standards and. or europe. but in china there are no national laws against mistreating animals. for decades naomi's documented the treatment of captive animals around the world she and other animal welfare activists have business. dozens of facilities in china and say they've never seen such bad conditions. several of the facilities that i visited were very young they were only five six seven years old. and i was
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surprised because they looked like they were thirty or forty years old both in the terms of their design was very old fashioned small circle in a circular tanks which just aren't it's not done anymore. and they were just degrading they were. rusting they were chipping they were crumbling. concrete was actually crumbling in a six year old facility. and their crumbling infrastructure is having a devastating impact on the health of animals. in one case dolphins and bellew girls playing with and ingesting paint and other debris. when they start doing this sort of. repetitive behavior with a found object which is a in this case a paint chip which could be toxic. and is indicative of failed husbandry
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i mean how many times are they eating paint chips a day. it doesn't have to be a particularly toxic pain for that to become an issue. yes. through well our investigation we found an industry that publicly appears to care for animals. i. was. but in private treats them very differently. than the. sons are born from sins of parkland. and from a member of. and a lot of people want to share of these profits. the number of aquariums being built is growing astronomically a few years ago there are only
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a handful of these places in china today there are more than sixty multimillion dollar marine theme parks with about a dozen more being built. nowhere else on the planet have so many marine animals been taken from the wire and put on display. aquariums here each boast of having on average twenty thousand species of marine learning. even moles are getting into the business workers tell us the treatment there is even worse. this is a never ending cycle. for the animals in the wild where they are just being. taken inside and often their natural lesions put into boxes in china and they die. so this is just a one way conveyor belt. and it ends into the other and this is supposed to be
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entertaining. we asked the aquarium as we investigated and the government ministries supervising them to respond to our findings of mistreatment they all declined. to find out how the parks source their animals we put on hidden cameras and meet a key industry adviser he's helped many aquariums acquire their marine mammals from around the world. for you to be to know how to shoot video that we would like to make up to you. feel you have time to do that and that's how they did that then went on to the fucking. we've told them we're developers looking to set up a marine park goes to the heart of what. well you know if i go. because in human history i'll tell. you it's really.
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good if you're going to seek help i know yeah your money because those. who have it down. the road that goes for like this. after buying the animals consultant advises us that to get them into china we will have to bribe quarantine officers pessimistically you know you from what. he did to you to go with them i think if you think. that's how you might have made it to the public this is this is just. an example that. while there seems to be no problem buying the animal trainers seen another media trade he warns us to avoid the feelings of other marine parks in china or. we're going to work so . i'm going. to be off a device that we go. please on the. bum on the city to. go
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with this. person you know what he was going to. do that what we have done. that this will be a good time he just has a case he makes money says there was a cut in the. studio with us because the marine parks viewed their animals as disposable he says many don't invest in skilled staff will get out in the. town and we'll shout what want to go could. leave that to me and. all woman i'm sure you would you want to leave. former trainer being confirms marine park workers don't need much experience to his surprise this even included. the vents. to all your column for the different. good. tool for a shoe move you're. too young to be on the international mission therefore you
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don't want to go to for india. to answer to how much. national. one marine park even left the better near we care up to trainers like him you know you should let me hear one of the front tire what i can you should you want to hear you are for someone to show for you drop your insurance if you have. someone tell me all get attributed to me all the way with you know. being says he was astounded to be put in charge of dozens of animals he had no qualifications or training and was just a university student studying account. and charge you enjoy the time this winter before which other people you know actually you often when children are too young to hear. the emotion you feel how do you misuse of words are for you if you don't trial for us your handlers are sure to chelsea why don't you
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tell her ours to have or not hold water and all the time to live the methadone though it's all total pneumonia. and that's why the lack of training has naomi rose not only worried about the animals but also the aquarium employees so looks like this scuba diver is scrubbing the bottom of the tank to the whale obviously this is all a game but the divers in a vulnerable position what if the well look he's his if the potential just pull the guy's regulator right out of his mouth none of that she says some practices she sees are downright dangerous to actually have a diver who's dependent on a tank and a regulator in the water with i don't know three at least. wild blue whales. that are clearly not trained interacted with him appropriately i get the feeling they just don't realize that this guy is actually in danger and i can serious danger
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potentially oia. well posing as marine park developers we were given a behind the scenes tour of one of china's aquariums during it the general manager here confirms that one of its cleaners almost r i i got it i have him i think i think it's going to go down but i think. the manager says the beluga was plain but it almost killed the man that he. sees he. eats and top up. i would have been with my little girl she somehow got there i think what i have that i don't have to have to spend much more you don't want because i'm a really hot i said let me tell you have caught on who turned out how do you want me to get out of my good how do you know you only get that. i have
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a five yeah i think i saw that. he was. he says the aquarium doesn't insure employees because due to the high risk premiums are too expensive and should send us at least. full service if you don't but you don't believe me put a good deal will come one of the blue to the full don't fade and open up that you go into it down you know which if you do a good job. and they have been gentle but. don't move by you i just don't leave you to sort of double should you be simply you get. to see a circle or you actually sort of then just i think. these are wild animals and according to the manager cage in them in confined spaces can lead to hyper aggressive behavior. dangerous not. just to their carers
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but to other animals. here researchers film a dolphin attacking another for hours on end. former trainer being says he witnessed a dolphin bullied so much its only escape was to jump out of the tank an action that would have led to its own death. would offer you you know you are felt healthy potent combination has been. our horse here for. lehigh shrilly. pago a lot of water on the lookout. but despite concerns over animal and employee health marine parks have long argued these serve a valuable purpose educating the public about marine life. but naomi isn't convinced. it really is completely ludicrous for them to argue that you have to see
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the animal in the flesh to care about it if that line of logic is true then ninety percent of the species in this world are do and it isn't they hunt in captivity and what eight year old have you ever met who isn't totally jazzed by dinosaurs and i think. that what experts like naomi know is that with the growing demand from china's marine park. the number. one of the most majestic and sought after animals is the orca also known as the killer whale. in this rare vision become child in russia. fishermen were filmed netting orchids. it is one of the only places in the world that still allows such captures it's
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devastating to or populations because. they're so tightly bonded to family they're so social they're so intelligent they're so cultural that if you just come in in a slave raid and remove you know three or four babies and the mothers are screaming in pain and that's what happens when they're trying to protect their offspring while these capture operators come in and cut them out and put them in a corral and you know it's chaos it's trauma. earlier this year the russian government approved the capture of twenty six more organs destined for the chinese market. well once popular across the world most older shows like this one at sea world in florida have been stopped. at the widespread condemnation and the deaths of trainers. but in china it's
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a different story they're gearing up for orca shows. one of china's largest aquariums has released footage of orcas being trained in their facility. secretly recorded conversation with one of china's largest animal importers explains why they're so highly sought after well you know what they are going to. push off with your we're going to transfer. to the home where you go. and what you're going to have a way. to go. according to government import papers china's marine parks have been bringing in orca's since twenty twelve. despite this none have been put on display. the aquarium manager we met with tells us the holdup is the fear of bad publicity
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and. i've got time you have a coach. if you're so. good you the buggy if you're not even on going jim bob. i'll need. you to yank a tire. he will put you on. the one. who remembers scientist naomi rooms or goes will never be on display. in china and she says the key lies in changing public perception. the has to be the whole the whole past to believe that china and russia even can move along the same societal trajectory the same growth and self-awareness and public awareness. and that the
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two finally get to the point well you know the sprog. when you see animals like these in their natural habitat. it's clear how highly intelligent and highly social they are. once you know that naomi believes it's very hard to accept there's a place for them cooped up behind glass. instead she says they should be left free. to roam the launch. live in a country plagued by poverty but for india's billionaires life is all about glamour luxury and christine. one of the new. business updates brought to you by qatar airways going places together.
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because you know. this is zero. on. live from coming up in the next sixty minutes. the death toll rises off to a ferry capsized. on the tanzanian side of lake victoria many are still missing. vietnam's president trying to die quiet has died at the age of sixty one we'll take a look at his legacy. i don't know what. it is or what to do there was nothing out there a disease without a cure
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a strong warning on the growing numbers affected by alzheimer's. i'm paul reese with the sport tiger woods hits the top of the standings and the season ending top championship we'll hear from him later in the news hour. a lot of hopes are fading in tanzania for around two hundred fifty passengers missing after a ferry capsized the number of confirmed dead is rising quickly the latest toll now at least one hundred that is expected to rise as more bodies are found in lake victoria. well this lake covers three countries tanzania and uganda and kenya it's believed the ferry sank between who caraway and cora islands on the lakes south eastern shore tanzania has a history of very disasters over the years with overcrowding often playing a role in one thousand nine hundred six more than eight hundred people died when
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the m.v. sank in lake victoria one of the worst ferry disasters of the last century in twenty eleven two hundred people drowned off zanzibar the island in the indian ocean that is part of tanzania the passenger ferry was carrying eight hundred people when it sank one year later one hundred forty five people were killed in another ferry disaster in the same area let's speak now to catherine sawyer who is in nairobi in kenya for us so catherine the death toll continues to go up what what's the latest that you're hearing there on the recovery operation. the death toll continues to go up the situation as you mentioned is moving very quickly and the commissioner the regional commissioner all of warm ones and this is where this tragedy happened had a press conference about an hour ago and he said that forty four people today have
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been rescued thirty seven of them still in hospital he say that this operation now has moved from rescue to recovery and we also spoke to a district commissioner who think that they have made an appeal a local appeal for divers from other parts of the country to come and help in this recovery effort as the locals we are told have been very helpful local fisherman using their boats to try and recover as many bodies as they can. in the regional commissioner also said that more than forty four hundred people were on board that ferry that is clearly an overload and it's want people have been telling us on ground thursday was a market this a many many people were being transported from one island to the next island where the market was and they had their way is in there they are many bags of them and they were vehicles as well and any more of their domestic animals to take to the
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market so we're told this ferry was just a few meters from the dock when people rushed forward to get out of that ferry once it's dark this is a common occurrence and so people moved to one side of the ferry and this is perhaps what led to it toppling over and catherine given this is unforeseen on the first time as we showed there that there's something irises happen what sort of investigation can we expect. right now all the concentration really is on this recovery effort everybody is just trying to do what they can on the ground to make sure that bodies that are still trapped in the water are moved from the lake by the president john ponder mughal fully did issue a statement last night and he said investigations are going to begin immediately and one of the focus areas obviously is going to be this issue of overcrowding and they're going to be looking into the offices to see whether there are any records
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of the number of people who were actually on board we have been told that the ticketing off the stuff was in that ferry and he might have drowned with his data so it's going to be difficult for them to try and piece together this information of just how many people exactly what we're also expecting that it's very likely that investigators are going to be looking into this he was in as of this ferry but we have been informed as well that it had recently gone through a series of tests and servicing as well but a lot of people really has them just looking on to the government to do more because as you mentioned this incidents have happened in the last few years very many people have been killed in such tragedies and you know always being blamed on overcrowding so people are looking really at the government to do more in terms of
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investigations making public their findings and also putting measures in place to make sure such tragedies do not happen again indeed a lot of unanswered questions there catherine so a life for in nairobi. an investigation by the associated press news agency shows a systematic came campaign by the chinese government to strip young muslims of their language and culture the united nations has said around one million muslims in the shin jang region have been rounded up and held in so-called reeducation camps the chinese government denies this but on a honda has more. when many pit travelled with her husband and young baby to turkey to visit his sick father she lived for three children with family the oldest was eight the youngest just three but that trip appears to have coincided with what the united nations says was a systematic campaign by the chinese government to round up muslim wages and other
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minorities under the pretext of countering terrorism and religious extremism all. made it says chinese authorities weren't just targeting adults her children were apparently taken to the soften it she hasn't heard from them since then o'hearn out on the can to become a let me after i got the news i was so upset i one of them to grow up with me. isn't true every time i think of them i think of the things that have happened i feel horrible isn't a day when i haven't cried. all the so many pages now living in exile unable to return to shinji ngo she believes her children were swept up in a large scale campaign aimed at replacing the muslim leader identity with the chinese one something the chinese government denies. consistent measures are intended to promote stability development harmony and at the same time strike against ethnic separatists and terrorist opposition movements according to the law
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. abdulrahman i mean doesn't buy the official chinese line from cash he fled china five years ago after what he says was repeated her arrest meant of her his activism and writings since then his wife was a restated and he hasn't heard from his five children his daughter is thought to be at this so-called bilingual school but a sign at the front gate tell students to speak only mandarin on campus. to show them russian obviously it's brutality it's even worse than being killed what the chinese government's doing is torture. some analysts say china is repeating now widely condemned colonial practices of taking children against their will from their indigenous communities we view the education system as one of the primary threats to their future as a society is a weaker society and to their families to get there they made it describes an
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overwhelming sense of despair and i want to tell them i was so sorry for going with . dispirit being separated from the children she loves despair that the next generation of weaker may be stripped of the language and identity they hold so dear miriam holland al-jazeera. the leader of yemen's hooty rebels has called on his supporters to stand firm against the saudi iraqi led coalition of trying to defeat them thousands of people filled the streets of the yemeni capital sanaa to celebrate the fourth anniversary of the hoody take over the city the united nations is trying to mediate peace talks to end the fighting between the government and booties the conflict has killed more than ten thousand people and left millions displaced when an interview with al jazeera un secretary-general antonio good terror has renewed his calls for all parties to avoid a major escalation of the hoody controlled city of what data. our concern is
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first of all humanitarian concern in addition to a battle for a day that needs implications for the civilians and it is also a concern about the harbor and the possibility of harvard to suffer if the conflict . you know they the becomes acute so that is why we have been recommending the parties to avoid a mess of battle and to do that because obviously in the planning of the calculations that might exist on one side or the other there is this reality that is very worrying which is a dramatic humanitarian situation in. yemen yemen is a very complex situation you have of course the hutus and the government you have. the visions in the south and clearly different perspectives in relation to it from the you will you from the government side now you have a tribal reality that is complex with alliances that shift you have this presence
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so it's a very complex situation in the country that is why it is so important to come to an agreement between the hutus and the government of the in the coalition it's a first step it will not solve all your many problems it's a first step to create the conditions for a united. central government in yemen to be able to deal with all the different contradictions and problems that will still remain. other president of vietnam has died in hospital at the age of sixty one the government says tran daikon had been sick for several months he was one of vietnam's three most powerful leaders but his presidential role was largely ceremonial he morgan looks back at his life. grand icon's time in office was brief but marked by domestic crackdowns and a bid to stabilize relations with the united states he was sworn in as president of vietnam in equal time to sixteen the sixty one year old had been a public security minister and police general areas which had been the focus of
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criticism of the nation's human rights records under his rule vietnam launched a crackdown on corruption and dissidents posting on social media he'll also be remembered for a major expansion of the power of the ministry of public security and the police in the larger vietnam political system he quite clearly has made the ministry of public security now one of the preeminent organs of power in that country and it continues to affect the lives of daily via the maze and not of her positive way i mean in terms of rights violations he was he was the leader of the band abroad one try to stick to vietnam's policy of non-alignment whereby the nation doesn't rely too heavily on any one superpower and exploits rivalries to its own gain he quoted various international leaders from poland to iran and was the last head of state to see cuba's fidel castro before his death but we had norms maritime disputes with china in the south china sea and its long term concerns over its northern neighbors
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territorial ambition has seen its edge a little closer to the united states one signed billions of dollars worth of deals with the us president donald trump and pursued a trade pact after the us pulled out of the transpacific partnership once enemies on the battlefield and the us defense secretary james mattis discussed the prospect of military cooperation between the two countries in march as a sign of his growing relationship a navy aircraft carrier with five thousand soldiers and pilots on board anchored near the port city of the land this was the first time that had happened since the end of the vietnam war in one nine hundred seventy five and the historic visit carried a message to another superpower now that was a very significant this. money spout and then the astute of so because the color would. ease the hide of the united states navy and so was about to clues into sas china sea as a show of defiance against china the rule of president is largely seen as
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ceremonial but posting was theme as a stepping stone to becoming the communist party chief and the nation's top leader and. for more on trend icons impact and legacy let's speak now to southeast asia analyst benjamin so whacky in bangkok thanks very much for being with us so how how should trend icon be remembered. well who clearly be remembered far more for his forty years or so literally two thirds of his life that he spent in the police force and in the ministry of public security five of those years as the minister himself for more for those years than for his his two and a half year tenure as president but essentially when you say vietnam it's become almost synonymous with with human rights violations in the region among other things and indeed the late president is as much on account to account for that association as is anyone else at least going back over the past couple of decades
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and he is a controversial man in many respects and endured this criticism for his crackdown on human rights. were there any any positive elements to his legacy. yes frankly speaking he's part of a government that has very consistently and very vocally protested chinese encroachment on illegality in the south china sea despite the fact that vietnam is one of as many as five or six countries within the association of southeast asian nations that has territorial claims disputes with china it's the only one of those five countries that is this consistently spoken out against china and even if you accept the fact that it's that it's that it's citing principles of international law and international norms freedom of navigation etc is done very selectively in contrast to the lack of it here and to those norms domestically in vietnam
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nonetheless i think the government of vietnam should be applauded for standing up for for their rights in the south china sea breeze of the china and clearly the late president would have been part of that decision to do so good to speak to benjamin benjamin the west bank oh thanks very much. well we've got plenty more ahead on news news our nigeria's money wives young girls sold into slavery to repay their parents' debts. and environmental disaster in the u.s. floodwaters from hurricane florence mixing with toxic waste. and joshua and prevent can trade verbal blows one more time ahead of saturday's big heavyweight title fight find out what they said later in sport. all that still ahead but first the secretary general of the norwegian refugee
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council yan egeland has sounded the alarm on the deteriorating conditions at a refugee camp at the borders of syria jordan and iraq the makeshift camp is in a u.s. controlled no conflict zone it is home to fifty thousand people who are in desperate need of food and medical supplies the u.n. has not been able to deliver aid to the camp since january syria and jordan blame each other for blocking access yan eglin says needs are exploding in his words and he urges governments to give the green light to an aid convoy or power loss this is the u.n. secretary general and regional humanitarian cold coordinator for the syria crisis he joins us live now from gaziantep in turkey thanks very much for being with us now i'm sure there are a lot of reasons for this and plenty of blame to go around but how did things how did things come to this point. really the situation is really appalling at the moment we cannot go to any longer this is
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a group of people that have. been impossible. really literally in the desert between a very close adjacent to the borders of jordan the most often point within syria what is appalling is that the last time to grow to a system was in january and the time before was in the summer of indian and you have women children and many civilians or in desperate need now the latest development is also lost access clinics that you have up until a week ago so we're really talking about this desperate situation. everybody allow us to be able to say. you will go from within syria to the. south and forty of syria and why can't the various parties involved here the governments of jordan for example and. why can they not come in to any agreement on this well on our side we have humanitarian assistance that can be
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deployed from the basket. it would really cross into a non-government controlled area the coalition is also there. it requires the cooperation of everybody everybody needs to the humanitarian needs of these people above and beyond anything out we're talking about families we're talking about children and. really. increased medical cases people children are hungry so politics has to come to the side and a lot of the humanitarian agencies to provide assistance to the people who are in a desperate situation certainly appreciate talking to a panel. joining us from gaziantep in turkey. now in the philippines the president's proposed changes to the constitution have provoked more protests opposition groups say rodrigue a detailed plans for
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a federal state will lead to dictatorship of the march in manila was on the forty sixth anniversary of the declaration of martial law by former president ferdinand marcos many filipinos called him a dictator and activists say there are similarities between then and now which. is live for us from manila so this is this is an area anniversary that is marked almost every year since mr marcos left power what makes this this year's events different all right doesn't it. doesn't appear that can hear us there polish apologies for that we will try to get back in the meantime we'll move on the tiny southern african kingdom of swat teenie formerly known as swazi land is holding parliamentary elections including its critics are calling it
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a farce the political parties are banned from taking part half a million voters must choose from individual candidates for fifty nine seats while the remaining ten will be appointed by king mswati the third himself the king has veto power over legislation and he appoints the prime minister and cabinet and is constitutionally above the law all right it looks as if we can go back to jimmy in in manila right now talking about this demonstration that is going on in. the philippines capital. just tell us about what what is happening there there right now why these events are significant this year this time round. well as them you know we've spoken to activists. but then it's basically you lived
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through the time of the fourteen years of martial law under former president ferdinand marcos and they see basically there is a need to remember history there is a need for the new generation of filipinos understand what truly happened during that time and basically this history means serve as a lesson so that's history will not repeat itself they also made some saracens about the time of former president for urgent marcus who's a current through all the presidents of the good that there did they describe the current government as as a basically a sweeping authoritarianism and that this is something that many should warn against there was a special mention all the president of the good that this so-called war on drugs basically in comparison to the same also appears cormier present for denmark but there are different generations of community there also of this is i'm a marxist and young people from universities activists who have been also been on this by several awfully spokespersons over the past few days this is what they
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fight against basically the difficult off with their science representative has been branded basically as a communist as a rebel and then this is what the basically describes as that as the need for other uses authoritarian governments like this heir to the sickly as i am. jimmy latin does in life first there in middle thank you now in parts of africa girls as young as five are still being sold to settle their parents debt as part of a tradition known as money marriages so-called money winds can face decades of slavery and sexual exploitation as they are pos from one of ono to another now many dream reports from the town of bitch of in nigeria where money marriages are widely practiced. aboud result is one of nigeria's top tourist destinations but in the shadow of the mountain some nigerians continue an ancient tradition with
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child protection workers say condemns young girls to a life of slavery and sexual exploitation. i can i'm richard is a missionary who rescues girls who have been sold off for so-called money marriages the money goes to buy outrightly you know and no call can even be trucked a girl before she's born and a man will wait it will if it takes forty years in the demand days the brothers can still go to get their brothers money wife if there are hundred homes in better of it you would have had live ten that do not have one or two more name marriage money marriage parties going on there so you have over ninety percent of families involved in this kind of marriage history twenty one young women in the past nine years community leaders say the practice was banned years ago that he was there but it is. right in one thousand and one
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a woman we are talking about it was not that people who come out to say i am looking for a way after mary. in the family you are like in their family when you are in their family maybe someone is sick or one isn't it has a mother in the police or that i'm william william william was in one thousand one and it's true also i was pass or source of a policeman wife couldn't have a baby with our order. rosita he was rescued nine years ago i was about ten years old when i think you mean. my father day when i was seven years and when i was. into me. rose has received psychological counseling and taught some skills she says she's found confidence has a new boyfriend and a baby but says our past stands in the way of true happiness. the boy
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parent yet in their point i miss somebody in my new life. i mean the baby did not mean to be. victims say the practice of selling girls into slavery and forced marriages still continues in some communities around here and encouraged by the elders only a few of them get rescued and organizations working to support the victims say they've been threatened on many occasions and want to stop their work that when i couldn't reach its missionary work for the grace chapel of nigeria i set him on collision course with people here i don't have any security walking around me but i can't even go to access my bank anymore because i've been promised that any time on scene on the ranch i will regret ever commented that i rely on many here say money marriage could take a long time to write again before that happens countless numbers of young girls face
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a life of pitching poverty illiteracy and slavery i mean to greece al-jazeera betcha. all right in a few hours we'll have the weather with kevin but still ahead on edges it up. in colombia coffee region where farmers are abandoning fields like the one behind me due to the very low international price of the beam and in swore the cleveland browns get their first win since december twenty sixth in will see how they celebrated this star debut from their new quarterback. from dusky sunsets over the sprawling savannah. to sunrise atop an asian metropolis. well we have some big changes happening across europe over the next several days all due to a friend system is pushing through of course we've been having a lot of storms pushing through parts of the u.k.
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across parts of the north sea and into scandinavia that's no different than what we're seeing today is you can take a look here on our forecast map a broad area of low pressure with a front pushing through a lot of clouds right there temperature wise a big drop so we're going to be seeing temperatures that are well above average take a look at this for berlin thirty degrees expected high today but behind the system a big difference we're looking at london at seventeen as well as paris at about eighteen degrees now if once this front pushes through temperatures are dropping significantly we're talking berlin going from thirty degrees down to a high of sixteen degrees on saturday same thing with warsaw vienna as well what's going to happen after this as we go through the rest of we can and into monday this frontal boundary is going to be sinking all the way down into southern greece so our first big cold blast is going to be coming into place as we go through the weekend see better get ready for that well across the mediterranean we're looking at an area of low pressure that is right here just off sicily and parts of course sardinia as well that is going to produce
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a lot of rain for some locations and here across. that rain could cause too localized flooding and we'll keep you updated on that. the weather sponsored by cats are and always. were. i have dedicated almost my entire professional life to that were mentioned in fight against corruption and what i have heard is that we need chaffetz we need also to shine the light on those shampoos and this award bridges that gap that existed in this. nominate your own version here all shined a light on what they do and to have not shine
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a light on your hero with your nomination for the international space award two thousand and eighteen for more information go to isa war dot com. hello again you're watching and just in a reminder of our top stories this hour hopes are fading in tanzania for around two hundred fifty passengers missing after a ferry capsized at least one hundred people are now confirmed dead the total is expected to rise as more bodies are found in lake victoria. the president of vietnam has died in hospital at the age of sixty one the government says tranda
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klang had been sick for several months he was one of vietnamese three most powerful leaders. the philippine president's proposed changes to the constitution have provoked more protests opposition groups able to get details plans for a federal state will lead to dictatorship the march in manila was on the forty sixth anniversary of the declaration of martial law by former president ferdinand marcos. a ugandan pop star turned politician bobby wine says he'll keep fighting the government or die trying in his words he was speaking to supporters outside his home near the capital kampala after returning from the united states where week he received medical treatment one says he was tortured in uganda in police custody michael ware has more from camp are. these people want change in uganda and they think pop star turned politician. can
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bring it. he's better known as bobby wine he's very popular among young people who gathered at his home to wait for his return from the u.s. . prison. for us this. everything they use god we've done is we citizens who don't have guns they use many and they inform. and the men in uniforms made it clear that people were not allowed to gather in the street just being in the wrong place at the wrong time was enough to get beaten. well the wine says soldiers tortured him when they arrested him last month fiame denies it was in america for medical treatment i will soon as he landed at yak hopis bundled him into a car and rushed off the last thing they want to crowds of thousands of his supporters gathering on the airport road that leads into the capital kampala.
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back at his home supporters came to welcome in his popularity the threat to seventy four year old president you know rima seventy who's ruled for more than three decades the only ones i see inside of clothes were just in a cave like the thankfully there was so over the border they are very excited to see the they don't know as well now the place they were accompanying the ok i know the police they gave her the i only allow it was the they kill her that's the president of the earth the police didn't want to take any chances so they pulled him away through his front door was three quarters of ugandans around that yes old many of them are on employed a corpse off it was the change of mass it appeal i have come to continue exactly where i stopped i am going to fight on and like i say that we must get our freedom
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or we sowed die so i will get our freedom his wife and children hope it won't come to that but you can and never have a peaceful change of power you will be winds being charged with treason. which will to get crowns than any politician in the government attempts to stop him and he seemed to make him more popular. malcolm webb al-jazeera kampala uganda. britain's prime minister is facing growing criticism for her brags it plans from her own party political rivals and the media they say to raise in may was humiliated by european leaders at thursday's summit in salzburg they rejected a so-called checkers plan to leave the european union as unworkable with just six months to go before britain is out may insist her plan is the only option yes concerns have been raised i want to know what those concerns are there's a lot of hard work to be done but i believe that there is a willingness to do
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a deal but let nobody be in any doubt that as i've always said you know we are preparing for no deal there is no counter proposal on the table at the moment that actually deals delivers on what we need to do and respects the integrity of the united kingdom and respects the result of the referendum. everybody the shirted of you that why positive elements in the czech proposal on the framework for a comic operation. not least because it risks undermining the single market the question needs something more than only good intentions i mean we need to. clear and precise guarantees liberated siddhis what you probably didn't bridget is the choice of the british people and it's pushed by some who predicted easy solutions but it tells us one think and i fully respect the british sovereignty by saying this it has shown
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us that those who think that they can easily do without europe that it'll go very well and that it'll make a lot of money are liars. it is global alzheimer's disease awareness day and as people live longer more and more developing the disease in their late to use caring for all time as patients is an emotional and financial challenge for many families and health workers are warning they won't be able to cope if the number of patients continues to rise rob reynolds reports the month of caring for her ninety one year old mother is truly a labor of love she wants my attention twenty four seventh's she is not going to be here florence garcia was diagnosed with alzheimer's disease twelve years ago martha quit her job to take care of her mother i didn't know where to start i didn't know what was going to happen i didn't know what to do there was nothing
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out there she needs care around the clock i cook i believe based. on my doctor i'm her nurse my friend i sleep in the room with her. because i'm afraid. she'll get up and fall five point seven million people in the u.s. have alzheimer's treatments are emerging but there is no cure it's only going to get worse because people are living longer communities like this will bear a heavy burden of alzheimer's disease in the coming decades research shows that latinos and latinas are one and a half times more likely to develop alzheimer's disease the non let's you know whites alzheimer's among latinos in the u.s. is projected to increase eight hundred and thirty two percent by twenty sixty one i think for the most part are not ready for the wave of alzheimer's that will impact what you know communities families part of that is because of low levels of
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awareness he. sees to increase awareness advocates of produced a tele novellas style video series about a family coping with the disease but society as a whole is not ready for the surge in alzheimer's completely unprepared we knew it was coming we've known it was coming for thirty years that we're unprepared on all levels we don't have the investment in research we have a totally unprepared health care workforce martha diaz has advice for caregivers don't do it alone attend a support group we talk with our stressed out we cry we listen to each other we help each other caring for florencia defines martha's life and that's fine with her i have no regrets no requests that there you don't have or i
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don't know what's going to happen to me a disease without a cure but with the treatment called low robert oulds al-jazeera los angeles. or timers disease is the most common kind of dementia it causes problems with memory thinking and behavior worldwide around fifteen million people suffer from dementia and almost sixty percent of them live in low and middle income countries that's because of how quickly the elderly population is growing in places like china and india nearly ten million new cases of dementia emerge every year that's one every three seconds and the total number of people expected to be living with the condition by twenty thirty is projected to grow to eighty two million so let's speak now to paula barbara you know she is the c.e.o. of time is disease international thanks very much for being with us so in your in your estimation are we properly prepared for this well no we
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aren't and today his for the most they are now our biggest challenge here is to raise awareness and demand char as a global epidemic and there is still so many people who thinks that as i met in demand at a product of aging anything not tendencies that we need to walk at it we will find a solution but we need everybody to be aware that the disease exists and has to be treated as such and their aides have their noses globally are still very very low and certainly as we wait for a cure as your previous correspondent pointed out there is a lot that we can do about improving stand that of care globally and if you have an older family member or a loved one who may be at risk what are some of the signs that people should be looking for for early signs of dementia. they reported that we published
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today their words are most report which i suggest to everybody to read because it tries to explain simply the hall conundrum around what is apennine with the damage disease or why we are struggling to find a solution and one of the things we look at is a reserve chair more widely sort of search and risk reduction is equally important it is definitely true that we can do something about our kind of give us killer health by exercising that we can feed ourselves back to nutrition is really important to place definitely a part in getting. in reducing the risk of getting. a disease and dementia and let's not forget the brain and how. keeping your brain moving keeping your brain exercise is absolutely fundamental in your inducing the scope of developing dementia but all the other symptoms that the people develop there may be
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a clue to. later later dementia the the warning signs characteristics for example yes. we have we. have produced a ton warning signs old out to gain anything that report there are any number of things people report to different science at different times or wherever and dementia is not just one illness there are hundreds of four different types of dementia and it manifests itself in different ways a lot of people point out to memory loss so that's not necessarily the first sign some time is the is an issue with spatial awareness to be less aware of the space surrounding you or some people report of relatives wandering for example so there are quite a few signs that can point to our to maybe an issue about some time is not our
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simple as the sign. what is really important to wherever is that if that is any idea some kind of confusion related to the match i may be setting be spatial. cognitive impairment of some kind. is very very important to seek and diagnoses and one of the things that we are finding increasingly is that in a lot of the war of the event the doctors are not aware about dementia so we need to also the educate educate primary care practitioners we need to educate the pharmacies people to whom are the people that you are mean when you go or asking for advice about what to do about a relative just just briefly and finally what do you believe we're any closer to to finding a cure or an effective treatment for alzheimer's. well the
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signs are more promising i think we need to look at this in the broader spectrum we are not going to find one magic pill that's fifty short one hundred the fourth act of the mencia think about cancer that is different treatments for different type of counseling will be the same with dementia even if we find one thing is not going to address everything however we also have to look at care there is a lot of advances that can be done about caring for people and talking for example or about risk reduction that is a lot that can be studied to further we are getting closer that is a lot of new frontier cinema chatter searchers are trying now looking more broadly at the number of factors and that is very exciting and we do hope very much that that will be a cure but we need funding so this is not going to have ten ladies we're calling a.d.i. for one percent of the societal cost of the disease to actually be devolved to finding a cure for demand all governments are have
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a role to play nice. good to speak with you paula joining us there from london thanks very much for being with us. rising floodwaters in north carolina carrying pollution and toxic chemicals across the u.s. state it is threatening waterways and drinking water john hendren explains. the floodwaters of hurricane florence are unleashing a toxic slurry of hog waste north carolina's swollen river basins are home to thousands of hog and poultry farms in four thousand lagoons filled with called waste the state's department of environmental quality says at least one hundred ten of them are leaking into floodwaters or are likely to start leaking soon yes there are some problems today but the concern is what's happening or what's going to happen over the next few days isn't all that heavy rain floods that way downstream two years ago the waters that followed hurricane matthew flooded fourteen lagoons
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but none breached as the flood waters of florence continue to rise environmental officials say this time the worst is yet to come we did see a couple facilities today that were already in serious trouble they were surrounded by water there were surrounded by water there are spray fields or completely covered up the situation is not good but it's not good today but it's likely to get much worse throughout the rest of the week as the waters start to get to their or their flood levels. through carolina has nine point seven million pigs they produce ten billion gallons of manure each year president trump has promised federal aid for the recovery but once the groundwater becomes polluted that job becomes much more difficult and if ingested the excess nitrates in hog waste can cause blue baby syndrome a potentially fatal condition in which a child's blood cells are deprived of oxygen the storm has already proved fatal to fifty five hundred pigs in three point four million chickens and turkeys. another
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environmental hazard coal ash which contains toxic substances like mercury and arsenic that can pollute waterways drinking water and the air north carolina. his duke energy company reported that enough coal ash has spilled near the city of wilmington to fill in a limbic sized swimming pool the state's environmental managers say north carolina's pollution problem is likely to grow worse as the floodwaters continue to rise john hendren. all coffee prices are at a twelve year low but as a result farmers in colombia are struggling to make a decent wage now they're calling on big companies like starbucks and nestle to subsidize farmers. has more. i leave your coffee plants are as lush and loaded with the ever yet for the first time he's considering leaving them on the tree. with the situation as it is right now we can't continue
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producing we're running out of fertilizers we can't pair of debts or pay the workers we've reached our limit the price buyers pay for a leave us pressures arabica beans has fallen to less than one us dollar a pound that's less than what it costs to grow the coffee in colombia's mountainous labor intensive coffee region you've got going to. i've seen people crying over what they're being paid for a bag of harder and beans people just crying out of desperation the current prices mean that farmers make less than one cent of the u.s. dollar for each cup of coffee sold across the world farmers here in colombia are wondering for just how long they'll be able to work at these prices there's already gave up like the owners of this field that abandoned it two months ago what's happened is this and it's very painful it's devastating because we spent all of our life growing coffee quickly would lead us to these are new plants that just started
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producing last year so much work such a big investment yet the situation is so bad that these people decided to let the beans rot at the. a small representation of farmers. in front of the embassy of the european union to bring attention to do situation. he's giving up hope. i'm not sure what we're going to do what i do knows that it's not sustainable and that we might be close to the end of the road. emergency financial help for the growers. farmers receive a fair share of the cut. will leave them with nothing but a bitter taste. but one. of the world's best players joining forces with poland.
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all right let's get you caught up on this board now here's paul thanks a lot tiger woods has found himself back at the top of the standings it's a big tournament again the fourteen time major champion shares the lead after the opening round of the two a championship after a bogey on the opening hole woods was on fire with his putter he made this huge putts for eagle on the final hole to finish on five under par and share the lead with the rickie fowler. bill played off again to earn my way back to this.
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to this level. is something i was hoping i would do to begin the year but i don't know. i've done it now this tournament is the season ender for golf's richest prize the fed ex cup and world number one justin rose put himself in pole position for victory he's just a shot behind woods and fowler rose is second in the overall standings behind bryson to shambo who struggled in the opening round of rose wins they'll take home a ten million dollar prize. boxes anthony joshua and alexander prevent ken will weigh in for their world heavyweight title fight later meanwhile joshua who's the defending champion has been weighing in on the issue of drugs in the sport his rival privette ken is a russian fighter who failed to drugs test back in twenty sixteen but after serving a short ban he's got the chance to take all four of joshua's belts if he wins their fight in london the britain says it's not good for the sport and wants tougher
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punishments. you know if you're on drugs you get banned simple as that yeah and then number two it's not for me to make that decision are not part of can me but i just do believe in a fair fight you know i mean it's not like. i'm just trying to prove my swing i'm going to. knock you out and. help me off and it should be more severe because. i've always been in the business in boxing myself whining about what the committees are doing order judge's order referees in there and you know me so much as my opinion it should be a bit more civility. my job in this issue is to show. the non-drug she is a strong woman that's what i have to do. if they were so you know concerned about drug cheats and he would have been a president. obviously the powers that be have let it happen and he seems to be a man that you and i just have to deal with that tennis fans are in for traits with
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two of the greatest players in the men's game teaming up on friday night roger federer and novak djokovic have played against each other forty six times but the two stars who played doubles together for the first time in the laver cup. team europe against a world team federer will take on jack sock and kevin anderson. thrilled i'm excited i'm never played was novak somebody great battles on the singles court and to finally team up together i think is going to be very special for both of us i think we still have to talk over it a little bit exactly maybe you know who's going to take the lead or who you know how do we play exactly this is what this competition is all about you know bringing us all together and we're going to have. soccer was one of those that was was in the world across the net saw going to have a great challenge and you know hopefully good support from team members and you can
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have fun i mean you're talking about. two of the four or five greatest players that ever played tennis you know on the same court so just from that standpoint alone it was it's. extremely interesting to check it out louis philippe scolari's palmero us will take two away goals into the second leg of their cup at liberty dora's quarterfinal that's after the brazilians beat colo colo in chile on thursday bruno and he case scoring in just the third minute in santiago. and then due to getting the second after william had hit the post the return leg is in sao paolo in two weeks time. brazilians fluminense they are playing in the cold pursuit americana ever although getting the first for the rio team against they put dave or co-anchor in quito ecuador the second goal killed off lukas getting the ball from his goal keeper taking on a couple of midfielders then a few defenders joined in the fun but couldn't get near him easy ball across from luciana to score to nil to fluminense say the teams are back at the monaco on
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october the fourth. the boston red sox became the first team this season to clinch a division title and they did it on the turf of their old enemy the new york yankees lifelong yankee fan at ralph lauren was born close to yankee stadium in the bronx and the designer was brought on the to throw the knights first pitch but their regular pitcher masahiro tanaka couldn't help fashion a victory against the m.l. b.'s most successful team so far this season. one of several home runs for the red sox who have won their division three times in a row for the first time in their history. now the cleveland browns the decision to take a break i'm a failed as the number one pick in the draft has paid off big time the quarterback made his n.f.l. debut as a substitute and led the browns to their first win since december twenty sixth again that was a streak of nineteen games until mayfield's intervention against the new york jets
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on thursday the two point conversion one of his highlights they had been fourteen nothing down when he came on after tyra taylor was concussed brown's went twenty one to seventeen. so this was the first celebration cleveland fans that i have had in six hundred thirty five days there was a bonus in it for them as well the browns had promised to unlock fringes of bay around the city when they finally got there when hopefully it wasn't quite past its use by. and i will have more lighter stuff thanks paul and that is if all this news and for me has him speak about laura cali is here in a moment with more of the day's news go. and has lots more our web site as well as zero dot com latest on all the stories we're following there for you.
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al-jazeera recounts the shocking story of the assassination of count dot. tossed by the security council to mediate between arabs and israelis. his days would prove one of the darkest days in the quest for peace in the middle east. killing the count on al-jazeera. was just ten years old when a devastating earthquake struck mexico city in one thousand nine hundred five the quake damaged her family's apartment and the government moved them to distant shack
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around seventy families who lost their homes in that earthquake still live in this camp. that the government raised our hopes and then abandoned. politicians have promised that they won't allow a repeat of what happened after the earthquake in one thousand eight hundred five but the cost and complexity of housing hundreds of people living in camps is a major task and one that many people here think the government will fail. if they . couldn't touch it i. thought why does this updated nafta have the kind of support that it needs for we bring you the stories of the shaping the economic world we live in counting the cost on al-jazeera. now look i'm. well you. know some of it i like.
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the death toll rises to one hundred ferry capsized on the tanzanian side of lake victoria many still missing. from doha also coming up vietnam's present one has died at the age of sixty one we take a look at his legacy. conditions at a syrian refugee camp on the jordanian border plus. i don't know what. to do there was nothing there. and this.
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