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tv   NEWS LIVE - 30  Al Jazeera  October 2, 2018 6:00am-6:34am +03

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but dispute mechanism to resolve fights with the u.s. over lumber exports and auto workers in mexico will be paid more to produce parts for the u.s. market that last point mattered to officials in ottawa we have reached an agreement on cars and car parts inspired by creative canadian ideas which as some of you will remember we put forward in our talks in montreal back in january that was a key turning point in this negotiation mr speaker the draft treaty now heads to parliament in ottawa until congress in both washington and mexico city we've got a most having a little more and where was that we will make sure it does not contravene the sovereignty of the people and we will be guarantors of the federalist principles that maintain our republic analysts say there is a reason why canada is joining the deal now its economic future what is important is that we be an attractive place for foreign companies to invest and if they feel
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you feel that your investment in canada could be shut off and he terms of his access to the u.s. market by future cherubs the money best year historic but for now it's worth noting that these three countries have succeeded in negotiating a trade deal they can all accept as president george washington well for the view from mexico here's john homan. it's code actually suited out a trade deal with the u.s. last month but the fact that canada is now entering into it to preserve this three nation block will come as a relief to the government here and that's because a bilateral deal with the united states really creates a bit of a david and goliath situation with mexico obviously very much the junior partner there introducing kind of the as well means that obviously there's going to be times possibly life for mexico when their interests align and just another point of view here aside from the very powerful united states now the mexican government in
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the mix can president came out today and said that this was a win win win referring to the three countries in the pact really for mexico this trade hasn't been a win if you look at what it did have under nafta beforehand they cut the seed ground and that was the whole point of president trump wanting to renegotiate the deal the key thing for mexico really in this process has been damage limitation how much ground to play how to seed to keep the pact alive and whether that was worth it migrant children in the united states reportedly being relocated from overcrowded shelters to a tent city in the middle of the night according to the new york times as many as one thousand six hundred children have been moved from shelters to a camp attorney in west texas since may the number of detained migrant children has spiked to more than thirteen thousand that's five times the number last year well
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a traveler is a policy adviser for the migrant rights and justice division at the women's refugee commission she says the trump administration's policy will have a lasting effect on the children. the psychological effect for children who were separated from their families some of them were quite young some of those children didn't even remember their parents when they were reunified with their parents later so it's quite a profound effect on children on their wellbeing on their development even for children you know children who are riding alone tend to be older you know what we call unaccompanied children and even for those children detention for prolonged periods of time is extremely harmful to their wellbeing detention is simply just not a place where children should be and much less for a prolonged period of time the administration is creating crises there are there is no crisis right now at the border but there are policies again as i mentioned to not releasing children detaining for longer seeking to lower conditions even for
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detention and to hold families and to hold children for longer those that's creating a ballooning effect it's increasing the population that's detained and that's what they're pointing to but that's not a real crisis still ahead on the news hour demolition that deadline palestinian bedouin villagers await the arrival of israeli forces as the latest ultimatum passes lebanon's foreign minister takes some bassett or is on a tour of the places that israel says are hiding hezbollah missile sites plus. the remote. in sports the verbal sparring has begun on the head of one of the year's biggest boxing contests. but first spanish police are clashing with demonstrators in barcelona on the first anniversary of the catalan independence referendum as night fell there was a standoff on the streets of the city which is the capital of the semi autonomous
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capital in the region catalans voted for secession in last year's unofficial referendum which was ruled the illegal. the government in the dritte well earlier protesters a staged a sit in at the entrance to barcelona stock exchange and tried to block roads and railways an estimated one hundred eighty thousand people also marched through the city they're not only unhappy with the madrid government they were more action from the catalan regional government to push for independence. when i was young and it was important to do something today because throughout this year we have not made much progress the cash led government has not done much and we had to timin for cash land republic. but. it's already been a year since october the first we voted then regardless of all the obstacles imposed by a fascist oppressive government that did nothing but assault innocent people who went only with the ballot paper in hand.
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events have been taking place in the u.s. city of las vegas to mark the one year anniversary of the deadliest mass shooting in modern u.s. history survivors families of victims and first responders all attended a sunrise a ceremony to remember those killed on october first last year a gunman opened fire on an open air country music festival from a hotel window killing fifty eight people before shooting himself no motive has ever been discovered that line has passed for palestinians in the village of han hamas or to destroy their own homes before israeli forces move in israel gave residents in the bedouin village until midnight on monday to pack up and leave it wants to demolish the village in the occupied west bank to make way for more settlements a move which has sparked international condemnation well harry falso joins us live now from the hamas saw that that line has just passed twenty minutes ago what's
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actually happening there now. we are scarse right this village has seen many deadlines come and go in the past but it is just about managed to cling on through various legal actions but this one does seem to have an air of finality about it what we have here at the moment are some schools of activists who come in some of them brought in by the palestinian authority to mark a kind of a village vigil here and to advocate for the continuing existence of this village and also of course the villages themselves and we are speaking two to one family and they were saying that essentially it did feel that this was different from previous times when they've been given a deadline and that they do feel that they're entering the last days here it doesn't mean that the israeli forces are going to move in immediately at dawn tomorrow morning for instance although i mean it could be that but there is no absolute reason for the israelis try and move in very quickly indeed the german
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chancellor angela merkel is visiting israel this week and so it may well be that this would be seen as an inopportune moment to come in straight away however there is this very permanent now threat that this village will be destroyed we're speaking to one grandmother and she was saying it's very difficult putting her grandchildren to bed every night they come up to her and i ask her is tomorrow going to be the day that the israeli soldiers come and from now on any morning could be that morning. and harry just remind us why is this village and we're seeing pictures right now why is it so important to both palestinians and israelis . well to some extent it has become a symbol of palestinian resistance for many people in the occupied west bank for the people who live here obviously and for international observers and the d. the european union and others it is seen as a potential war crime if israel does forcibly remove them and force them to live
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somewhere else where they don't want to be this is a bedouin community but essentially this is all about territory this particular village it doesn't lie actually within the borders of a proposed israeli settlement plan but it lies very close to them and what the concern is for the palestinian side is that demolishing it demolishing other bedouin structures in this area will allow israel to expand vastly the settlements to the east here of jerusalem in the occupied west bank further wringing jerusalem further separating the northern part of the west bank from the southern part of the west bank and really making a potential future palestinian state a properly territorially contiguous future palestinian state all but impossible and so that's why there's been so much international condemnation of this it's why the palestinian authority is sort of human to be opposed to this however israel does
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now seem to dispatched with all of the possible legal challenges to it and it appears to be now just a matter of time very full set with the latest there from hong harry thank you for the lebanese government has taken dozens of diplomats and journalists on a tour of beirut to disprove israeli claims of hezbollah bases there on thursday the israeli prime minister told the u.n. general assembly the armed group has hidden missile sites in the international airport by lebanon accuses israel of making false allegations to justify an attack and a heart of reports now from beirut. lebanon is on a diplomatic offensive its foreign ministers are brown but still. invited ambassadors and the media to tour sites that israel says are hiding has been our misfiled production facilities there within an area controlled by the iranian backed lebanese armed group in beirut's southern suburbs among them the a head football stadium. a political ally of hezbollah is accusing israel of lies
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to justify an attack against lebanon on this rule but there are many statements made affirming the four session of accurate as well however this does not mean the present the vicinity of beirut airport. israel's military says the facilities used to convert regular missiles into more accurate guided ones are still not operational but under construction with iranian supervision. israel is accusing hezbollah of knowingly jeopardizing the lives of civilians and using them as human shields the three alleged missile sites are located in densely populated areas close to the airport. there was no immediate reaction from ambassadors of western countries but russia's envoy is calling for calm. we want to prevent war that's why we are
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deploying new weapons to syria there should be no escalation. russia's decision to deploy s. three hundred anti-aircraft missiles follows the downing of its plane last month over syria moscow is blaming israel for the incident. russia is sending as three hundred netanyahu is telling hezbollah this doesn't mean you can operate freely we will continue to argue against your activities. over the years russia gave israel room to act in syria it carried out hundreds of strikes targeting alleged iranian bases and suspected iranian arms shipments for hezbollah the lebanese group however says the israeli strikes have been effective. valve i tell israel who matter what you did to cut the route it is over it has already been achieved we now have decision and not positioned weapons and all the capabilities to arm. lebanon says the tour is about assuring the international community that
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israel's allegations are false it is not about refuting what hezbollah and its allies believe is its a right to arms. beirut the united nation's highest court has rejected a request from bolivia to order chile to negotiate with it over access to the pacific ocean bolivia lost its only coastline to chile in a war one hundred thirty five years ago and it doesn't look like it's going to get it back anytime soon as more. from early in the morning these people in the capital of waited for a ruling that they claim would help landlocked bolivia regain what it's not had for well over a century access to the pacific ocean. one of those in the crowd they made said he was bitterly disappointed with the ruling one of the killer. we only want
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to be able to sit at the same time and to negotiate. five years ago or leave us president when what i took to the international court of justice in an attempt to force his country's neighbor to negotiate over access to seal its link to the ocean was lost to chile in the aftermath of what was dubbed the war of the pacific. since then the andean neighbors have held occasional talks about a possible corridor to the sea but judges ruled that chile is not obliged to actually negotiate one for this reason is because. by two of the voters two or three. i find is that the republic of chile did not undertake a legal obligation to negotiate a sovereign access to the bus if you kosha for the brewery nation of the state of bolivia. even what alice olivia's first indigenous president attended the call
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truly in the hague and said his country will never stop fighting for see your operatives that. is never going to give up its prosecution the bolivian people know the people of the world know that through an invasion we've been denied so often access to the pacific ocean. for the last forty years and will leave you have not had formal diplomatic relations. in spite of this allows bolivia duty free access to the port of arica near its northern border with people just. insists on continuing on the path to access chilean territory sea or land then we will have nothing to discuss but if bolivia understands that treaties assigned so that they are honored they will always have the door open. for now that door to the pacific will not be controlled by will livea its fight to break the land lock it's not just about national pride it's about delivering opportunity and economic growth
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. and death eater. so to come in this hour the dirt that surfaced during brazil's elections and while it doesn't seem to have stuck to the country's politicians combat in cancer the nobel prize for medicine goes to two scientists whose work has helped the human immune system fight back and then sport the olympic flame heads to the end of the world as they use games move to a new continent. hello again welcome back to your international weather forecast or here across europe we do have a lot to talk about first of all going to start in the mediterranean because we do have our old system that has been pushing through greece causing a lot of flooding across the region things are looking bunch better across that
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area clear skies across many of that many in the region but where we are going to be watching is here in the central part of mediterranean we do have another low pressure area that we are watching you can see that spin right there across much of that region we're going to be seeing some showers and because the system is moving so slowly the potential for flooding is definitely going to be in the works so we'll talk a little bit more about that when we get to know then africa but here across north europe we are looking at windy conditions of the frontal boundary pushes through right there with berlin a windy day for you with a temperature there of about fourteen degrees where we go i want to show you what's happening across parts of algeria as well as tunisia of the next few days and that is where our focus is going to be in terms of the flooding here across the coastal areas we potentially could see seventy five to one hundred millimeters of rain over the next few days and of course in this area that does mean flooding potential for you as we go towards the next couple days here on wednesday the rain continues down here along the coast towards tripoli we are looking at twenty six degrees there and bergonzi it is going to be a cloudy day view with
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a temperature of thirty two. we're . i have dedicated almost my entire professional life to the bench and fight against corruption and what i have heard is that we need champions we need also to shine the light on those shampoos and this award bridges that gap that existed in this. nominate your own for us from here on shined a light on what they do and to have not shine a light on your hero with your nomination for the international space award two
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thousand and eighteen for more information go to ace award dot com. welcome back here's a reminder of the top stories on our hundreds of bodies have been buried in a mass grave and in the following friday's earthquakes and tsunami which killed eight hundred and forty four people international aid is on its way to the island of slowing. u.s. president donald trump hailed the new united states mexico canada agreement or u.s. m.c.a. as the most important trade deal in america's history it will govern trade worth
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one point two trillion dollars and police have broken up protests in barcelona making the first anniversary of the catalan independence referendum earlier one hundred thousand people marched through the city to commemorate last october's vote which led to a drib imposing direct. macedonia's prime minister is pressing ahead with a parliamentary vote on changing the name of his nation to north. that's the spied the low turnout in sunday's referendum which wasn't enough to force the issue he's hoping to end the long running running this feud with this country southern neighbor greece which has its own region called macedonia sinegal has more. a result marked by change is macedonians who took the time to vote to change the country's name to north macedonia did so by a landslide enough says prime minister's runs i have to go ahead with the decision not me yes. i know the opposition and all the citizens know they can be no better
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agreements with greece there is and they come be no alternative to macedonians membership of need to an e.u. let's not play games with no unity and all must. despite the applause and the defiance the vote was to all intents and purposes a nonstarter only a third of the country's electorate voted meeting the referendum didn't meet the requirement of a fifty percent turnout many stayed away after nationalists campaigners people to boycott the vote the prime ministers i have says he'll seek parliamentary approval for the name change even though opinion on the street is divided whether for. the referendum was how the people expressed their opinion i think more than six hundred fifty thousand citizens who said they think about joining nato and the european union as enough. campaign that was promoting the yes vote put an emphasis on european values and the european way of life but if you look at the time since
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prime minister took power the people who promoted this are not true representatives of those values. values that are now at a crossroads yet nationalists and the country's president to fight against the name change that this really is not the only but you know we all are part of some group our language culture and if you lose that then you're worth nothing here and in the world this was always going to be a contentious vote and ultimately the name change will come down to how much popular will there is for the country to join the european union and nato instead. cameroon's english speaking regions are under curfew a separatists marked the one year anniversary of a symbolic independence decoration separatist fighting has displaced hundreds of thousands of people since the conflict intensified last year and as they addressed now reports from a ga ga nigeria more than twenty five thousand people have crossed over their delta
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and on her six children joined other refugees to move to a new settlement away from that are coming on board this is the family's relocation since they fled the fighting in southern rule none of the children has been to school since then we don't have peace in the house because the children warry. one need not be what are we doing here we are not going to school what are we doing there let's go back with no money and hope of returning to their former home anytime soon she says their future is bleak. even parents who could afford to hire private tutors for their children are giving up when their mind are within. our country and for all their been down year managed to build a school. now the savings is gone many parents in this new refugee settlement prove that their children can soon go back to school but most of these classes since
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reply better homes last year there is no school here so they will have to rely on nearby schools and the generosity of the local community. should be in our final year of secondary school because of the situation. that will depend on how soon she gets the chance to resume classes in. the united nations and local authorities say they are trying to come up with a plan to help children like frieda who have been working with the government of nigeria here to provide additional capacity to continue school that they're having through the settlement so that they are committed additional students in the classroom and we're here to provide support necessary support to construct additional classrooms and also at the same time to construct a playground for room for the children to play in the. educational soldiers in cameroon will have to approve the certificates the refugee children be getting
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nigeria when they eventually return but some parents here are skeptical that will happen how many priests al-jazeera i don't know so the nigeria at least two people have died after a suicide bomber targeted an e.u. military convoy in somalia several soldiers were also injured by the blast which happened near the defense ministry compound in the capital mogadishu the convoy was carrying italian military trainers al-shabaab has claimed responsibility for the attack. ugandan the pop star turned politician bobby why and will return to court in the summer after government lawyers adjourned his case while appeared in court in gulu on monday facing treason charges but the case against him and other members of the opposition was delayed after the government said it needed more time to investigate a fierce government critic why is accused of throwing stones at president hear what he was seventies convoy in august. now there's less than
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a week to go until brazilians vote in national and regional elections politics in brazil has been tainted by allegations of corruption at every level the spike this many candidates tied to some of brazil's worst corruption scandals are expected to be reelected you see anyone explains. from one in the morning till long after dawn men dive into this lagoon in northeastern brazil to scoop out mussels from the mud with their bare hands. on shore their wives like twenty five year old. sorting clean the shells. on a good day the family can make five dollars barely enough to feed her sons just so lanny is eligible for a social program called falsify media that could significantly improve their lives a little bit bucket of a valley but i've never been approved i don't know why they spend so much time
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evaluating my request and i've never managed to get it. one explanation can be found at the state legislature or twelve deputies are being investigated for pocketing funds allocated to the program we were told they were out campaigning for reelection corruption in brazil spreads from the local level to the very top in southeastern former president lula da silva is serving a twelve year sentence as part of a multi-billion dollar corruption probe that snared dozens of businessmen and high ranking politicians but there are hundreds of more politicians accused of corruption who haven't been touched and who in fact are running in this month's elections as candidates for the senate the lower house and even the presidency and if some aura lect in which of course they will be they will enjoy immunity from prosecution which in many cases is the point. back in northeastern brazil we found
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center. one k. yodels who has eight outstanding criminal investigations campaigning with his son the governor but here you know when you shocked it's a historical problem but just like everywhere sometimes you see him as affects off life he says people often vote for corrupt officials they think may give them the most benefits. but those benefits rarely trickle down to the bottom of the social ladder it's a bit of it in love with builders that we need to have faith in god says just experience has taught her that having faith in politicians is pointless. you see in human al-jazeera brazil the u.k.'s ruling conservative party is holding its annual conference against the backdrop of the ongoing negotiations to leave the european union with the party seemingly in open warfare over its bricks and
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strategy all sides in the argument on public display and as lawrence leave reports from the conference in birmingham no one seems willing to compromise. which hold the points of bricks it is to make britain grace again restore some rule britannia and victorian global significance first top then the people who say the only way is to jettison entirely the european projects they talk of swashbuckling trade agreements with mexico in china we know there were eighty nine people at their meeting because they voted eighty eight to one to reject the government's plan the british people who voted to leave wanted to have a confident vibrant britain back they knew what leaving new york in union meant and they were relying upon m.p.'s to come back and deliver that deal for them and they haven't done of course they haven't because many of them remain as many of them just didn't have the spirit and will to negotiate strongly with the european up the road the other wing of the party these people traitors to the n.c.
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europe brigade are fighting tooth and nail to hold a new referendum on whatever ends up happening their numbers are growing and no they do not think they're subverting democracy. i believe strongly that we need to seek the informed consent of the people before we proceed with threats i've just come from a meeting where there was an expert there talking about. access to food food policy food standards i don't remember that being discussed in any detail in the referendum it was sixteen and i think if the british public aware of the implications of what we are doing i think they they they may consider. throughout all this the government continues to say it is confidence of its plan is. that it's now been rejected by the pope winds of its own party the european union and the vast majority of voters this surely cannot last off as conference ends on
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wednesday it will be exactly two weeks until the european union needs to decide if it has any kind of offer from the british that it can go with. it isn't even clear it'll be a government in this country then that's alone look i hear a plan when the referendum happens to leave slogan was about taking back control you couldn't possibly make it up these people are tossed with determining the future of the u.k. the rights of millions of british and european citizens britons place in the world in or out remain or leave they don't know if they're coming or going something is going to have to give lawrence lee al-jazeera. a french photographer at the heart of a rape scandal that saw this year's nobel prize for literature postponed has been handed a two year prison sentence junker that no was found guilty of raping a woman an apartment in sweden in two thousand and eleven the seventy two year old
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is married to a member of the academy that awards the nobel prize for literature the crisis also sparked a wave of resignations from the academy. meanwhile the nobel prize for medicine has been awarded to two immunologists for their work on cancer therapies james p. allison of the university of texas and kyoto universities the super honcho of separately discovered and developed developed treatments which improve the human immune system so the body can better at pac cancer cells only to do. people tell me that they have recovered from grave illnesses become healthy thanks to my treatment method to me that's above everything else makes me realize that my research has been truly meaningful and makes me happy. still ahead in this news hour. with ransom due to the singer
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songwriter. whose musical career spanned eight decades. and then sport a ryder cup rant things turned sour in the u.s. after their defeat to europe plus. i'm charlie rangel at the tate modern in london where visitors will have to work together to reveal the new artwork about migration that's hidden under any. business updates brought to you by qatar airways going places together.

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