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tv   newsgrid  Al Jazeera  October 17, 2018 6:00pm-7:01pm +03

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is this strike on the shaver which is some forty kilometers away from the gaza strip as a major escalation is only the second time that a rocket from gaza has fallen in that area since the twenty fourteen war in august the previous occasion it fell in fields during a round of major exchanges between israeli forces and hamas this strike hamas has denied responsibility for it in a statement which was also cosigned by islamic jihad and other palestinian fighting factions inside the gaza strip it said that it condemned any such irresponsible actions that would act to undermine egyptian efforts to negotiate a long term truce with the israelis the defense minister however before this rocket attack took place on tuesday he had just been meeting with senior army officials saying that now is the time to deal i'm age a blow to hamas and the only art to such a blow which essentially reads like a call for a major military action war on gaza only after such an attack could there be
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a long term truce the question remains whether the israeli army is signed up for that whether the israeli prime minister is signed up for that certainly there is a lot of reporting in the israeli media that that is not the case and election cabinet has been killed in a bomb attack in afghanistan as violence threatens to disrupt saturday's election the blast happened in the southern province of helmand at least ten candidates opin killed now in the run up to the election and hundreds of people have been injured in attacks across the country charlotte bonuses in kabul. and was killed inside his electoral office and helmand province this morning a bomb was planted on to his chair eight people were wounded in the attack three people died later of the injuries the taliban took responsibility for this attack they had warned they would do this ahead of the elections and on election day the parliamentary elections here on saturday he died in that blast he was a very well know one politician here in afghanistan a former military general who had been
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a politician here ever since the fall of the taliban in two thousand and one he had worked in helmand for the last three years he was determined that they would just it wouldn't be a fight a military fight between the government in the taliban he wanted to speak to them he wanted to negotiate and people called him a dream and yet he continues this morning people who had a lot of supporters a lot of people would have voted for him on on saturday but as soon i mean karama which in diary means champion o'hare and for a lot of people here this morning his surname will ring church. will get a weather update next here on al-jazeera then store a bit tourism industry back in business tourists are hitting the beaches a bizarre as again after the twenty fifteen hotel attacks and a linguistic divide violence in cameroon worse than its power struggle over language.
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hello again it's good to have you back well this hour we're going to start in south parts of asia where we are seeing a lot of clouds across malaysia as well as into indonesia now the next two days also vietnam is expected to see some very heavy rain holtzman city rain day for you with the terms of their of thirty one but as we go towards friday we do expect to see more rain across much of that area even a little bit of circulation developing right there just to the south of vietnam to the south jakarta not looking too bad with the temperature a few of thirty. degrees well over here towards australia we are seeing one funnel boundary here on the east coast and that is producing some rain for a few cities there we do need the rain because of the drought situation so along this front we could be seeing some showers some of those could be intense at times with thunderstorms and those showers will continue for thursday we're going to be seeing brisbane at twenty six degrees melbourne about twenty one and then over here to the west for perth we're going to see a front going through so nineteen degrees and winds and showers here on thursday
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but as that front pushes through here on friday things get a little bit clearer but i also get a little cooler with a temperature of fifteen to seventeen degrees there and then very quickly as we make our way over here towards new zealand we're going to be seeing some very nice conditions for the north and south island for thursday we are looking at sixty degrees for auckland and a nice day for christchurch with a temperature of fifteen. discover new developments in surgery i'm talking about them when i'm in hiroshima japan to meet the surgeon pioneering new techniques in regenerating money and could a breakthrough medical trial provide some much needed owns to cystic fibrosis suffers based on all of the evidence me being mieris if you please stop hundred foot morning at ten o'clock to night the cure revisiting its own al-jazeera.
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get the main news this hour on al-jazeera a lack of cooperation from saudi arabia is being blamed by police in turkey for cancelling their search of the saudi consul general so forensic teams have already searched the saudi consulate in istanbul where the saudi arabian journalist jamal khashoggi was last seen fifteen days ago investigators suspect that he was killed. by the u.s. secretary of state is in the turkish capital ankara my compare was meant to president top of the one of his that has met with the country's foreign minister he flew in from riyadh donald trump sent in to see cards from saudi leaders.
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of the palestinians been killed three others injured after israeli forces launched airstrikes on gaza the israeli military says that it was targeting a group firing rockets israel's defense minister ordered the closure of the as and care of abu salam crossings following the attacks in which three people injured. hopes are fading that a deal on the u.k. leading the your leaving the european union could be agreed with a march deadline getting ever closer e.u. leaders accusing meet britain's prime minister to resign may in the coming hours at a meeting in brussels on tuesday the european council president donald tusk says that said that he's not hopeful about a breakthrough in talks with the u.k. negotiations of store once again over what should happen with the irish border briggs's several border crossings between syria and neighboring countries have reopened in recent weeks on monday the crossing with jordan open for the first time in three years the decades that was a vital trade routes across syria between lebanon and jordan where much of that
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trade went through the months not crossing on the syria lebanon border from where i was there is in a harder reports. the reopening of than a sea border crossing this vital artery for commercial traffic benefits many countries in the region jordan of course we know suffers from a weak economy the closure of that border was a crippling blow lebanon as well this is its only overland route to other countries this border was not closed during the seventy year war but trucks were not able to reach jordan and the gulf arab markets and so lebanon lost billions of dollars they had to export goods through the sea via the sea via air which cost really a lot of money so the reopening of these borders of the nessie border crossing benefiting the countries in the region syria celebrating it really as a victory showing that the country is stable it's returning to its pre-war status as a transit hub now of course the resumption of trade means the restoration of ties at
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least for jordan and lebanon and we heard the jordanian government spokesman person say this is a vital trade route between two brotherly nations jordan and lebanon did not break off diplomatic relations during the seven year for but they did not engage officially with the damascus government so damascus slowly coming out of its isolation economically it is hoping to engage to reengage with the international community as well but that this is going to be a little bit more difficult because we know the the west is no longer calling for us said stepping down as a condition for for political talks to happen but what they're asking for is a u.n. led credible political process that will lead to free elections and only if that happens then they will reengage with damascus and help with the reconstruction of the country so it is still a long path ahead but this is the start of the beginning of damascus coming out really of its. economic isolation at least in the region. three separatist fighters
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in the police may have been killed in a gunfight in indian administered kashmir it happened in the city of srinagar indian troops and cordoned off a neighborhood and was searching for rebels protests followed the incident resulting in local internet availability being caught trying to prevent the spread of demonstrations the decades indian security forces of four kashmiri separatists who want the region to be part of a stone chinese state media has released video of internment camps for we go muslims in the western province of shin jang despite international criticism the government has defended its treatment of the minority group it claims it's really educating people so that they can be part of a modern civilized world up to a million weak as have reportedly been detained in the camps of a serious china correspondent david brown reports from beijing. well for months china's government has denied the existence of these camps but this week the government appears to have broken its silence on tuesday night state controlled
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t.v. aired a documentary showing conditions inside these camps it says they are not reeducation camps but simply vocational training centers where we girls get to learn new skills like carpentry and sewing as well as learning a language mandarin and getting another lesson on religious extremism the aim of these camps say the chinese authorities is to put a shield to protect we girls from islamic extremism now there have been a number of attacks in sion jang during the past few years the china's government has blamed on groups seeking an independent shin jang one of those attacks happened after a visit made by president xi jinping to the regional capital a room she in may two thousand and fourteen now human rights groups say that up to a million ethnic muslim weekers are being held in reeducation camps and that eventually they say all ethnic muslim week will have to pass through these camps
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now in early november which is perhaps why this documentary has been released now the united nations will have a meeting in geneva of one of its human rights panels this body has been investigating what's going on in shin jang and officials from china's government will be invited to present their side of the story also the outgoing u.s. ambassador to the united nations nikki haley has said during the past twenty four hours that what we're looking at in shin jang may be the biggest in term and of people anywhere in the world so if you richardson is the china director for human rights watch she says that china's reasons for setting up the internment camps are questionable. well that you know about chinese government propaganda is going to answer the increasing call for accountability which are in governments from the us and in the media about gross human rights violations in the shingi i mean i think
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the real questions to ask are you know if these are vocational training programs why can't people leave why can't people call their families why are they guarded by you know armed guards and surrounded our wired beijing is very clearly trying to break we years and other target muslims of their identity of their language of their culture and their religious practices you know clearly the goal is to force these people to abandon any distinct mark their identity and make the oil only to the chinese government the chinese communist party voters in cameroon are still waiting for a winner of a presidential election to be declared ten days on a top priority for whoever takes office will be dealing with violence in the south west of the country hundreds of people that have died thousands of been forced to leave their homes in two years of conflict between rival french and english speaking groups morgan reports from where the. last three
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combat me becky came face to face with men who said they were english speaking separatist fighters they accused him of supporting and spying for the french dominated government and he was to be punished and he sent this to optional with two for one now as we move from one point on board going home i checked and you guys have my to give down so i sat a minute. and i don't my facilities enough to use. just the attempt. i've made my house beside me i fighting in cameroon southwest and northwest darted in twenty six team with english speakers in the two regions accused the french dominated government of marginalization the angle phones make up about twenty percent of cameron's twenty four million population a group of small fighters took up arms against the government demanding independence. it's not clear how many fighters the specialist groups have some estimate the number to be about
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a thousand and as they continue to battle the government if the civilians were caught up in the middle. more than two hundred thousand people have been displaced because of the fighting many say they fled their homes out of fear of being attacks in a conflict they want no part in. here where they were shooting once in a while they were shooting and even when i went they were shooting and i had to relocate to another village. but not all those who are living in this conflict region were able to escape for the past a year it's intensified hard scores of people coming in after. some time to do all the best we can but at the end of the day we can still save them however some of them are broad already dead and in that instance that taken directly to the mortuary aid groups say at least four hundred people have been killed both sides of the conflict have been accused of atrocities but boy as government says it's working to keep civilians safe it's not a conventional war which can easily be contained. your neighbor when they get top
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in the morning under decide to settle scores with you in the name of a separate we. are not measures to reduce the rate of kidnapping the. bummy says he'll still stay in because he has nowhere else to go but in a conflict revolving around languages he doesn't know who to speak to or want to see to keep his family safe people morgan are dizzier cameroon. is enjoying a tourism revival industry have gone into decline following a series of attacks by armed groups on businesses in two thousand and fifteen mohammed vali reports. tunisia's tourism industry is taken off the sandy beaches of seuss' in the northeast are again bustling so is the general manager of siebel who tell all four hundred eighty beds are fully booked even though the hot season has ended a little is brazil to come to the system in twenty seventeen we started to feel
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like european tourists are coming back and in twenty eighteen there was a remarkable increase in european tourism especially western european tourist traffic markets like belgian english luxembourg has and also french. scenes like these have not been seen since early two thousand and eleven for the uprising of toppled former president. that triggered a series of popular revolt in the region known as the arab spring. as you know the arab spring nations tunisia paid a hefty price for the southern political upheaval groups linked to al qaeda isom steams the tox across the country the bloodiest wars on the museum in the capital tunis in march two thousand and fifteen that killed twenty two people twenty of them your tourists. the attacks led to a severe drop in visitor numbers hitting the country's economy this is the deal
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calibrated set at the hot season has ended but urgent season is excellent as well and there are still lots of her tales which will be full for an early november it was positive and statistics are here to confirm that. but that situation began to change early two thousand and seventeen with a marked improvement. nearly five point five million tourists have arrived since january and major european operators including thomas cook went to you i have resumed holidays to tunisia the government says it expects visitor numbers to hit at recalled eight million by the end of the year for tunisians tourism means not only economic ease but also peace a feeling shared by those of life in the country so much just to visit internees feel comfortable and safe place you have a lot of police men and women like this. swords
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it's looks safe safe yes of course i'm safe in a like tony said what in march the people are what a kind here all culture good food. i like it what a much. it doesn't suit and testament to the changed optimal sphere handicraft selous out again busy or hoping of the bad times over for good. it is good to have you with us hello adrian forget here in doha the top stories this hour turkish investigators have been stalled again in the search for clues over the suspected killing of journalist jamal khashoggi and the interior minister is now reported to be seeking consensus with saudi arabia over the team being allowed into the consul general says residents in istanbul investigators were
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blocked from entering the residence when they arrived on tuesday night who shot she hasn't been seen since entering the nearby consulate building fifteen days ago and these are the latest pictures so we're about to see pictures of u.s. secretary of state mike can pay a. reboarding less than two hours after landing in turkey he was there to find out more about what happened to jamal khashoggi we know that he met with turkey's president and foreign minister the head of the international monetary fund is the latest big name to pull out of the conference dubbed davos in the desert christine legarde is postponing a trip to the middle east which was to have included the meeting of major investors in saudi arabia later this month god has said she's horrified by it because she'll g.'s disappearance a palestinian has been killed three others injured after israeli forces launched airstrikes on gaza the israeli military says that it was targeting a group firing rockets israel's defense minister ordered the closure of the others and abu salam crossings following the attacks in which three people were injured.
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another action candidate has been killed in a bomb attack in afghanistan as violence threatens to disrupt saturday's vote the blast happened in the southern province of helmand at least ten candidates have been killed in the run up to the ballot hundreds of people have been injured in attacks across the country. chinese state media has released video of in time of camps for a week of muslims in the western province of jang despite international criticism the government has defended its treatment of the minority group it claims that it's really educating people so they can be part of a modern civilized world up to a million weak as have reportedly been detained in the camps three separatist fighters and a policeman have been killed in a gun fight in indian administered kashmir it happened in the city of srinagar indian troops of cordoned off neighborhoods and were searching for rebels those
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the headline speed adobe's hable the news out for you in a little over twenty five minutes on al-jazeera after the cure revisited next. year and the differences. and the similarities of cultures across the world. al-jazeera.
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for some trick of nature these stem cells and white swan are on. which this whole procedure is a bad joke like cupping but it's more sophisticated inside their dignity is sad but you're born american like us relations. it doesn't matter that worldwide three hundred fifty million people are affected by genetic disorders closed by faulty d.n.a. these genetic defects can lead to a variety of conditions like cystic fibrosis which leads to a conic on also sight along sections and at the moment the system and here i am dr elizabeth healy in the u.k. to see how groundbreaking developments in gene therapy could one day transform the lives of people living with genetic disorders. that may l.l.s.
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but not marry bond on a is sixteen years old and was diagnosed with cystic fibrosis at the age of one. america tell me from your perspective what is your day like living with cystic fibrosis. aaron when i asked so i guess i ought to take my interview arises off eyes. and then you're sitting in my inbox tears. and i asked you i know now you guys are failing. and they're nasty my physio and. i do spiral a.j. and i'm going to go out and cheerfully and they're helping me. and then off about asked to do another nebulizer. there are still more passes. and then i will need space also you have all now so learn. that our
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night. mary was first diagnosed doctors thought she would only live until the age before. i decided i was dazed and not ready until marriage or. unknown house ten i thought i'd take them on occasion then of ok. there's never a day goes by either and talk to everybody forget the whole thing and i got up so i know it's always there. married to use me to the children that have cystic fibrosis. mark on this our voice if i meet one of them they want to possibly just want to me or long passage i'm going to em. so now it's a question isolating condition to near yet there's always an official i know was never our senior haitian now right. so i only used to send your letters to h.r. . because they couldn't me face to face on the fly now last night at the moment
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mary is not really understanding everything about c.f. she she does now know that it is live show me that she doesn't know that it cannot be kids. but things could be about to change scientists have proven for the first time ever that an experimental technique called gene therapy can improve the health of those with cystic fibrosis i've come into central london to meet the doctors and the clinicians involved in the gene therapy trial into cystic fibrosis . resting back an. outing with their. distant fibrosis is as you know a genetically inherited disease parents who pass those copies on to their child and they have cystic fibrosis during the first year of life most babies will experience and lung problems and those relates to the buildup of sticky mucus within the airways and that sticky mucus attracts bacterial infections and the bacteria
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infections become chronic and they eventually cause quite significant lung scarring in the u.k. they're around ten thousand people with cystic fibrosis at the moment on a registry about one in twenty two of us is a carrier of the mutated gene most of us won't realise and about one in two thousand babies are born with cystic fibrosis the genetic nature of this and other conditions mean that treatment has focused on managing the symptoms as best as possible but a new and experimental technique called gene therapy replace the faulty gene with a functioning one this is the largest and the longest duration gene therapy trial using a liquid formulation for cystic fibrosis that has ever happened in. two hundred sixteen patients completed the protocol and took at least nine over the course of a year and it was in that group which was defined as being the group we were going to look at that we saw a significant impact on lung function at the end of the year we can thank the patients and their families in the because without patients like mary and her
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mother we just couldn't have completed this trial so we're really grateful. these results would not have been possible without the perseverance of scientists who spent years developing the genes and. we started this program at the start it would be very easy for patients to just hand the gene research and if it gets to the right area into the right cells and that long it turned out that was much more difficult so how are you getting these healthy new genes into the areas and to do the job of the some teaching. but the try that has just finished it actually using a very symptomatic cure it's a had it lifted but we did just use the chin and we mixed it with this fat chick in this form smaller complex that complex then into the lungs of cystic fibrosis patients the dose of gene therapy that the trial participants received does not terminate correct the faulty cystic fibrosis d.n.a.
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but scientists are working on finding a longer lasting solution clinical trial results have been very encouraging but they're not quite good enough to turn them into a treatment yet so we have plans for and as a trial where we get more in depth on gene complexes and more frequently basically in addition to that we have to developed by wrists that this is very very efficient in getting genes into the lungs do you think you see the fires might be more efficient than using the static possibly using them and we certainly think so based on noise. the evidence we have the virus is at least one hundred forty more effective fighting very frightening. these success stories represent a huge step forward that people might match did you notice any changes cheering the
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course of the treatment i thought i had no more injury i didn't need well those charity more k. . were christian traditions or at best so i prayed still going up let's get a little more lot done. and how does that make you feel when you saw me achieving a so mean about a mission where you get to know i could die i die i could do that and i know i can do the hope is that one day gene therapy will be approved for use and widely available to those with cystic fibrosis or those people that the study and work in to get this drug to work even better than it did let's just hope and pray they can get it done and they can get the funding and if it doesn't come soon enough mary she's helped other faithful if it's not. the next generation of children born with cystic fibrosis in a city some are. going to begin. by south korea how corning it
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speaks for seniors. is that really the sermonize. alymer back again. things can stay there. by the age of eighty five nearly half of us will suffer from oxygen damage to the name which can lead to chronic pain and disability bouts because cartilage unlike other tissues doesn't have its own blood supply. so heals very slowly. when i'm in hiroshima japan to meet the surgeon pioneering new techniques in regenerating on the he's. professor mitchell or she is one of the world's leading nice surgeons and a revered figure in the world of we generated medicine. professor
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. selfies way ok thank you. jay tech is an enterprise focusing on tissue engineering and has spent over ten years commercializing professor archies research. sourcing yeah. right nice to see how you very welcome things are paramount. in one thousand nine hundred for my doubts on paper was published by swedish group the swedish team had developed a way of regenerating cottage in
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a lab and then re injecting it in liquid form directly into the knee however there was a weak point all with their technique. in order to solve this problem i started to use very same scale for the. yes you can imagine. the the foot would be here coming up yes exactly. meniscus has no blood supply or if injury is. a song we are blind to resect so what you can do with this regenerative medicine is to take the patient's own cotton sheets from the same joint yes all the change of confidence is essential company i see it does she engineer the cuts. and that's why we're here yeah just half a gram of healthy cartilage is harvested it is then broken down with enzymes and
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then planted on a college in scaffold designed by professor ought to after just four weeks the cells will have multiplied to form a four square centimeter disk. the surgeon then makes a template of the lesion and uses that to harvest some perry all still tissue from the shin bone. this will be the cover used to hold the new cottage in place so this is a model of someone's potentially regenerated cottage but the beauty of it being the patient's own cells here is that it's not rejected you know any medicine from the viewpoint i mean you know raj their reaction oh told you nasty shoe is a proper. today this method has an almost ninety percent success rate and is considered a leading treatment for neat cartilage defects. what are the limitations of this can it be done better we need a larger scheme. that is invasive.
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painful after surgery so less invasive technique is desired i have another new proceed you're using the magnetic. the goal is to devise a less invasive procedure much like their original idea of simply injecting the cartilage into the knee we inject so many serious. ten million shares. we are teach in the knee joint you know you see the injectors so you can't see if inject cells blindly into the fluid they go all over and that made scarring so you'd rather just close to where there is actually enjoy the right pinpoint targeting so how did you achieve that so i decided to use small i am particle. didn't do that.
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didn't come or stimson count up a side small i am part of the city actually asked themselves not the ira can fuck all this then that they can be controlled that direction with a strong month then my new law would that so many in the with magnetic force. from here there's an injection. attaching to the defect here it's being channeled that way i can see very clearly by some sort of trick of nature that these stem cells like to swallow are not honest which is this whole procedure hinges on that because then you can manipulate. that lewisham stem cells with a magnetic field. so not having to cut open the knee in any way you can attach those themselves to just the area where the cottage is broken down the different area how do you make them stay there is there
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a magnet on the skin just ten minutes from the outside of the ski you're really a minute then he physically they start to be the hero to the defective area it's amazing the bolotnaya this is a brand new. only here in hiroshima. japan is aiming to be at the forefront of regenerative medicine and scientists are researching possible treatments for previously incurable diseases such as liver cirrhosis retinal generation and even outsiders but a crucial hurdle for many stem cell therapies is positioning the cells within the body this is led some to call professor archie's magnetic breakthrough an important step forward in regenerative medicine in twenty fifteen this footage was shot by japanese television when professor archie performed the first ever magnetic cartilage restoration the patient was a semi professional tennis player and her cartilage injury threatened to curtail
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her career. the procedure involves extracting some bone marrow to harvest stem cells after cultivation a few stem cells were injected and the magnets came out for the first time. a year on his back for a checkup. and the. new . sport. in the movie is. going to. get us to a company. i knew about i mean it's a bit like the bullet. in the. yeah. i coat is ready for me which will reveal whether her wound has
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healed following the magnetic knee regeneration procedure. first of all she's always been a scrub and here we go is reading. this . the payout that yes this was a complete idiot. that's very much noticeably better yes what he first injected it but huge defect of redness and now it's all white it's covered in cottage now. it takes almost into who he is when i can see this idea. and so i'm very.
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finished. at the moment professor all cheese technique is only optical to relatively young knee joints but he's already working on ways to adapt it for older patients suffering from austria all flights of. seventeen years old i'd like to walk with my knee joint so all history and you can see it is a very very desirable. so i'd like to provide. you with the. china's disease is a parasitic illness that is found mainly in the poor rural regions of central and south america and it is estimated that in excess of ten million people are infected with the disease. and dr jeff lacey and i mean bolivia to me a woman who may just have found
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a solution to this devastating disease. diseases caused by the parasite. which is carried by the triad to mean bug known locally as winter coats when an infected by someone leaves behind infected feces scratching the bite grabs the infected feces and. once in the body the parasites multiply and spread. the face of charge lasts approximately two months causing mild symptoms it then goes into remission and it can be decades later before the chronic stage begins where the parasites attack the heart and just of organs which can cause intestinal and cardiac disorders progressive destruction of the heart muscle can lead to heart failure and sudden death there is no vaccine. all are around when i was there. is an expert on the deadly vinci code insect. that i meant they were.
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the last but it is. me that at this time of day we won't be getting back to that. we have does. not just. argue whether meaningless but it's on us. that's. he's big they say she has got bungled up to this so i just take. a lot for. me little. everyone how how many intruders do you think are in this house than. you are going to rather know when i was really in the car see you in this matter the median joe guess. one thousand in.
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the pain and suffering caused by infection as a devastating impact on communities like the indictee of the two hundred fifty people that lived there are brum estimates that up to eighty percent of charges relate to. what has been the impact of childhood disease on your life and your families. do you have a chance disease you're so. thank. you. it's. me my dear you. are the bank the boat i went back. to the past fifteen years ago to people who has been working into libya using an insecticidal paint to great its effect to communities of the even to create insect
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tell me about in this far this is the paint you have developed to combat. but no more sophisticated. in other words a new paint is an advance on previous insecticide paints because the insecticides with. which slowly released over two to four years containing the insecticides like this means that the concentration of chemicals can be lower and that several different pesticides which don't work if they are mixed together can be used. ok so do i have to dress up like this ok let's turn this there's nothing i'd like to do more than put in over thirty five degree heat.
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this is going to look. for they're. doing they are loved. sure seem to be some of the stories for those folks. and then just. ok. currently each home costs approximately two hundred us dollars to pay with the financial support coming from various organizations and private donors. in the last fifteen years her team have treated six thousand homes in ninety three communities across the region which are home to twenty four thousand individuals incredibly the number of new cases of trans disease in these communities has dropped to almost zero. is because.
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yeah. yeah this is a very sad this is. the back to the house now the people. with the inside and outside painted the house will be clear of the insects within twenty four hours. following its success fighting tigers disease the pain is now being used to come back then the fever and malaria in communities and gone all our. lives in one of the first villages the people are treated in bolivia. can you. describe to me what your house was lived before the painting was done. but it's only a week or so whether lots of intrigue in your house see the body i'm a bit better so i don't know what i'm looking. hey danny me
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a lot of those saw me and the chuckles free you actually have the oh you've asked me a lot of thought i laughed been to death not the end. the diagnosis he has been sick for a long six months now the challenge ahead there was one of these ninety six could be a new cure for the basis of a new cure all for. disability al-jazeera. so this is the explosive yes it's basically a wearable robot. revisited. business updates brought to you by qatar airways going places together.
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business updates brought to you by qatar airways going places together. when the going gets tough. forced to borrow.
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more patience. but make no mistake. she means business and. granny loan shock because of the viewfinder asia series. this is al jazeera. l.o.l. come on peter dhabi you're watching the news our live from our headquarters here in doha coming up in the next sixty minutes questions still remain over the disappearance of the saudi journalist jamal. as the u.s.
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secretary of state continues a whirlwind diplomatic mission in turkey. tensions high as israel retaliates for rockets from the gaza strip. we take a closer look at the reeducation camps set up for the week of muslims in western china. and in sport the boston red sox we have a step closer to see baseball's world series a grand slam home run helping them take a two one series late over the houston astros. let's get going to investigators have been stalled yet again in their search for clues on the suspected killing of the saudi journalist jamal khashoggi turkey's interior minister says he's waiting for a consensus from saudi arabia and investigators being allowed into the consul
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general's home in istanbul the turkish team were unable to enter the residence on tuesday ashaji hasn't been seen since he walked into the consulate building fifteen days ago the u.s. secretary of state mike pompei o is in turkey having already been to riyadh to seek answers from the saudi leadership mr pompei o s held meetings with both the to. he's president as well as the foreign minister all this as the u.s. president comes to the defense of saudi arabia donald trump says the saudis should be seen as innocent until proven guilty we have two correspondents covering every angle of this story for us in a moment we'll take you to charles stratford outside the saudi consulate in istanbul first my colleagues joins us from the capital ankara cinema there are developments as we go on air with the news hour what else do we know as of the past few minutes. oh well peter actually
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probably the world is witnessing the weird a story especially in diplomatic terms because this case has lots of first events in the world a murder probably committed inside a diplomatic mission what we have as the latest line as al-jazeera is that one of this is one of the members of the sequoia team who came on the day when he disappeared in his name to be the very close security guard of crown prince mohamed bin sandman so now all eyes are on this gentleman probably you will be revealing the picture soon as well this gentleman arrived on the day one has disappeared and he was with the fifteen member of sequoia team according to the investigation report he had twenty two what's up calls with saudi arabia and nine thousand phone calls through its roaming saudi line with saudi officials on that day since the beginning of his lending in istanbul and his the parcher in the late
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afternoon and the prosecutor's investigation file suggests that's it for all of these former calls among those nineteen calls are done with is saudi prince the crown prince's special secretary so now everybody each police member and each persecutor expert is now watching his most also according to the same report the other members of the squad had either no phone calls with saudi arabia on the day they were here or just a few calls also now there is another suspect in the file who is now a who is who has actually reported each move off jamal khashoggi since he entered turkey from the united states until the time he was those by the way according to the investigation fire this man who is named to be the sick also the security guard of crown prince is named as the cordon. later of the whole of creation of democracy
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of does this appearance sin him let's break this down for people just seeing gauging with this developing aspect to this ongoing story the first man we're talking about are we saying he was one of the fifteen or are we saying he was the team leader are we saying he was the coordinator. while he is one of the members of that fifteen member squad who arrived from saudi arabia on that day about that investigation file record of him as the core of the nation of the whole upper a session of tomato soup does this appearance because he is the one who gave the orders and the private jet that they came to istanbul with it was rented under his name. point number two four of those calls according to your sources went to the crown prince's private secretary so this saudi line in the earliest stages of this saga that we knew nothing that's
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demonstrably not the case because if people are making phone calls to somebody the next stage is the crown prince presumably that conversation was going on up. well probably it was supposed to be conveyed to the crown prince mohammed bin so mom of course but let me remind that these phone calls were done by a roaming the line which is a which is a saudi mobile and the other whatsapp calls are turned in christian so it will take for the turkish technical team circa security technical teams to understand then it's actually real what the content of the conversations are but of course within the light of all these evidences in the investigation file now everybody's eyes are on mohamed and some on the crown prince so that probably most probably he was aware of what was going on on that say in saudi consulates in the stumble so inconsistent
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with the latest for us live in christendom thanks very much charles stratford joins us as well here on the news from istanbul charles why did the turks not go into the building behind. it was in the building behind me that was supposed to be focused on yesterday it's like the consul general zone which is about two hundred meters from hey we understand having spoken to the prosecuted chief prosecutor's office this morning that members of the turkish side of this joint invested team arrived last night around seven pm and tried to make phone calls to people that they thought were inside the consul general so there was no response and and they left the area off to that we spoke to at port authorities and they told us that the consul general had left the country
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at around five pm around two hours before those to members of the best group team arrived at his home we understand that pressure. continues on the saudis to allow access into that building the interior ministry saying that because she ations with the saudis go in but of course it begs the question that certainly you've got to ask why why this is happening now when it seems as if that consensus had been reached as this team was set up you know three or four days ago there was an agreement day and so we were told that there would be an investigation inside the consulate inside the consul general is home and indeed looking at those vehicles the suspect had big calls that were registered on the diplomatic plates we understand according to the ministry of interior story the bitter foreign affairs that he is still hopeful that that investigative team both the saudis and the will go into the consul general later on today and one of the prosecuting team
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one of the prosecutors has been talking charlie as well what's he or she been saying. yeah according to one of the prosecutors that we spoke to this morning again more credibly damning evidence. we were told that yet again that they have proof that crucially she was killed in the building behind me that's the consulate in an area called the c. section we understand that id is known as the crypto room it's an area where norm saudi nationals are not allowed inside the source also telling us that according to the investigation that mr kosofsky was dismembered. also details with respect to those fifteen suspects so much focus has been on we were told that. those fifteen that those fifteen men were space into three groups an interrogation group the killers themselves and the evidence destroy is we were also told it's
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understood according to this source as i say who claims to be one of the prosecutors involved in this investigation that two other suspects are. still in the country it's believed that they haven't left the country one being the a teligent attash and one being the political affairs attash and as i say it's understood that despite believe them having diplomatic immunity they are still in turkey so they're very much people of interest they are people that the authorities want to get to but you've already touched on this charles if they. file will behind diplomatic immunity they can find them they can ask them questions they don't have to answer them. well that's right one would think so each day to say that what is holding up this investigation is obviously the saudis using that vienna convention that international law that gives them the
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right to refuse access to the consulate and the consuls home whether in fact what sort of diplomatic immunity is given to these two people who as i say the intelligence detection implicitly of the face attach a belief to be still in the country whether they can hide behind that wall in terms of are answering questions what level investigation the turks what level of pressure that can put on them to answer their questions remains to be seen the the obviously a very complicated legal issue but as i say the longer this goes on the longer this delay seems to to to go on the more it see the sources in the turkish government and according to our sources are actually participating in this investigation with the prosecutors are leaking more and more information or would think is a means of putting more pressure on the turks to allow greater access charles thanks very much. will the head of the i.m.f.
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the international monetary fund is the latest big name to pull out of the saudi conferences known as davos in the desert christine legarde is perspire owning a trip to the middle east which was due to include the meeting of major investors in riyadh later this month she has said she's horrified by the disappearance of jamal khashoggi. on his visit to riyadh my pump aoe said saudi leaders told him a quotes transparency and timely investigation would be carried out into a shell g.'s disappearance but u.s. senators are skeptical about whether that will be allowed to happen mike hanna reports now from washington. mike pompei oh held meetings throughout the day speaking to the king the crown prince as well as the foreign minister he came away with saudi denials and the pledge that a credible investigation is already underway they made a commitment to to hold anyone connected to any wrongdoing that may be found accountable for.

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