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tv   NEWS LIVE - 30  Al Jazeera  October 9, 2018 10:00am-10:34am +03

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right. the u.s. finally speaks out about journalism as the last photo of him entering the saudi consulate in istanbul images. right now nobody knows anything about it but these are pretty sad stories daryn i did not like it. so i'm fully back to watching al-jazeera live from doha also ahead as brazil heads into a presidential runoff vote to see more divided than ever. retreating from the front line d. delicate deal to prevent more violence in syria as last rebel held profit splats
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suffering in silence the less obvious cars for palestinians trying to fight against israeli occupation. thank you for joining us tonight it states has finally spoken about the fate unknown fate of. donald trump says he's concerned about the case his comments come as the washington post released what it says is the last known image of the newspaper says this image shows him entering the saudi consulate in istanbul last tuesday to believe he was murdered inside the consulate and allegations saudi arabia's government has denied the image has been verified by her show g.'s fiancee before he vanished. hinted that he was concerned about his fate the b.b.c. released an interview with him in london just three days before he went to the saudi consulate in istanbul. i'm today not but i found with of doing
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a lot of traveling now and i'm living between istanbul and and washington d.c. i hear of an of a list of a friend who did. nothing that warthe to be a twisted make me feel i shouldn't go i'm talking that friend of mine who were who was arrested all of even talking maybe he was talking. critically over something and that in that in a dinner party right that's what we want to be what we are becoming in saudi arabia right when i used to that recently a sword a columnist an economist who was close to the royal court got that listed and that's good many people because here we are talking about somebody was going off of the government right right i don't even want to use the term this is a decision at this int he said and then this intense i mean the people who are out
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of this and even being dissidents right they just have an independent mind right and you know i don't call myself an opposition right i always say i am just right that i want a free environment to write and speak my mind. as i mentioned president trump a spoken out case and his secretary of state is asking sound arabia to support a thorough investigation into the journalist's disappearance game elizondo reports from washington submitted because i don't want saudi journalist jamal khashoggi has been missing for a week and for the first time u.s. president donald trump has addressed it and he's not happy i am concerned about it i don't like hearing about it and hopefully that will sort itself out right now nobody knows anything about it but there's a pretty bad stories going around i do not like the u.s. government has mostly remained silent on reports saudi arabia might have murdered. saudi arabia denies any involvement late monday vice president mike pence tweeted
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deeply troubled to hear reports about saudi arabian journalist jamal khashoggi if true this is a tragic day by lin siggins journalists across the globe is a threat to freedom of the press and human rights the free world deserves answers the outspoken journalist was a u.s. resident and well known in the halls of power here in washington from his big platform as a columnist at the washington post where his writing was often very critical of saudi arabia's government particularly crown prince mohammed bin solomon to show his disappearance now as many people in this city demanding answers i think it's very disturbing. it's very unnerving we just need to get clear facts from both governments senator lindsey graham tweeted we agree if there was any truth to the allegations of wrongdoing by the saudi government it would be devastating to the u.s. saudi relationship and there will be a heavy price to pay economically and otherwise it means that there's going to be
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reexamined nation of the relationship of aid by the military by the united states on military sales to the saudi government and there's going to be once again a distance for to. in the united states and that government it's now clear washington has joined the chorus of coals to saudi arabia for answers on the growing international scandal his disappearance gave rosendo how does it go washington. is associate professor of middle eastern politics at the university of oklahoma says u.s. criticism of saudi arabia won't end their relationship but it will alter the impression some have of the crown prince being a progressive reformer i think there's no question that this is going to put some strain on the saudis i think they're going to have to come up with better answers as to what happened the relationship between mr trump and mohammed bin so mine in
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the survey the regime has been very strong very positive has been unquestioning with regard to human rights issues in saudi arabia or saudi arabia's doings elsewhere such as with regard to the yemen war or for example the blockade of qatar or other activities so this could change things slightly i don't think it's going to be the unraveling of the relationship as you know it's one that's existed since one nine hundred forty five and one that both countries benefit from in some sense . in other world news an investigative website has revealed more details about the second suspect behind the poisoning of russian agents in the u.k. betting katz says russian military doctor alexander miskin travel to solves very using a different name it says michigan as employed by russia's intelligence agency the u.k. accuses him and a man identified by the wept website as a not tony of trying to kill script and his daughter where the nerve agents know
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the chalk in march. brazil's far right presidential candidate had both scenarios says he won't be toning down his rhetoric ahead of the second round of voting he could become the next leader of latin america's largest nation after easily winning the first round on sunday to reassemble reports from sao paolo. there's lots of mixed feelings in brazil after sunday's elections on one hand there is those who are afraid about what could happen in this country if a person. makes it to power they're afraid that human rights abuses by security forces will increase to hold for now the us said in the past that a good criminal is a dead criminal or is so afraid about the possibility of persecution of minorities of political persecution but then there are those and there are many of those who believe that. they will do anything in order to prevent the workers' party makes it
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to power again and they say that they will vote for boys for not oh you know wait so many of those you talk to they're saying that they are voting for the worst the least worst candidate but it was has responded positively has been this country's economy the stock exchange has been on the rise the brazilian area is has been soaring and i do have said that if he's makes it to the presidency he will prioritize state owned companies reduce the presence of the state in the economy and it seems that markets seem to like that from now on is going to be the campaign ahead the strategy for now is for him on the law that says that he's visited a former president it would rather feeble in prison told him to take to the streets to talk to people to tell them what's at stake in this country he says that it's brazilian democracy that's at stake and he wants to create an anti-fascist bloc with other center left candidates on the other hand is also an adult who said that
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he's not going to change his campaign strategy that he will continue to attack the workers' party because he blames them for the economic crisis that has happened in this country and for the worst corruption scandal that has happened in this country's history follow sotero is director of the brazilian scituate at the woodrow wilson center he says both scenario was quick to understand the frustration brazilians had with the system. i think this sort of the final surge was a bit of a surprise spalls had indicated that he would win the first round of elections but not by such large margin which makes him very likely next president of brazil mr harper has an almost impossible position of. stablish in his on identity as a candidate he is completely dented five by folders with little or if you go see how
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that goes too far to the center he risks losing soup or precisely from the lula base so he has a very difficult task ahead of him in the next three weeks i think he is down to five very early in the end the frustration of resilience with. widespread corruption that didn't happen mostly under the rule of the workers' party so. public's insecurity crime brazil is today the coal of seventeen of the fifty fifty most violent cities in the world and there is an enormous frustration lingering effects of the longest and deepest recession in brazil's history. deal between
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russia and turkey to prevent a syrian government offensive in the last rebel held province is moving forward on heavy weapons from the front line in creating a twenty kilometers demilitarized zone this was a condition to avoid an assault on the province which is home to three million people then a harder reports. the turkish army has reinforced its observation posts all around province which borders turkey and sent 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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was. so sure. the day was. turkey's president to go on says turkish intelligence agents and 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 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 seems satisfied president vladimir putin said turkey is treating the agreement seriously and fulfilling its commitments but must . sco is accusing the so-called radical groups of trying to create provocations to
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torpedo the deal october ten and fifteen are deadlines for the implementation russia's president vladimir putin is already calling the zone effective ruling out the military action of your 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 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 big route. and i'll kind of commander accused of planning attacks in egypt has been arrested he. was held a raid by the libyan national army in the eastern town of data on the border of
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libya and egypt the army is led by a warlord highly for have to balance by egypt's. facing a death sentence in cairo said ahead on al-jazeera i will tell you about a government decision in zimbabwe that has led to fuel and food shortages and donald trump heads his new supreme court justice work after a better nomination process. how they were about half way through continuous rain in highland scotland from the massive cloud above my head this could leave a thing up to a two hundred millimeters of rain possibly maybe more than that it's ridiculous right but it's falling of the last knots the most active weather in your part from the few showers down here in the west and then train which will carry all next
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twenty four hours if anything maybe conglomerated and then start to feed themselves back up through march say that's where the rain valley and give a line of rain at through western fronts and that is an indication of increasing wants to southerly wind twenty five in paris twenty two in london all this time i've been standing over what is effectively a quiet part of europe central and eastern europe right up through scandinavia and actually quite warm again seventeen in stockholm now of course lends itself to similar sort of split around the mediterranean western side means plenty of showers at least some cheese day for morocco for our area possibly for tunisia they dissipate north as tensions start to rise it is still a fair amount of try to be felt here and without too much the breeze elsewhere i was talking about high twenty's for tripoli benghazi thirty one in cairo otherwise apart from the cloud it's a dry and quiet environment throughout north africa. in
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major life you see beats order and boy is one of the. rights. they need to be joined that is for. nigeria is so. is your development my major cities this is my nigeria. my mind on al-jazeera. and watching al-jazeera a reminder of our top stories this hour the washington post says really is what it
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says is the last known a major saudi. before he says the image shows him entering the saudi consulate in istanbul last tuesday he hasn't been seen since turkish investigators believe he was murdered inside the consulate and allegations saudi arabia's government denies and for the first time u.s. president donald trump has voiced concern about the case washington is calling on your abs are supporting a thorough investigation into his disappearance the outspoken janice is a u.s. resident. brazil's far right candidate is promising to overhaul latin america's largest nation after needing in the first round of the presidential election also narrow vows to fight corruption and privatized state companies if he wins the top office in round two. returning to our top story and the fate of saudi journey. many people in istanbul are unaware of his disappearance and the potential implications on their country's relationship with saudi arabia simcoe silda reports
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. the saudi general comes late in istanbul for journalists to do was last seen entering his fiance now the center of so much attention from the world's media. to the annoyance of saudi consular officials and while the stumble chief prosecutor's office has often to probe and ask for a search turkey has become a sanctuary for many opposition figures from the middle east since their up supreme of two thousand and eleven has shipped g.'s disappearance spreading fear amongst them. now they are asking the syrians to come and to call for their being in turkey to be interesting they're all saying well. as if we go inside and when they would get out the vanishing of the saudi is seen as a clear warning to others that even if this is
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a matter of detention by this authorities or perhaps we shouldn't spare the word kidnapping of this individual this still cost you it's a very serious breach of international law and international diplomatic traditions the level of interest among turks is mixed with no i didn't know that because i'm not following the news i don't watch t.v. i'm really busy with work weekends and it is that he seems to be an important person both research the arabia and turkey it's a subject that must be well investigated but for our up tourists visiting turkey the comments are much more telling i will disappear as well if i will talk about it many turkish people are unaware or just mysterious disappearance and stumble but the incident is further escalating the tension between both countries who lay sions have been strained since turkey's government criticized the kingdom support for the
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military coup in egypt five years ago but for now both turkish and international media keep watch at the saudi council eight hoping to get some clues about fellow journalist and author ship g.'s whereabouts so you know because although i'll just stumble. pakistan's new government has decided to start talks with the international monetary fund on a second bailout in five years the finance minister says it's to start an economic recovery programme the country needs eleven point seven billion dollars to service its external debt in the current fiscal year. zimbabwe's president says a new tax on bank transactions is a painful but necessary part of the government's attempts to revive the economy it's amazon and got worse first common sense he imposed a levy which has led to the reemergence of fuel queues and food shortages reports from harare. it's perhaps another signs the economy may take a long time to recover some people have been lining up since saturday to fill up
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because the central bank governor says fuel shortages are because of the introduction of a two percent tax on back transactions that means products now cost more and suppliers are buying less it's little shortages and many disappointed customers it's up to very rude disappointing because everything is at a standstill gondolin a business. groups in the world. the worsening economic crisis is compounded by a critical shortage of cash the last time lines were this long was back in two thousand and eight some people would sleep in their cars for days hoping to get fuel government officials are telling the bobbins not to panic but some people say they are worried. in some places fuel has started arriving but it's still not enough. others are stocking up on groceries these days brit is in short supply and usually
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doesn't last long on the shelves in some stores customers are limited to two items per person to prevent hoarding and panic buying. stock or. even room for. this behavior persons of change with people uncertain of the future . certainties of cum. very big pressure increases prices a tripled in just a few days it's a question of increasing capacity specifically some of my fits are us having more fill of those shelves because it's just that it is sage and demand it is the same speculation that's causing some panic buying but again these things and they will be. but increasing production needs foreign currency us dollars that banks say they don't have enough of some imported by dollars on the black market at a premium sums of the could be more frustration and hardship before things get
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better. algis there. brett kavanaugh has been sown in as a new justice of the us supreme court it follows a better nomination process and accusations of sexual assault against him that prompted an f.b.i. investigation and protests by women's groups against the appointment before the swearing in president donald trump said the allegations were all made up this for president thank you for the great honor of appointing me to serve as a justice of the supreme court i've seen first hand your deep appreciation for the vital role of the american judiciary i am grateful for your steadfast unwavering support throughout this process and i'm grateful to you and mrs trump for the exceptional overwhelming courtesy you have extended to my family and me
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mr president thank you for everything. thank you and behalf of our nation i want to apologise to brett and the entire cabinet our family for the terrible pain and suffering you have been forced to endure. those who stepped forward to serve our country deserve a fair and dignified evaluation not a campaign of political and personal destruction based on lies and deception what happened to the kavanaugh family violates every notion of fairness decency and due process more than a decade of blockade war and economic collapse have taken a huge toll on the mental health of palestinians in gaza recent protests at the border are adding to the stress nearly two hundred protestors have been killed and thousands injured by israeli life fire harry fossett has a second report in our three part series on global mental health issues. a recent
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friday protest in gaza near the border fence with israel the israeli snipers shot more than fifty protesters killing one as usual many suffered leg wounds. with the chaos a small group broke through the fence into israeli territory. a telephone yumi says he was one of those who got through he had his leg amputated after being shot during a protest in april but he keeps going back his family says he wants to die he's even written notes to be published after his death and i was a lost part of my body why should i live either let me out of gaza to get an artificial limb or i'll keep going to the border al-jazeera film with a toddler just after he was injured following him through surgery he was defiant then but his family soon noticed changes in his behavior his mother says he became demanding and prone to outbursts of temper at home but it's worse she says when he
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goes out i have a value because the men have a very eyes and i used to be a normal mother now i live in fear as soon as he leaves the house i start getting anxious i keep trying to convince him not to go to the border but he doesn't listen . gaza's health ministry says at least five thousand palestinians have been injured by israeli gunfire since the start of the protests in march sixty eight have had a leg amputated psychologist somee a waiter is helping to research the effects on their mental health related trauma formative experience sometimes liberation and sometimes unfortunately if the will of the storm the war on that there will be different kind of for that ideation of the so that. the acute this is but one factor among many in gaza is a broader mental health crisis the world health organization talks of the huge effect on mental health of the israeli blockade the last twelve years have seen three was mounting joblessness rising despair. w.h.o.
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is estimated that up to twenty percent of the population likely to have serious mental health issues and last year the number of psychiatric patients visiting government linked mental health clinics was up nearly seventy percent on the year before. four years ago an israeli airstrike killed us or a. son mohammed and destroyed her home. him now who is a pair of caravans not far from the border fence she's disarmingly frank about the depths of the depression she experienced while i've got a fair love got it i thought about committing suicide several times i wanted to die rather than live such a difficult life but because of my religious beliefs i didn't go through with it or tell us how you may see the counselor three times a week he says the sessions make him feel better but still he keeps going back to the border hurry force it out zero gaza and in a final report in our series on world mental health we go to sweden to look at an
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unconventional approach to help those who need support that's on wednesday right here on al-jazeera. hundreds of thousands of children remain on the brink of famine in yemen as families struggle to get the help they need to weeks ago we reported on two year old bassem has a son his parents in the healthy controlled north couldn't afford to take him to the capital sanaa for treatment but now his luck has changed granted smith has the story from neighboring djibouti. he's just skin and bone mass and her son 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 silence of sun i report i mean under part of the day that full and that led to their suffering from malnutrition. the who the administration's health minister
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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 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 it's. santa airport is closed to all but a handful of u.n. flights the saudi u.a.e. led coalition battling the who these are shut down yemeni air space. with the closure of the airport is a crime a basic rate of yemeni citizen inpatients 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
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seventh that he looked forward to announcing the reopening of some airport next week we're into the second week of october and the airport remains closed burnet smith al jazeera djibouti. fully back to go with the headlines here on al-jazeera the washington post has published what it says is the last known photo of jamal entering the saudi consulate in istanbul a week ago turkish investigators believe the saudi journalist was murdered inside the consulate the subject rabia government is denying any link to his disappearance donald trump has for the first time voice concerned about the fate of the well known journalist who has a u.s. president the u.s. president is calling on salinger a.b.i. to support a thorough investigation into his disappearance before he vanished in hinted that he was concerned about his fate the b.b.c.
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has released an interview with him just three days before he went to the saudi consulate in istanbul recently a saudi columnist an economist who was close to the royal court got a listed and that's a good many people because here we are talking about somebody who's close to the government right right i don't even want to use the term this is a dissent dissent dissidents there this isn't i mean the people who are this is not even dissidents right they just have an independent mind right until you know i don't call myself an opposition. i am just right that i want a free environment to write and speak my mind. an investigative website has revealed more details about the second suspect behind the poisoning of russian double agents a script in the u.k. belling cat says russian military doctor alexander miskin travel to souls very using a different name it says the works he works for russia's intelligence agency the
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u.k. accuses him and a man identified by the website as an atoll each a pita of trying to kill script and his daughter with the nerve agents know the child can march brazil's far right candidate is promising to overhaul latin america's largest nation after meeting in the first round of the presidential election and both the narrow vols to combat corruption and privatized state companies if he wins the top office in the second round. and brett kavanaugh has been sworn in as the new justice of the us supreme court it follows a bitter nomination process and accusations of sexual assault against him that prompted an f.b.i. investigation and protests by women's groups against the appointments you're up to date with the headlines on al-jazeera coming up next year it's inside story do stay with us. that is the perfect formula for authoritarianism and here let me ask you straight up korea is the two state solution now the lights are on and there's no
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way to tie up from which to. bust his deepening ethnic divisions out in the open a hardliner who wants to break away has been chosen by just serves as their president the top post is also had by muslims and croats when milorad don't excel lection pulled the country apart two decades after the brutal civil war and this is inside story. hello and welcome to the program i'm hood out that hamid the results of sunday's general election in boston had segovia threatening to cause furred instability in the balkans which was wrecked by civil war in the one nine hundred ninety s. so voters elected miller and don't take.

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