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tv   Gaza Between Fire Sea  Al Jazeera  September 25, 2018 6:32am-7:00am +03

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huddled with trump at a white house state dinner in april urging him to exempt components for the apple watch and other company products how long will this trade battle last no one knows the one thing that business truly hates is uncertainty but at times models tom and biz trying to keep calm on the trade turmoil going to take time for the end result. then to see if these tears are beneficial towards the u.s. or detrimental. now. trumps tariffs taking their toll from tech to tory's rob rebels al jazeera los angeles the russian court has sentenced opposition leader alex in iran need to another twenty days in jail he was freed and immediately arrested in the early hours of monday morning brutalizing an unauthorized rally earlier this year about the who's president vladimir putin's most visible opponent has numerous jail sentences
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heading a series of unsanctioned protests across russia. china used to be the world's largest importer of plastic waste but in january they're going to boast restrictions which in effect ban imports that's left many western nations scrambling would have to deal with their own buildup of rubbish that allows for her ports for amsterdam as part of our series on waste china has decided it no longer wants to be the world's rubbish collector and that's causing big problems for the global waste industry for decades nearly half the world's waste has been sent to china to be processed but new government regulations have put a stop to the import of millions of tons of low grade blessed six which now need to find a new destination ben because recycling business in the netherlands shipped half of its plastics to china says it changes he says he's forced to bring twice as much as he used to for incineration. for me as a recital it's
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a shame of course or like i said it was at least fifty percent inside these bills which can be even more than seventy percent and now they are not allowed to import anymore and we're not allowed to export. what other countries wants to get rid of china saw as raw material for its growing economy the dutch port of rotterdam was to gateway sending waste across the ocean to asia was cheaper than processing it in europe we buy a lot of goods from china telephones the laptops plastic goods so we barter their welfare by ship those containers that are so it's very cheap to fill them or plastic toys have come from the same goods and son back to china every year europeans generate twenty five million tonnes of plastic waste of which only a third is collected for resizing out of that food the netherlands would only recycle the high quality plastics for decades the low quality plastics were shipped
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off to china now that's no longer an option so what does europe do instead the e.u. say lack of capacity to recycle its old place sticks is now beginning to show more waste is getting burned dumb to landfills and even illegally disposed of but there is hope the basic problem of plastics is they go in very many for righties some scientists think this could be a wake up call for the industry forcing companies to use material that's easier to recycle if you look at the plastics that are produced today. they are their medical . complex to recycle and if something doesn't get recycled. a lot of it into a new environment. in recent years across europe new techniques have been developed to tackle the plastic problem the director of this dutch startup says is becoming possible to keep using the plastic that's already out there we're going to dying
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over here with this technique we can endlessly reuse plastic waste it means you don't have to produce new plastics anymore in the end you won't even need oil anymore it's not clear if we can recycle our way out of the plastic crisis we've created but by closing its doors to the world's waste at least china made other countries take responsibility for a problem they've long shift off their shores for now al jazeera amsterdam. still to come on the program tell you why one of the biggest prizes in the attorney has been praised as the most. and its history. in the middle of indian ocean is finally rescued. thanks. business updates.
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business updates.
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thanks. to the world's biggest and most controversial at competitions returns to tate britain every year it generates a debate about what can be defined as this year it's about how to define an artist for nominees or working in film include an anthropologist and an activist group and . pressing political issues. this year's turner prize contains no paintings no sculptures only films each shown in their own darkened room and yet it is the most politically charged collection in the prizes history. thompson sixteen millimeter films feature victims of police violence and racial a piece. shot approaches poetic work shot on her i phone
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exposed sexuality and identity. as an. anthropologist neemo hymens feature film and documentary focuses on politics in the developing world from. each uses film in a different way and while the line up usually generates debate about what can be defined as art this year it's challenging the definition of an artist the fourth nominee for ending architecture is a group of investigators made up of architects lawyers journalists and scientists they look into allegations of state corporate violence and they don't consider themselves artists this room is like stepping inside the mind of a forensic investigator what the group of tried to do dissect exactly what happened in twenty seventeen when a bedouin village or an israeli police killed during their clearing of palestinian homes in the negev they view satellite images. from al-jazeera to try and
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determine where the blame lies. the agency open up a new dimension to the art world and critics a keen to embrace the forensic architecture most going into the room. because different he was not just in our artist he was also a scientist and today it's a venture alive part of the architecture but even the curator can't tell if the public will appreciate so much politics in the prize it's important incredibly. to tape that we are talking through the communities that we start or you know our republican situation we are we off to the nation's collection of artwork it is the nation's they are in it we look after it and so we always want to know what people think with a big love it or hate it the turner prize is reflecting major shifts in making. al-jazeera london. sports news that's crossing over to far and.
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lauren thank you so much croatia's look at moderate chiles won the best seat for men's player award. around the dread midfielder from the golf competition from liverpool's mohamed salah and former club teammate were naldo who had won the prize for the last two years moderates was part of champions league winning campaign last season and also led this country to being runners up at this year's world cup al-jazeera xli welling's has more. this turned out to be a really unusual award ceremony in that it wasn't one the best now prior by either christian or now though although you know messy who wasn't even nominated not since two thousand and seven has it been the case that one of the most hasn't been awarded fief is best player they've also been winning the other big award the ballon d'or but a breakthrough coming from a thirty three year old croatian before the world cup started everyone knew that
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cannot judge was a really good player i don't think people might have anticipated quite the impact it had it have as the heart beat really of that croatian side and i'm sure with a population of less than five million and he led them into the final and they played really well in large part of the final despite losing to france he just won the champions league with round which would of course mimic a part of that side and what i like about this is that really is the epitome of attaining man and yet this is recognizing him as an individual and i think that's a really nice thing for someone who just goes about his business without any fuss even though he plays around would you leave in the revenge the world cup final look amount which doesn't strike you as a superstar like right now don messi but this is a proud moment for him and a problem for his country. francis did a day sean was another was among the other winners he won coach of the year after leading his country to winning the twenty eighteen world cup in russia liverpool's
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mohamed salah won the award for the goal of the year the winning strike being a spectacular effort against everton in the english premier league and brazilian forward marta has been named best women's player for the sixth time. tiger woods's celebrations have been cut short less than twenty four hours after winning his first p.g.a. title in more than five years the american arrived in france to prepare for the ryder cup words and the rest of the u.s. water in paris the usa are the defending champions but europe haven't lost a home match since one thousand nine hundred three the showpiece event kicks off on friday but so much of the talk was about tiger's stunning comeback win in atlanta on sunday. i guess the amount of attention and the buzz around the p.g.a. championship around the torch championship the crowd on the i still think it was and i thought the eighteenth fairway yesterday. was amazing so i think it obviously
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brings not to this event needs much more energy or or that brought to it it's probably the biggest the grandest event all golf but it will add that much more excitement i believe you know tiger woods for the game a goal from him winning golf tournaments again that is something that's pretty and then i think we all benefit from it because in the end whatever it is these twenty four guys are going to do this week in the game of golf needs a boost of somebody like him that transcends the game to the masses needs him at the top of the game so for a running go if it's brilliant. team europe their world rivals in tennis is laver cup germany's alexander's drive beating south african kevin anderson in chicago as you win taking the trophy thirteen to eight it's only the second time the trophy has been played for but the three day competition now looks to have established itself as an annual fixture. miami heat star dwayne wade says walking away from
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basketball's top league will be very difficult the three time and be a champion earlier this month that this is his sixteenth season will be his last. could seem to say i'm going to be very all caught on with this whole thing i'm going to be very well called. the farewell tour is not something i want to think people well you know i really really really didn't want is. so i just look at this is me just saying you know more so than anything but. and then injured sailors stranded in the southern indian ocean since friday has finally been rescued indian yachtsman tommy was taking part in a solo round the world contest called the golden globe raising badly injured its back and a storm severely damaged his boat the australian maritime safety authority had been running the rescue operation and on monday a friendship found him he's now in stable condition. and that's all your support
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for now it's now back to lauren and london. thank you very much a quick reminder that you can always catch up with our website any time just so that is al-jazeera dot com. that's it from main our news hour back in a minute with more news. when i think of my nature i think a potential when i think of what michelle i think what could be what is not i think people need to do to get control into the island and do something that they come to . tell me is impossible i think all the challenge. all the research on the
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country on tax. money is being done and this is my energy. on al-jazeera. correspondent. jeannette morales 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 around seventy families who lost their homes in that earthquake still live in this
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camp say going to be up to the government raised our hopes and then abandon us 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 failed. russia agrees to provide syria's government forces with a sophisticated air defense system the u.s. calls the decision a significant escalation and urges moscow to reconsider. your entire this is al-jazeera live from london also coming up. trump discusses plans
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for a second summit with north korea as he meets a south korean leader moon on the sidelines of the u.n. general assembly. celebrating a change of direction of the maldives the president concedes defeat after a tumultuous ten years for the new democracy. out of inquiry opens in the u.k. into the infection nearly fifty years ago of thousands of people with blood containing a child b. and hepatitis c. . you know the u.s. has warned russia that it's causing a significant escalation by deploying new advanced missiles to syria the kremlin is sending an s. three hundred missile defense system a week after one of its planes was shot down in a friendly fire incident u.s. national security adviser john bolton has encouraged moscow to reconsider one israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu says it will increase dangers in the
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region or a challenge has more from moscow. russia's s. three hundred the air defense system that's russia has held off from supplying to the syrian military until now. within two weeks of modern surface to air missile system the as three hundred will be handed over it's capable of intercepting early sold weapons on a range of more than two hundred fifty kilometers and at the same time can hit multiple aerial targets having an advanced on t.v. . facility on high fire rate the system will strengthen syrian air defense combat capabilities significantly defense minister sure you gave little down why the russians have changed their position but you're going it is you that has them going to let me make a point at the request of the israeli side and twenty thirteen we halted delivery of the s three hundred which was ready to be shipped to syria while syrian service personnel were given appropriate training today the situation has changed not by
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our fault the defense ministry holds israel responsible for the deaths of fifteen military personnel a week ago that reconnaissance plane was misidentified and mistakenly shot down by syrian air defense admits the confusion of his radio strikes and israeli military delegation sent to moscow last thursday failed to convince the russians it was their fault. but interesting aspects of this rift is the way the ministry of defense approach differs from that taken by the kremlin the m.o.d.e. has kept pushing the view that israel is culpable but. his spokesperson have been soft pedaling saying it was just an unfortunate accident and that the s. three hundred decision is not a that israel. israel has previously been able to count on russia turning a blind eye to its airstrikes inside syria of which there have been some two hundred in recent years but if damascus really does get its hands on s three
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hundreds the israeli military will have to rethink its tactics is the first time in the history of the conflict that we see the syrian defense is equipped with a mother in. missiles that can deprive the israeli air force of from their freedom of movement and the syrian air space part is not just the israelis who will be affected by the move. u.s. national security advisor john bolton has called it's a major mistake any other country operating in the region will now have to realize that syrian airspace isn't theirs to use it will reach out to zero moscow moxon makowski is a senior fellow at the atlantic council's eurasia center where he specializes in defense policy he says russia supplied syria with the s. three hundred system to send a political message. you know this is an advanced system that the syrians have been
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seeking to get their hands on for many years russia essentially halted the delivery because of israeli concerns and wider concerns about stability in the region coolly moscow has made the political decision based on this shoot down of its airplane that there is no need to withhold this equipment in the future obviously moscow i think also has grown frustrated with israeli impunity in striking syria and so this is to send a message that israeli actions are going to be limited in the near future because they're going to take into consideration a much more highly advanced anti aircraft or missile system. well leaders are gathering in new york for the united nations general assembly well sidelines u.s. president donald trump has met south korean media mungy in to discuss plans for
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a second summit with north korea and then said he brought a personal message from north korean leader kim jong un in trouble praised as open and terrific trouble addressed assembly on tuesday on diplomatic editor james bass has more. that price they are words that will go down in the history of the united nations the united states has great strength and patients but if it is forced to defend itself or its allies we will have no choice but to totally destroy north korea the fahri rhetoric by donald trump in his first visit here as u.s. president stunned diplomats a year on relations between north korea and the u.s. we improved but no one expects the u.s. president will spend three days this time at the u.n. to be much more restrained. this year watch what happens in the united nations is most powerful body the security council around the horseshoe table where
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ambassadors normally sit they'll be presidents and prime ministers although russia and china will only be sending their foreign ministers as the us happens to have the monthly rotating presidency president trump will chair the meeting and it's already clear this year he has iran in his sights the fact earlier in the year he finally pulled the u.s. out of the iran nuclear deal and agreement the u.s. and its allies had made with iran to end its nuclear program in twenty fifteen while the other signatories are still technically in the deal it looks to be in deep trouble when i asked the un secretary-general antonio good terrorists about it he didn't sound confident it would survive is he dead though it's not clear that a lot of contacts have been taking place a lot of. have been taking place between different members of the. and so i think that is an effort u.s. secretary of state might pompei i will also chair a security council meeting the day after president trump this time on north korea
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the situation has changed dramatically in a year seems to trust kim jong un the contrast with his approach to iran is something likely to be causing much discussion among the leadership in tehran according to a former obama administration official who dealt with both countries so i think there are some around ians or say also why we need a nuclear weapons and if we have nuclear weapons then we could get his attention and we could get is endorsement of us the same way that trump is indorsed kim jong un there are others who would say listen the north koreans have a completely different security situation they're able to threaten south korean away that we're not anybody else maybe we need to do that leaders from around the world are here in new york but events of the united nations likely to be dominated by president trump and the u.s. leader is also likely. to be in all the headlines diplomats say that it's an unfortunate distraction from many of the pressing issues that leaders should be
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dealing with james plays out zero of the united nations which we have attendees are following events for us at the u.n. she have we seem to be seen two very different faces of president trump here is dealings with the careers and iran. yes when donald trump likes you he really likes you it seems and certainly monday has been about his a few sieve praise for the leaders of both north and south korea just a couple of hours ago once again confirmed that preparations were underway for another summit with kim jong noon at a time and date to be decided i think what we now are bracing ourselves for is the address of the u.n. general assembly on tuesday morning once again we can expect perhaps more if you served us about the koreas we're also told to expect a theme being sovereignty national sovereignty over global sovereignty and that is the right of national governments over international law for example or international bodies like the u.n. one would imagine but also we're expecting him that's we're going to expect some of
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the last broadsides against iran to take place the iranian president will then also address your drug with somebody later on in the afternoon and then we have that security council meeting that james was talking about on wednesday where don't you want to the entire focus to be about iran but he was told he was talked out of that but we do expect more broadsides that but yes we are seeing that very stark contrast and. that's another example of when he likes you he really really like so this is again another of these little mutual appreciation society moments between the egyptian president and the u.s. president the fifth time in two years that they've met i can give you a few bits and pieces of the if the read out i'll see she's a friend our relationship has never been stronger. you know lord it will be a couple issues all the once you've accomplished president trump. they were congratulating each other on fighting against terrorism we've done a lot for against donald trump said so if anyone was hoping that the u.s.
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would take a stand against the reports of mass trials mass arrests the crackdown on the press in egypt they'll be disappointed interestingly just a few weeks ago bob woodward published his book fear about life inside the troubled ministration trumpets calling killer in that book with live in their hard feelings between the two leaders at least expressed in the last hour. thank you very much indeed. the president of the movies or do you mean has conceded defeat in sunday's election opposition leader ibrahim mohammed soli will be the new president after taking all the fifty eight percent of the vote i mean had been in charge of the indian ocean island nation for five years but have been accused of stifling opposition to morgan has while. many had expected now this president abdullah yemen to win the election then it was feared that he would not accept the results but hours after early poll results showed that his rival one yemen conceded defeat we
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are going to be hard all deviant people have decided what they want i've accepted the results from yesterday. these has been in political turmoil under yamin during his five year tenure two former presidents a prosecutor general and a number of opposition politicians have been jailed in controversial trials on the eve of the vote opposition leader ibrahim mohammed who hails campaign office was raided by police but no evidence of electoral fraud was uncovered preliminary results on monday showed that so he won fifty eight point three percent of the votes the electoral commission said voter turnout in the country of four hundred thousand people was eighty nine point two percent the u.s. had threatened sanctions if the elections were not free and fair. the message is loud and clear the people of the move.

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