tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera October 8, 2018 9:00pm-10:01pm +03
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lives back. on al-jazeera. this is al jazeera. hello once again from doha everyone i'm come on santa maria this is the news hour from al-jazeera turkey is demanding saudi arabia prove its claim the missing journalist jamal khashoggi did it leave its consulate in istanbul also coming up a dire warning about global warming from the united nations make drastic changes now or expect disastrous consequences soon. sure there are many politicians in brazil who are racist who are homophobic who are misogynist but they don't speak
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like that in public and bush one out of this and the leader of brazil's far right movement is one step closer to becoming president but there is still a runoff to count in sport pakistan cricket sahara so haile hits a maiden test century his effort against australia putting his team in a strong position on day two of the first test. so the turkish president reject typewriter one says it's up to the saudis to prove a missing journalist jamal khashoggi did leave the saudi arabian consulate building turkish officials believe the journalist was murdered inside the consulate which saudi arabia denies and turkey is asking for permission to search the building in istanbul as part of its investigation into disappearance we'll start with this from jamal of shale in istanbul you know almost a week has passed since she went missing and still no evidence has emerged of what
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has happened to him turkey's foreign ministry some of the saudi ambassador monday for the second time. and police formally requested permission to search the saudi consulate in istanbul speaking from budapest president. called on saudi authorities to release information on jamal's fate but. the lady consulate officials cannot save themselves by saying that he left the building don't you have cameras if he left you have to prove it with footage of those who asked turkish authorities where he is should ask what happened. she was last seen entering this six story building last tuesday saudi diplomats there insist he left shortly after his fiance waiting outside sees she hasn't seen him since when asked about the consulate surveillance system the saudi consul general said the cameras didn't record so there's no video of entering or leaving turkish security sources have said they're dealing with a murder investigation after concluding that special jihad almost certainly being
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killed inside the saudi diplomatic mission president or one had told reporters that he was personally following the case but there's been a notable silence from saudi arabia's and eyes neither of the united states the european union or the united kingdom have publicly put any pressure on the riyadh the united nations however has spoken out if it's proven. and it does seem at this point that this is what the turkish government believes that jamal khashoggi was murdered in the saudi consulate than at the very least i think i i would like to see the international community imposing some consequences on this brutal brutal act journalists gathered again on monday outside the saudi mission in istanbul in solidarity with their missing colleague and to denounce the saudi government if i thought that's it could find a diplomatic way out of this crisis then the continued refusal by saudi arabia to cooperate or exert disclose of any information that would lead to subtrees
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whereabouts or well being is fast proving them wrong. to stumble. stephanie decker is with us now from istanbul with more stephanie i wonder if we could pick up on a point you made a little bit earlier and that was about the lack of information for all the accusations and allegations out there and the extraordinary nature of them actually very little information. yeah i think very little fact and evidence more like around a lot of people are saying to those turkish or says that he was killed inside the consulate some people going as far as to saying you know horrific stories that he was perhaps cut into pieces i mean these things are all horrific sort of rumors that are going around i think we have to be very careful when we look at this this is also of course a very much a politically loaded situation the facts that we know is this shows you went into the consulate here in istanbul on tuesday and he hasn't been seen since the saudis
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say he left but certainly as you heard in jamal's report his fiance hasn't seen him and of course all expectations were he went there to pick up a document that was evidence of his divorce because he was due to get married the next day on wednesday so this is the big question mark has very much skepticism surrounding saudis events which is why you're hearing the turkish president saying you need to prove it sags a saying they don't have cameras the turks are saying they are investigating and they do have a certain amount of proof that they will make public we haven't seen that made public yet what would that be is that c.c.t.v. video of what they say are fifteen saudi. nationals that landed here on that day in two planes and left later on the same day it is an extraordinary story come all it is an outrageous story if it is true but again at the moment what we are lacking is concrete facts and i think we do still have to be careful when we look at it i
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think you certainly the next couple of days perhaps some people saying tomorrow we may hear a little bit more about exactly what we need which is facts what happened. and the only thing we know at the moment is that six days later no one has seen them here turkish relations stephanie presumably getting worse by the minute but what sort of state with priors. well they weren't very good they weren't very good since the coup in egypt they were very good following the failed coup here that some time you know that some turkish senior sources blamed on saudi arabia they're no good because of the blockade that is imposed on coopted which saudi is one of the main members of and turkey is of course a close ally of qatar so this gives you the bigger political picture also turkey and saudi do have some form of relations there's a lot of saudi investment here there's a lot of saudi tourists that come to turkey the economy here in turkey is it a dire point so you know however much people may be outraged at what potentially
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may have happened here these political cards or ways come into play i think the first words we were heard from present aired on yesterday were very much measured some people saying that that perhaps is because they don't want to without escalation but the reality is many people will tell you that even if and it's a big if if it's confirmed this indeed happened many people will tell you that america for example but cut off ties that billions of dollars in military aid will continue to flow that arms sales will continue it is a cynical world when it comes to politics and sometimes these kinds of situations will be brushed aside when it comes to real justification real sort of you know accountability when it comes to these kinds of situations so again we're going to have to wait and see what the reality is but of course he remains missing and a big question mark as to what exactly happened to him excellent stuff from stephanie she's live in istanbul. meanwhile al-jazeera staff here in doha have taken a stand in solidarity with the missing saudi journalist jamal khashoggi staff gathered
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in the newsroom here demanding an investigation into his disappearance the managing director of al-jazeera english. the world needs. on another story a you television reporter this time who was investigating alleged fraud with e.u. funds has been found dead in a park in bulgaria police say thirty year old victoria marin over was raped and murdered in the northern town of research her death and the disappearance of jamal khashoggi are just the latest in a growing list of threats against journalism globally lawrence lee has more. victoria marin over looks like the latest grim statistic in the dangerous world of journalism her body discovered in a bulgarian town where she was investigating the corrupts misuse of european union funds she joins the likes of daphne carolina blown up near her home in a car bomb john ku's yak shot dead outside his home in slovakia and if turkey is right jamal khashoggi allegedly murdered in the saudi consulate in istanbul all of
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the reporters intent on exposing abuses he was silenced when impunity runs that over ninety percent most people think it's it's likely they'll get away with killing a journalist and what often happens is maybe the killer gets core but the intellectual mastermind the person who planned it the person who paid for it the person who instructed it they get away scot free and then the many of them become political leaders in different countries around the world or certainly people with a high up in business or high up in corporations. globally mexico remains the most dangerous place in the world to report from followed by all the countries in the middle east and asia where war has made journalists likely to be targeted in the same way as enemy fighters in fact the number of reporters dying has actually dropped since a peak two years ago but only because reporters are simply stopped going to places
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deemed too high risk of course there are some journalists who only plan flight routes they don't fly an airspace is of for example countries in the arab world if they're flying for example it's east asia they will fly by finland they will avoid at all costs any airspace whereby an airline will be ordered by government to land this is the journalist and they kidnapped him a few days ago i call the fake news the enemy of the people and they are it isn't much of a surprise that there's been virtually no international response to the bizarre disappearance of jamal khashoggi when any number of world leaders in the u.s. and elsewhere claim journalists are the enemy of the people. not only is there a dwindling political defensive free reporting but increasingly an apparent acceptance that digging for stories may result in physical harm. in the end it's about democracy or whether it matters. and one more note on press freedom bangladesh's president up to homemade has signed a controversial law the critics say threatens free speech police can now sorry i'm
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sorry people can now be jailed for up to fourteen years for spreading what could be labeled as propaganda about the war for independence from pakistan in one thousand nine hundred one the new law also calls for a three year sentence for publishing information that is considered quite aggressive or frightening to other news now in a new u.n. report on climate change is calling for urgent transformational change to avoid disastrous levels of global warming the intergovernmental panel on climate change the i.p.c.c. is warning that if forty five percent of carbon emissions aren't cuts by the year twenty thirty and one hundred percent of them by the year twenty fifty and the planet's temperature will rise one and a half degrees celsius doesn't sound like much but that will mean hundreds of millions of people around the world suffering from intensifying that from disasters floods wildfires extreme drought and food shortages as well the i.p.c.c. says the twenty fifth in paris climate agreement signed by one hundred ninety seven
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countries to help cut global temperatures won't be enough more for nothing bob the threats been clear and present for many years climate change caused by human activity is putting our very survival in peril now the un's climate change body says concerted action needs to come much sooner than previously thought early action to eliminate to reduce greenhouse gas emissions is possible they are options available there are signs that mitigation is going on but if this is to be achieved there's an urgent need to accelerate. three years ago at the paris climate change conference many governments gave themselves a pat on the back they pledged to take action to limit temperature rises to one point five degrees celsius above pre-industrial levels now the experts say they're failing and time is running out the i.p.c.c. says meeting that one point five degrees target requires a forty five percent cut in carbon emissions by twenty thirty and alarmingly zero net carbon emissions by twenty fifty with steep cuts in other greenhouse gases like
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methane it's a question of whether we can make certain decisions in the coming years. with the benefit of fisheries going to be our children and grandchildren and the. coming generations the i.p.c.c. says by the end of this century global sea level rises would be ten centimeters lower with warming of one point five degrees compared to two degrees and the arctic is likely to be ice free in summer around once a century at one point five degrees but at least once a decade if warming reaches two degrees none of this is academic faster action will reduce flooding giving people living on the world's coasts islands and river deltas time to adapt to climate change then there are the millions affected by drought many on the african continent we need to look at climate finance and strategies that ensure that we sort of speed up climate climate action related to issues like our culture our food security livelihoods and migrations and that's because
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migrations and migration is no longer a choice for lots of people in the continent it is now in moscow because of global warming the i.p.c.c. report says renewable energy must account for at least seventy percent of electricity by twenty fifty compared with twenty five percent now to stay within the one point five degree limit carbon will have to be sucked out of the air by machines installed on the ground and billions of trees will have to be planted and they'll be tough choices between using land for food or for biofuel crops we've been. the solution now it's over to our politicians and to us that. spoke to christiane i think got us a little bit earlier she was the executive secretary of the un's framework convention on climate change she was one of the architects of the paris comment according to the fifteen she told us all levels of society need to participate if we're to make a difference it is actually the entirety of society in the entire entirety of the
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economy and the good thing is that we already have one model that we can follow so what we're doing around the world on renewable energy is actually very much in line with the paris agreement objectives and also with this new i.p.c.c. report both of which go hand in hand the transformation that we have in the renewable energy sector in the energy sector what the contribution of the normals is that actually we will be at xtandi sharing percentages of renewable energy by twenty thirty and by twenty fifty so we actually are very well on track there where we're not very well on track is in other sectors we're not on track with respect to land use smart agriculture restoration of degraded lands protection of currently standing forests were not doing well there were also not doing very well on heavy industry those are the sectors that are lagging behind what the report says is we can transform the economy it is technically doable it is financially
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feasible politically t b d and that is the piece that really needs to move forward because it's very clear that all sectors need to participate all geographies need to participate all levels of human society from governments to private sector to our to individuals in civil society everyone and finance needs to be there as well so this really is an all hands on board exercise. here is what's coming up for you on this news hour. we'll look at the fight to save the thousands of starving children in yemen. also an exclusive report on the drought that's forcing people into makeshift camps in afghanistan. and in sports the russian football of finding a new way to take a penalty and you see with that story and more
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a little later. in brazil the far right candidate has finished way ahead of the rest in the first round of the presidential election but he has fallen just short of the fifty percent vote share needed to avoid a runoff a latin america as alysia newman reports now from rio de janeiro. brazilian voters have spoken and what they've said represents a seismic shift in this country's political preferences. from the center and center left of the last twenty four years to the extreme right represented by an obscure politician whose middle name is messiah five and that is how almost half of brazilian voters see in warsaw nat'l a former army captain promises to govern with a hard hand at ease concede that additional politicians lie and steal from the people the card was corruptions khandala sold us that they are all the same the
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firebrand congressman has tapped into anger and frustration against corruption soaring violence and a deep recession is they don't be back to the workers' party wants to control the media we have to believe in brazil we need to stay mobilized although he didn't win outright in the first round he has a commanding lead over his rival financial had that of the leftist workers' party also now to who is still weak from a near fatal assassination attempt a month ago promises to counter could. with stronger violence he's a virtually massage honest racist and homophobic views frighten opponents. i was really sad when i wrote and i cried because of what is going to happen in this country. but in brazil as in a growing number of countries political incorrectness is seen by many as a virtue. and follow the traditional rules of the brazilian politics for example
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i'm sure there are many politicians in brazil who are racist who are homophobic who are misogynist but they don't speak like that in public and goes on out of the us and the people love it out by. the outside impulse or not as house supporters feel as though they've already won and with good reason with less than three weeks to go till the runoff. has a massive gap to close and it seems nothing short of a political miracle could achieve it you see in human al-jazeera rio de janeiro. and sao paulo now with to raise the bar for more on the stories of how brazilians reacting to some banks vote. well brazilians are divided this country is polarized it's torn between those who would never like to see their workers' party in office again because of the biggest corruption scandal in this country's history the carwash operation that ended with
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hundreds of politicians and business men in prison and those who would like to see a figure like not all make it to power because they're afraid that their democracy would be briscoe a campaigned on a platform talking about how to improve the economy have been fighting crime and fighting corruptions and millions of brazilians responded to it and not totally in the running for presidency but also in congress was so mad it went from having eight congress eight a congressman in the lower house to winning fifty two seats so you can see how in a way disenchanted most brazilians are with the brazil's political system because in a way many ended up bolting to a politician that in the past had insulted down the. water about the chances for mr hideout in the runoff three weeks away and he has to turn around well around well more than ten or fifteen percentage points.
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well that's correct and it's going to be a very difficult bout seventeen points of difference between both candidates and the campaign has already started today when a fair number that visited former president was in prison including that's when the company starting it said that he had that would have to go much towards the center in order to appeal to those who do not like the workers' party who didn't vote for it who are in a way enraged because of the corruption that happened in this country however we do know that had that is planning and has called for his campaign to back what he says is a risk to brazilian democracy that's going to be his campaign to call on to those who want to defend this country's democracy that many see that ball tonight or could put in a risk on the other hand it's also not a company that has already started this campaign he has said that he will continue to attack the workers party he's blaming them for the crisis that has existed in
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the country for the past two years and he also said that he would participate in this in the form of debate in the debates if allowed by a doctor and he said very clearly that his campaign won't be about peace and love ok. thank you back to rio and andrew fishman joining us now he's the managing editor of the intercept to talk more about this sort of forty seven percent of the vote. it is a very divided electorate clearly that is a big lead both sonora takes in as well what do you when you look at those numbers what do you read of the. brazilian electorate. maybe the most striking or one of the most striking political changes in brazilian election history as your previous guest said the gigantic shift that he brought his party into power with fifty two seats essentially on the force of his own charisma
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and he's he's gone forward he has forty six percent and it seems basically there unless some sort of miracle happens that he's going to take in the second round since redock read democratization into the military dictatorship that every candidate who's gone into the second round leading has ended up winning the election yeah it would be no surprise that he carried on to win. three more weeks of campaigning very divisive campaign it's been very emotional sort of campaign i mean do you think brazil can can handle another three weeks of the. i'm not sure we can but yeah there is it is three weeks in a lot of things can happen as you know both in that it was actually stabbed to during the first round of elections and that in the bolstering his support base a lot of basically has the solution the key of how to make to get his his base rallied up rather than because he he's a p.t.
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he's anti corruption he has a positive message about how he's going to fix security and the economy whether and even though there's a rather vague suggestions that he has whereas the p.t. has basically just been using a narrative much more victimization about how it's unjust that was in jail and trying to make as little instead of trying to come forward their own very affirmative vision of how they're going to change the country and if they want to win that's what they really have to do however the very first thing that had dodd has done is he went to go visit little in prison which is exactly the thing that many analysts are saying is is not how he's going to win over the electorate. forgive me if what i'm about to say sounds a bit cliche but go with me on the sea i think from the outside looking in we could look at brazil and we think we think multicultural we think you know things like. i don't know it just it gives off this image of being liberal and and all encompassing now we have this lurch to the right does that surprise you in the end
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even with everything you've said about fighting corruption and the like and everything brazil's but is it still a monumental change politically speaking it's going to be a major change in the in the congress however the last congress is already the most the most right wing that we've had in decades honestly doesn't surprise me because brazilian society different from its image on abroad is very very conservative it's increasingly evangelical voting base and the social mores the traditions i mean the dictatorship is very recent history and that was based on family values in the same sort of messaging that that. that both are not is using in his campaign right now and he's really tapped into that and just brought it to the forefront something that was sort of sublimated for for a time and he's done it in the same way that trump was able to latch on to certain traditional values and that many other right wing candidates around the world have
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done that you know you need to push back against criminals to defend the family and you to push back against homosexuals who are who are attacking the traditional ways of our society these are the messages that he's using and he's using to great effect because a lot of reverberates a lot of people harbor of course not all of his voters are voting for him because of that many of them are saying well he's the only one that i think can actually change things that can make this country less corrupt and even despite his is very . homophobic racist messaging that he is using still willing to give him a chance because i don't believe any of the candidates. andrew fish i'm glad we could talk to you today from rio giving us some real insight into what life is really like in brazil thank you thank you very much. still ahead for you here on al-jazeera rockets mortars and missiles syrian rebels withdraw their heavy weapons from the front line and. i'm wayne hay reporting from
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palu indonesia where life in some of the areas affected by the earthquake and tsunami is beginning to return to some sort of normality but here thousands remain unaccounted for and sports news coming up as well the chinese basketball star hitting a career in front of his own facts. hello there for some of us in the middle east there's been an awful lot of wet weather recently and we have had reports of flooding mostly out of the northern parts of iran where the rain was so severe that the flooding that destroyed that bridge and it's caused quite a bit of damage now we're going to see a few more showers as we head through the day but nothing this dramatic the rain responsible well it's here now working its way of parts of afghanistan on up towards tashkent to now marty but for the west we've just got
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a handful of showers here far more subdued and they're working their way eastward so a couple more showers in this region as we head through tuesday nothing too sinister then we've also got a fair few showers over the new from parts of turkey little bit further towards the south and here in doha the temperature is around thirty seven or thirty eight degrees at the moment but it's for the south we're going to keep a close eye on the weather because this blog of cloud and rain here it's a developing cycle and it's still intensifying as it runs its way northward for some of us in oh man then and across into yemen it looks like we're going to see a period of very heavy rain and destructive winds as well as that storm eventually comes on shore we're not expecting it until around friday but on wednesday the rain will already be starting for some of us further towards the south you see the showers that we've had over parts of libya it looks like those will be clearing away the for tuesday.
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we're. i have dedicated almost my entire professional life so that would eventually one fight against corruption and what i have learned 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 shine the light on what they do and to have not shine 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.
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here on the news are here at al-jazeera and these are the top stories the turkish president reject tiber one says it's up to the saudis to prove the missing journalist jamal khashoggi left the saudi arabian consulate building took a few officials believe the journalist was murdered inside the consulate which saudi arabia denies the new u.n. report on climate change is warning that a forty five percent of carbon emissions cut by the twenty thirty and one hundred percent by twenty fifty then the planet's temperature will rise by one and a half to greece celsius that will cause hundreds of millions of people to suffer from intensified natural disasters and food shortages and brazil's far right
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candidate has won the first round of the presidential elections but. needs to prepare for a runoff now with his opponent the leftist fernando had died at the end of the month after foreign short of the fifty percent pressure. now asserted nationalists who wants to break up bosnia and herzegovina has won a seat in the presidency after elections on sunday and office must contain one serb one and one crow at each will hold that rotating position for eight months the legacy of the dayton peace agreement brought an end to three years of war back in the one nine hundred ninety s. david schaper reports from. the night sky above sarajevo was lit up by fireworks and the streets filled with the sound of celebrations as croats welcome to day a new president. but in the serbian capital of daniel luka. welcomed his own ascension to the stage of international politics by singing
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a popular love song. in the cold light of day though the realisation was sinking in that a serbian nationalist who wants to break out of bosnia-herzegovina will be the first of the rotating presidents to be in power. for the longest time and i really don't know if i can even bear to say the name of dr king but i think haiti's coming to power so that's another four years of misery and poverty without jobs pensioners are abandoned without anything i mean it's a catastrophe. has promised the serbian entity of republika srpska will break away from bosnia herzegovina he's also said on his first day in office he'll write a letter to president donald trump to demand the abolition of the office of the high representative it's a key part of the dayton accords which brought an end to the bosnian war and is meant to protect the country's constitution in a break with tradition miller out the door dick will talk to his fellow members of
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the presidential council here in the eastern suburb the so dominated suburb of sarajevo and he'll do it by video link. in sarajevo a scottish artist and photographer opened this exhibition on the eve of the polish it's made up of old election posters he called it disintegration he first came to the city in one thousand nine hundred ninety five as the war was about to end and i think what we've ended up with in the country is this sort of cycle of provocation growing on. it's not progressive them as not growing in the country for. some political analysts a bit by bit the new serbian president appears intent on demolishing the institutions of the country refurbishing the facade outside parliament these masons may be wasting their time david chaytor al jazeera sorry eva the u.s.
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secretary of state says international inspectors have been invited to north korea's nuclear and missile testing sites to confirm they have been irreversibly dismantled like on paper made that announcement after talks in pyongyang with kim jong un on sunday also said both sides are close to finalizing terms for a second summit between kim and donald trump is now in beijing for further talks. the search for earthquake and tsunami victims in indonesia will officially end on thursday it's been more than ten days since the disaster and there may still be thousands of people missing some of the worst hit areas and other affected regions things are slowly getting back to the way they were when he reports on that from power. there is some signs of normal life restarting here after the earthquake and tsunami electricity food and fuel will largely unavailable for days after the disaster now supplies are arriving in parts of palu allowing some economic activity to get going again. we only reopen so we could help people get food
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easily even. are still difficult to get in because we are spared from the zoster we feel like we have a duty to help other people when indonesia's president joko widodo visited affected areas last week he said restarting the economy was one of the priorities which people remain afraid of more earthquakes but the removed from what's left of their homes others are returning having fled when disaster struck on some streets there is color and vibrancy once again. but you don't have to go far for reminder of what happened here and that there's still much to be done bodies continue to be recovered but given the difficult terrain it's slow going. we may never know the exact number of people who died in this disaster particularly in areas like this which are so vast and the destruction so immense yes in some of the affected areas life is beginning to return to some sort of normality but here it is difficult to
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imagine how that will ever be possible. the government says they may be up to five thousand missing under the rubble and mud into areas of palu but the search will be wound down or stopped on thursday that contradicts an earlier statement from the indonesian president who said all the victims must be found relatives of the miss. want the search to continue. in these conditions we realize it's very difficult to get all the bodies out but we expect our family members to be found but they haven't so the government needs to give us a solution are they going to ask our permission before they convert this into a mass grave yard the government officially ending the search will be something many won't be able to accept and with entire communities wiped out it's expected to be a long time before most will be able to contemplate normality wayne hey al jazeera indonesia. now a deal between russia and turkey to avert a military invasion in the syrian province of moving forward syrian rebels have
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removed all heavy weapons from the front line in it's created a demilitarized zone twenty twenty kilometers long the demilitarization was a condition to avoid a full scale battle in the province because i'm to three million civilians or from . the turkish army has reinforced its observation posts all around province which borders turkey and send additional troops to patrol a planned demilitarized zone to separate government forces from opposition fighters the demilitarized zone is being established after a deal between russia and turkey it's aimed at preventing a possible syrian government offensive against it live the last remaining rebel controlled province in syria turkey's task is to free the zone from heavy weapons and so-called radical groups the state news agency says the syrian opposition and other anti-government groups have completed the first phase of the withdrawal. i
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want to see there. was a success. there is surely. probably a use for it. turkey's president. says. turkish intelligence agents an adlib are playing a major role rebel factions allied to turkey hold a third of the twenty kilometer deep buffer zone but the rest is controlled by what the international community labels radical terrorist organizations because of their links to al qaida among those groups is how a sham it controls the majority of the province and the planned zone and it has not officially declared whether it will withdraw its weapons and fighters by october the fifteenth regardless russia seem satisfied president vladimir putin said turkey is treating the agreement seriously and fulfilling its commitments but moscow is
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accusing the so-called radical groups of trying to create provocations to torpedo the deal oktober ten and fifteen are deadlines for the implementation russia's president vladimir putin is already calling this zone effective ruling out military action in the near future. doesn't want an armed confrontation with turkey that's why it's afraid to publish the reject the deal it's still trying to reach a peaceful solution turkey wants to prevent armed conflict but it's challenge is to implement the deal the tension is growing between the heat a sham and turkey backed rebels there could be more incidents of armed confrontations if the so-called radical groups refused to cooperate turkey has signaled readiness to use force against those who don't comply seven for their baby out. hundreds of thousands of children remain on the brink of famine in yemen as families struggle to get the help they need now two weeks ago we reported on two
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year old. son his parents in the who controlled north couldn't afford to take him to the capital sanaa for treatment but he is now getting the care it's been a smith as his story now from neighboring djibouti. is just skin and bone. is two years old he should be walking by now. he has severe acute malnutrition and a range of related complications after a million children in yemen earn a similar condition to bassam as a consequence of the war now into its fourth year between the yemeni government backed by the saudi and their r.t. coalition and who the rebels some of the song we can't ignore the siege and they're . just silent of sun i report i mean under part of the day they're full and that led to their suffering from malnutrition. the who the administration's health minister saw some story in al jazeera two weeks ago and ordered his rescue from northern yemen. and he was brought to the capital sanaa for treatment along with
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five other children condition might improve or he may need more specialist treatment outside yemen and that's where the health minister is influenced and. santa airport is closed to all but a handful of u.n. flights the saudi u.a.e. led coalition battling the who this shut down yemeni air space. with the closure of the airport is a crime a basic rate of yemeni citizen and patients according to this that this text file model by the ministry of health there are more than thirteen thousand five hundred death of patients that could have traveled abroad for treatment yet there are more than ninety five thousand patients that need to travel for medical treatment the un's special envoy to yemen martin griffis told al jazeera on september the twenty seventh that he looked forward to announcing the reopening of some airport next week well into the second week of october and the airport remains closed bernard smith al-jazeera djibouti. but histones new government has announced it will
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approach the international monetary fund for a financial bailout it's not known how much pakistan will seek from the i.m.f. but it's thought it will need at least nine billion dollars to meet the current account deficit an emergency loan from the i.m.f. would be pakistan's second in five you. after thirteen years the first local council elections are taking place in indian administered kashmir massive security operation will be involved as separatist rebels in the disputed region have threatened to target versus. the threats by armed separatists and the boycott by political parties dissuaded some voters but thousands did participate in what the indian government called a vital exercise to boost democracy skilled. the security arrangement is good and the voters are not facing any issue every voter is independently voting for his or her candidates and the voting process is going on smoothly and peacefully the
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indian army deployed fifty thousand soldiers to supplement the seven hundred thousand already stationed in kashmir separatist groups have been fighting india's control of the region since the end of british rule and the partition of india in one thousand nine hundred seventy. this election is to fool the world that there is democracy here where there are military emergency laws in place there is draconian laws under which thousands have been arrested for years this election is an exercise by india to tell even if you don't participate in it we will still conducted this is not an election it's a fraud. a general strike shut down businesses and to pro india political parties in the region refused to take part saying they won't participate until the federal government addresses the law on who can own property. the national conference and peoples democratic party say the supreme court in new delhi is trying to change
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kashmir special status in the indian constitution and allow outsiders to work or settle in kashmir low voter turnout in previous elections has allowed separatists to cast doubt on the political process in the disputed region but government leaders in new delhi insist elections are the only way to accommodate political demands. on al jazeera this is nobel economics prize has been awarded to two americans the economists william nordhaus and paul roman were given the prize for their roles in changes to long term economic forecasting not house got the prize for looking at climate change in economic modeling while rome a former chief economist of the world bank was awarded for his work of integrating technological change into his full cost. on three million people are suffering from a devastating drought in afghanistan there has been no rain for months crops have all failed it's forcing families to leave their homes and aid workers say the
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situation is now at a critical stage twenty berkeley has been to one of the worst hit areas the province of but yes. in the barren in the hospitable terrain of northwestern afghanistan life is a challenge at the best of times but the drought that to salvage this region has made survival even more difficult. we haven't had rain here for nine months it's devastated our community. but luis province is said to be one of the worst affected in the district of cali nor more than one hundred twenty thousand people have arrived in this one area the lack of water cause their crops to fail so they abandon their homes in villages muhammad his wife and four children walked eight hours in search of water and. we had nothing and we couldn't stay near to night and it was hard that we had no choice. un agencies are bringing in supplies but so many people are arriving at the camp they can't keep pace with the demand. the number is much much bigger than we expected and the resources we have
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is even much less than what we expected so a woman challenge is actually to get the necessary resources to the scale of the response the u.n. raise more than one hundred thirty two million dollars to tackle the emergency but that was based on estimations made months ago now the number of displaced people has swelled to more than three million and another seventy million dollars at least is needed this emergency is now into its fifth month and still these people are not receiving the humanitarian aid they desperately need a cold winter is approaching and that will make a critical situation even worse unless help comes quickly so you can see from some of the shelter around when people are basically. out in the open now that's fine when it's. until eight twenty nine degrees centigrade during the day and only. fifteen at night but soon temperatures will be subzero here people will die.
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phones could take weeks to get through and the pull of this camp don't have decent shelter sufficient food or time many children are showing signs of acute and moderate malnutrition winter is just a few weeks away these basic shelters will offer little protection in temperatures which can drop to as low as minus ten degrees and many people complain that the afghan government has done little to help but the local government says the huge number of displaced people is putting a strain on resources and. my didn't we are giving one million liters of water a day and our water table has dropped to thirty meters at this rate we will have no water within six months the international agencies need to get people back to their homes and feed and water them there in an area with significant taliban presence that plan depends on money and security no one can promise either for now the struggle for survival for drought victims goes on tony berkeley al-jazeera province
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health awareness and stuff a trying to talk to those who might be contemplating suicide john hendren for a visit in chicago. on a tree lined street in one of america's most massive cities lies a sanctuary where it's ok not to be ok where our slogan it's ok not to be ok comes from is me just being like damn it why can these people there's no they can talk about things you know why didn't my uncle drink himself to death why didn't my aunt you know not speak up about needing to be on meds and also her alcohol abuse and causing a chemical imbalance in her body and unfortunately gassing herself and her on she no like i had friends who didn't put guns that i had the you know. welcome to sip of hope the world's first mental health cafe where every cent of proceeds from every cup goes to suicide prevention and mental health education it's run by hope for the day the mental health nonprofit johnny who she founded after a close friend leapt from the fifth floor balcony he was number nine on
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a list of sixteen people that i've personally lost to suicide you can talk terrible reeses they're trained and mental health education that allows them to be equipped with the tools to have a conversation like we're supposed to be having every day but sadly we've neglected that is the society we have displaced that conversation and now we're starting to see the unfortunate side effects of that you know suicide rates are higher than ever every day in the united states one hundred twenty one people commit suicide eight hundred thousand a year worldwide for every one of them two hundred try and fail the idea is to reach people where they are people who aren't necessarily looking for a mental health consultation. maybe just a cup of coffee and a conversation. here the entryway is lined with information for the ailing and the barristers are trained to direct customers to mental health centers and funding as they fill their coffers they are talking about things like depression on they talk
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about things like suicide talking about. bipolar illness. kind of the. rise of different types of mental illnesses and different types of mental. crisis is that people may be having in the depression and other things it's a place where the brew can come with a potentially life saving conversation and a link to help and health all for the price of a cup of coffee john hendren al-jazeera chicago and it is the talk sport now what do you got for us we've got a bit of cricket come all century by a for pakistan in a pretty strong position after the second by the first test against australia so how combined with such a feat for a big partnership oh it was a an attritional day's play in the united arab emirates she fake at eight c. they're playing in six tests a hales lamont moment coming from syria one hundred and twenty three balls i thought i wanted eventually get his man for
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a hundred and ten is pakistan score four hundred and eighty two in their first innings three guys. australia finished today thirty without loss as been cautious and aaron finch the unbeaten batsman they still trail pakistan by more than four hundred fifty runs. well for the third straight year nick curiosus made a controversial and early exit from the shanghai masters the australian nearest series here appears to be putting in a less than one hundred percent effort during his first round loss to american qualifier bradley clan last year the world the thirty eight was fined after he stormed off midway through his first round match and in twenty six the incurious was hit with a barren after being accused of giving away points on purpose in another defeat. three time grand slam going to stand very frank also outs he still struggling to find his best form of the nursery haven't been here in three sets bike races on court. now liverpool manager yogen kloppers described the you often ations league
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as the most senseless competition in world football domestic leagues are on hold right now with leading players heading off on international duty is to spain's court meeting up ahead of their nations league game against england it's a competition designed to replace the majority of friendly matches what though not a fan boys unfortunately go away again have to play nations cup games the most senseless competition in the world of football. and you know and then we hope that they come back healthy in their play this this is a competition premier league and germany's league and f.a. cup is waiting all that's up so it's tough times for the boys. when rooney has continued his good run of form in major league soccer the from england caps the scoring twice on sunday helping d.c. united come back from a goal down so when we want to go to the chicago fire strike taking renie's total
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to nine in sixteen matches d.c. united within two points of a playoff spot. the colors of the players that come from behind him it's easy to. so you know what i'm almost signed you get the draw and you could see after we got the fares go. you could see the same nation in this time with a little. again something we didn't. go on and could this be the future of penalty taking. or it goes in russia rubin design used team player new york after you answered a unique approach to the responsibility in this game in the country student league admittedly his university side go nuts when the game for health. the most the colorado rockies to advance in major league baseball's post season the brewers shut out the rockies and colorado six nothing they were three there were three hundred one sorry in the game including back to back home runs in the ninth inning . atlanta just about the series of the l.a.
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dodgers alive the braves blew a five nothing lead before a home run by freddie freeman decided the game finished six five to atlanta leaving the best of five series poised to so on to the dodgers. chinese basketball player doing young you hang scored his first point for his n.b.a. team the dallas mavericks could hardly have done it in a more fitting location being on target with a free throw for the mavericks in this pre-season game against the philadelphia seventy six systems taking place in the chinese city of shenzhen the mavericks going on so when this game one fifteen so wants one. britain's vomit far has won the chicago marathon it's his first marathon win three attempts in pretty awful weather conditions the faults our military trying champion took the lead in the final few kilometers thirty five year old winning in a time of two hours five minutes eleven seconds that is a new european correct. plies amazing to hear someone first you know this is a major matter for not just one of the think tank american chicago organizers and
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everyone who's put the great race together you know it's nice to be able to race against gale and the rest of the guys you know he won last year here. to be able to come back the following year and win the first full day of competition at the youth olympics in argentina was a good one for russia the country wants three goals including this one for gori sharma coffin the ten meter air rifle events are a couple more goals for russia b.m.x. racing. in the world pools full same from tango guests of honor at the opening of the games that seem attracted global attention of course when they were rescued from a flooded cave in their home country she also had the chance to play a friendly game against the u.s. team of leading argentinian club river plights. rule from may through the night but that is all your support and thanks so much for that and that is your news hour from the team here and thank you for joining us. is getting set in london for another political views right here on al-jazeera coming up in
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a couple of. brother leader or brutal dictator. with discontent spreading through north africa time was running out for libya's self-styled king of kings. in the first of a two part series the big picture charts the rise and fall of one of the few and the events that helped fuel the violence of his final hours. the lust for libya on al-jazeera. the cricket world isn't nadal match fixing i mean you have to think
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why would he give me i got the guess then we didn't bring him again instead i get a big big bang bang and al-jazeera is investigative unit reveals explosive new evidence documentary confirms the moment now is a very hard profile figure in much fiction and international cricket do you go to this map al-jazeera investigations cricket's matchboxes the manaul of files coming soon china used to take half the world's recyclable rubbish but not anymore with garbage generated by one point four billion people they've got enough of their own but where does it go when he's this the live on china's war on waste on al-jazeera . we understand the differences and the similarities of cultures across the world. so no matter where you call home al-jazeera will bring you the news and current of friends that matter to you.
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al-jazeera. turkey's president challenges saudi arabia to prove that missing journalist jamal khashoggi left the consulate in istanbul. and modern tale of this is al jazeera live from london also coming up. scientists give the strongest warning about climate control so far make drastic changes now or face disastrous global consequences. is being called a racist and homophobic the leader of brazil's far right movement is one closer step.
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