tv Al Dirdiri Mohamed Ahmed Al Jazeera October 14, 2018 10:32pm-11:00pm +03
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times there is likely to be some heavy snow around as well be further towards the south and here in doha the temperature is easing as well it's still fairly humid though it does feel very hot if you're out in the sunshine still to the south of us this is a new band the remains of it and it's working its way northward so it's over the eastern parts of yemen them we're also seeing some showers over the far west and parts of a man and that's there in plenty of cloud ahead of it so don't be surprised if in the eastern part of saudi maybe up towards the u.a.e. and towards muscat there will be more in the way of cloud and just the outside chance of showers well down towards the southern parts of africa and here there's plenty of cloud too you can see it on the satellite picture gradually drifting its way towards the east the main focus of this is working away towards the east now though so it will be gradually drawing up a long night eastern coast if i fast forward to cheese day you can see the rains over towards the east and for to happen it's fine.
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i have almost my entire professional life to the invention of trade against corruption and whatever is the chapters we need also to show you the light. and this award bridges the gap that existed in this. normandy your entry for us from here on shine the light on work to do and to have not shine a light on going around with your nomination for the international peace award two thousand and eighteen for more information go to isa war dot com.
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top stories. in germany are demanding transparency over the disappearance and murder of. the consulate and. the saudi press agency says the kingdom rejects what it calls political pressure and baseless accusations. the top negotiator says that the irish border is still holding off despite intense efforts. from twenty seven european union member states someone to a meeting in brussels. from the block and german chancellor angela merkel's allies
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in the stage of the various. regional election results fifty and this. federal politician. now children and the iraqi city of mosul have gone back to school more than a year after the city was reclaimed from eisel the group shut down and destroyed most schools but seized mosul and twenty fourteen as the home of the reports it's hoped that getting an education will help the children heal. this. by the time the complaint. most of the city was. and keen to see their children back in class canada this was made possible with the
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help of contributions from the well wishers within and outside iraq it is the result of the tireless efforts of iraqi women to portray to the world agony and devastation and most of. the classrooms are crowded on the children must share both books and sits most top forgotten what it is like to be in school up to three years where it can be a struggle say the teachers to get them to listen and participate but it's the trauma and psychological impact the violence has had that's been the most diverse state. six year old solid that has has him survived an ass like that hit his home and almost wiped out his entire family he now lives in there partly destroyed house with his father and grandfather the only other survivors of the air strike solace for the prepares his son for the first day in school he is hopeful making new friends will help his recovery. of seven hundred is slowly recovering he nearly
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died and remembers everything vividly we need more help in caring for him though solace said mr ses everyone's trying their best to help. the psychological impact on children has been huge we have to free the children's minds from all these bad thoughts were free therapy sessions that are being clearly funded by the government unexploded bombs and other weapons continue to pose a danger to the children in the schools that once served us i said basis as many schools in europe to reopen teach us off forced to improvise running multiple shifts to accommodate all the students there are now increasing calls to the government for a major increase in investment in education to help ease the diverse station caused by years of violence mohammed on the wall just about that. the israeli supreme court has suspended the deportation of american student qassam until her appeal is considered the twenty two year old was detained on the twelve the second when she
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arrived in israel to study for a master's degree the government says she's a member of a group which calls for a boycott of israel over its treatment of palestinians qassam says she's no longer an active member of the boycott divestment and sanctions movement. a memorial ceremony has been held in somalia on the first anniversary of the largest bomb attack there at least five hundred people were killed and hundreds injured in the capital mogadishu the man accused of planning the explosion has been executed by firing squad for has more. sunday was a national day for somalis to mourn a year to the day since the massive truck bomb was detonated at a busy intersection in the capital it's been described as the largest explosion in somalia's troubled history and the worst attack since nine eleven in the u.s. . they believe that they can enforce fear and us they believe they could undermine the progress we have made they believe that they can damage our image betrayed our
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country is an unsafe place to go they want to damage the morale and resilience of our people to the contrary blisters with stronger unity the massive blast killed at least five hundred somalis injured hundreds more and destroyed buildings in the city center including a hotel no group claimed responsibility for the attack but the man accused of leading an al-shabaab unit was sentenced to death in february a firing squad carried out that sentence on the first anniversary for some it's little comfort shop attendant abdullah hossam goal says it's like the explosion happened just yesterday. the shop owner i was working for died next to me i lost a lot of blood i struggled for some time no one came to my rescue then outside the shop i saw the whole area in flames dead bodies burning bodies and buildings on fire it's one year now i survived and i'm now back at work other survivors such as
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ali still have to be treated in hospital he was selling sweets at the intersection when the blast happened his wife was there too but he will never see her again they get out. they told me she's fine but that she sustained injuries and she's being treated in hospital after a while i found that she could not be found even her body was never found. many somalis who were there that day have a similar story to early and while reconstruction of the area has begun building still in ruins much like the lives of those afflicted by the disaster. russian opposition leader alexina volley has fanned to supporters as he was freed from fifty days in detention said the kremlin can't stop protests through intimidation it was rare arrested last month after finishing a previous thirty day sentence for
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a rally against popular pension reforms. now the u.s. midterm elections is just over three weeks away on november fifth being seen as a vote on president trump's leadership the republican party hopes the economy's strong performance will help them rally support. came to power the stock markets have surged to record highs the dow jones and which tracks the most influential public companies has risen by more than forty percent but fewer americans own stocks than during the two thousand and eight financial crisis most of them are upper middle class of the surge in the markets as only benefit and those who are already well off the unemployment rate is lower than it's been a decade but four out of ten people think of the two dollars and rising costs of health care food fuel and housing eating into many americans and the government is in serious debt the federal budget deficit this year has soared to seven hundred
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eighty two billion dollars pennsylvania will be a key battleground in the fight to control congress christensen only has more from there. business is booming at h. and k. equipment in the last year they've hired fifty five new employees twenty percent increase to make. furbish industrial equipment we are on pace to have our best year ever general manager patrick koch gives president donald trump in his tax cuts a lot of the credit consumer confidence at least. we noticed an uptick right away a lot of people were waiting in twenty sixteen to spend money until after november and it seemed like it was an opening of the floodgates right after that h. and k. is located just outside pittsburgh pennsylvania otherwise known as steel city the steel industry has benefited from new tariffs imposed by the president but some manufacturers in the area are seeing their costs go up as a result democrats have traditionally held sway in pennsylvania thanks in large
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part. to the power of trade unions as unions have weakened in manufacturing moved overseas it's not surprising that the president's make america great again message has resonated with voters still democrats think they can make gains here in the midterms because many people are still struggling to make ends meet good morning one of their viable democrat conor lam is challenging the notion that the republicans economic policies are good for pennsylvania calling tax cuts a boon for the rich and wall street but he says the political debate should stick to talking about policy rather than personalities were given voters a reason to believe that they actually are represented not just by. one sided. clash of national ideologies but by people who live here just like him he's running for congress against a two time incumbent who warns lamb will help democrats obstruct the trump agenda
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as your economic future change for better or worse. everything is going up but paychecks canvassers with the political action group working america have been going door to door trying to show voters a link between republican policies and rising costs the chaos of the current administration is sort of. open our eyes. town what's going on as for patrick koch he won't say who he's voting for there are many business friendly democrats here they're business friendly republicans you know what i'm thinking about my business i think about how are they going to vote for for the small guys like us into proving the old adage that all politics is local and that democrats may have a reason to be optimistic even in a state that helped elect a controversial republican president christine salumi al-jazeera pittsburgh pennsylvania. to australia now where the government has announced a betty and donna aid package for drought stricken fama is that economists a question whether it's worth trying to quell crops and raise animals that
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increasingly hostile climate. andrew thomas reports from parks in new south wales. in a good year farmers like wayne dunn food wouldn't need to buy hay a tool they'd grow crops. and the sheep and cows would eat them straight out of the ground but drought has hit australia's east and states they say has been trucked in from a thousand kilometers away with transport that costs about two hundred fifty dollars a bale. one hay bale will feed sixty calories for a day dunford has three hundred eighty so feeding them is costing him more than ten thousand dollars a week the grind of a drip gets to you and i like you get a fifty k. or when blaring if i sold i was a really big throat and they still are afraid to stock and what windows but it gets everyone to be cranky for some reason and it tend to get out but it's just the fact
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that you're out there every die and. things go backwards not forwards. dunford is mixing some hay with wheat grain and compact grass silos to keep costs down but making that mix is harder work even if it is slightly cheaper across the east in australia the drought me the farmers are putting in a lot more effort and paying out a lot more money now the government part to help with the what but it can and helping with the money australia's national and state governments are subsidizing transport costs offering low interest loans and giving cash payments to farmers worth nine thousand dollars only having assets of more than three point seven five million dollars disqualifies farming families from the handouts it's the sort of help people in no other industry get this is a way of life that is important to australia's future and as
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a result of that i think that means there's a special responsibility here but some economists think farms need to deal with drought as any business deals with risk in good he is economically viable farmers make lots of money which should carry them through the tough ones few australians though see it that way most live in cities but they have a deep cultural affinity with rural communities it dates back to stories of colonial settlers timing a rocket lands today the media adds to the emotional mix drought mike's great television and in australia very early add drought so really. confronting so people in the city who don't necessarily understand the economics of agriculture who have this deep cultural sympathy for farmers want their governments to act so it's good politics but not necessarily good economics added thomas out of their napalm since demonstrating. now researchers are warning that teachers and
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clinicians are mistaking immaturity for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder or a.d.h. d. a global study shows that the youngest children of costs are more likely to be diagnosed and medicated and that could do more harm than good by the other honda explains parents want what's best for their children so when a teacher says they might be a problem parents naturally respond imagine then the suggestion that the child has a.d.h. day attention deficit hyperactivity disorder will a global study indicates that might not always be the case.
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