tv All The Presidents Profit Al Jazeera October 19, 2018 6:33am-7:01am +03
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friends of thousands of colombian students and teachers have take to the streets to demonstrate against a lack of funding for higher education the rally for the second time in less than a week demanding several billion dollars be added to the budget for public universities or they could be shut down i was under amputee reports from bogota. marching bands in costume this rally of public university students look very much like a carnival but the reason behind it was dead serious doubt that public universities have reached the point of no return if the government doesn't object to funds it needs many universities to shut down. students and professors have been on strike for a week this was the second major rally in boulder and other cities across the mending and increasing budget public universities need a billion us dollars just to keep functioning. because we simply don't have the money to keep paying fesses this year and receive new students next year we need to
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guarantee access to public education the number of students at public universities has increased tenfold in the last two decades while resources of lag behind so universities are now facing a huge operational and infrastructure deficit adding up to six billion dollars at a national university campus and some buildings like mt risking collapse there's already have been demolished. but there was the university studying the hunger strike inside campus he says his students are among the poorest in the country and can't be left behind many of our students don't have enough to pay for lunch they are subsidized their lunch for thirty cents of a dollar the same with braces that's very little yet we are unable to continue doing it the result will be losing our students. under pressure the government is
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promising to crease public university resources by almost five hundred million dollars in the next two years critics say the measure will fall way short of the mark one locus you're born if you destroy public education you're condemning the country to a lack of real progress through knowledge and of course you increase inequality because education is the best instrument we have to help poor people access better jobs and salaries but in the end time might be against the protesters the colombian congress that you see behind me is expected to vote on the national budget next saturday oct twentieth the government says there's no time to find more money for public education but students promise they will continue fighting until they. get. still to come. the u.s. facility trying to reduce overdoses by giving users safe access to illegal drugs for those similar trials in canada. and me and box on the latest challenge of his
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you business of. going places together. in one of the drug epidemic history several cities want to set up places where people can use illegal drugs with supervision to reduce overdose deaths. at a busy intersection behind a nondescript door is the safe haven for drug addicts here at the corner project
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they can grab a nap on a comfortable chair or pick up clean needles or a referral to detox and last year the corner project saved sixty five lives including that of this recovering addict i've spent most of the month injure thirty nine year old damien zamora now works here monitoring the bathrooms where he himself has overdosed. more than once or. three. times. you're right anyone can use the bathrooms for fifteen minutes so workers check on those inside periodic lee just in case they don't answer we have an overdose response this is the crash overdoses hit an all time high in the u.s. last year people are dying around the city liz abbott is the director of the corner project says having a place where addicts are more openly allowed to shoot up like this supervised injection site she helped start in vancouver canada would save even more lives she
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says addicts there were thirty percent more likely to seek treatment supervised injection sites save lives supervised injection sites are a way for people to connect with care to. get a message that while they are still actively caught up in their life of addiction that somebody is there to make sure that when they do overdose that they don't die here in new york city hall has been pushing to open doors supervised injection facilities or as they prefer to call them overdose prevention centers and new york's not alone officials in seattle san francisco and philadelphia are also exploring the idea but the problem is federal law which makes it a crime to knowingly operate any facility where illegal drugs are being used. in the city's special narcotics prosecutor says the treatment statistics cited by the corner project are outdated last year overdoses in vancouver increased by more than
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fifty percent where new york they've stabilized we were only up by three percent just to give them a place where they can shoot up drugs and walk out i don't think you've done a thing for that person but help them destroy their own life still damien insists he would not be alive or clean for his daughter were it not for the support he received here after being revived you know i have a job and i have a chance there are other people that maybe arc of reach that one person still christian salumi al jazeera new york times rules for his fur thanks very much lauren pakistan are closing in on a series when over australia they are in firm control of the second test in abu dhabi going in today or on reaching four hundred and declaring leaving the aussies with a victory target of five hundred and thirty eight to chase them top scored with ninety nine surely is finalizing the hasn't started well near homes that are breaking the
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stumps see dismiss shaun large the tourists need another four hundred ninety one to win with nine wickets and whoever wins this take for two match series but again one draw on. most successful spin bowler ever in test matches has confessed to his role in a spot fixing scandal in england six years after being banned from playing following a recent al-jazeera investigation dinesh canaria decided to come clean david harrison has this exclusive report. clint bolick done his canaria played over sixty test matches and took nearly three hundred wickets in international matches for pakistan. but in two thousand and twelve his career paint was sudden and he was banned for life by english cricket's governing body for match fixing canary was found guilty of encouraging a team mate of essex county cricket club to underperform during a match in two thousand and nine and with bringing the game into disrepute for six
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years canary has protested his innocence two appeals were rejected but now in an exclusive interview with al jazeera as investigative unit canaria has finally confessed his guilt. the charges brought against me. or. her. become for show you know make that decision because you cannot live your life ripped live in areas said that the imminent death of his father was initially a reason for not admitting his guilt and had one of getting worse and worse and worse and i didn't have that kurdish with the fish and i was wrong canaria introduced his as sixteen date nevin westfield to an infamous engine much success in a nightclub westfield was jailed for four months and banned from cricket for five
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years for accepting around eight thousand dollars he admitted allowing opposition batsman to school runs when he was bowling i want to apologize to my very best for . a marriage mark i think to get more i figured and i first started to park a star on canaries says the band has had a devastating effect on his life i want their highs ticket taker or parker fine at a time when i was achieving good money i lost my friend effect which i used to get everything and then everything i don't stir everything he is now pleading with crickets governing bodies to lift his ban and didn't return he pledged to help young players i want to teach young people young cricketer there are people who will do temptation for you but you have to be strong go do it right dedication right there going to worship and making money in the short and then that
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i am and. david harrison al-jazeera london now you can watch cricket match fixers the team one of our files here on al-jazeera twenty hundred g.m.t. this sunday. terry henri is expecting a tough task in his first match since taking over as coach of monaco are really who was most recently belgium's assistant manager will take his team away to strasburg on saturday the twenty seven hundred french champions are in real need of a result there down into eighteenth position and league with just six points from a line games. visit i mean we have to go ahead and make a result in strasbourg like this much will not be easy. live the last much two two against it was a good much going on jan strasburg we will try to work poorly tennis world them once to monitor how it has pulled out of next week's finals in singapore to due to a lower back injury meanwhile over in moscow to his young qualifier bear has
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continued her fairytale run at the kremlin the twenty four year old number eight seed and that want to write a stone here seven five six one beats reach the semifinals to bear will face them are fighting to seed from last year and stacy at seventh story are. really happy with the first time since the final here and premier events it's amazing feeling probably more when more more i want to read more. into new. pressure having fun on the court saying this is the key for me to. amnesty international is calling on tennis stars roughen the delano back jock which she withdraw from an exhibition match due to happen in saudi arabia in december the king solomon tennis championship was announced shortly after the disappearance of saudi journalist jamal khashoggi amnesty international there were asking them to use their global popularity to draw detention for the country's poor human rights
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record. and that's all your support for now it's now back to warren in london. thanks very much better monday can catch up any time met with our website address for that is al-jazeera dot com you can watch us live by clicking on that live icon . that's it from made our entire live as news out of here in a minute with another full roundup of the day's news thanks for watching right now . if inscribed in the wild west previously where the average person couldn't touch and tell if a post had been sponsored all paid for and thought why does this updated nafta have the kind of support that it needs we bring you the stories that are shaping the
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economic world we live in counting the cost on al-jazeera challenge your perceptions. powerful documentaries. that's what makes up the. debate some discussions you've been out there with the protesters on the streets what are they been telling you. discover a wealth of award winning programming from around the. see the world from a different perspective. on al-jazeera the cricket world isn't much fixing i mean you have to think why would you give me a got the better than me being burned in india it's the you know the big fan base. al-jazeera is investigative unit reveals explosive us documentary confirms that by now is a very hard profile figure in much friction and in question that she is. al-jazeera
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is al jazeera live from london also coming up a taliban attack kills one of afghanistan's most powerful security officials but it was a u.s. general who was the target. one of the world's youngest democracies has chosen a new government we have a special report from the mountain kingdom a proton. and south korea's president meets the pope bringing with him and historic invitation from pyongyang. i oughta days of speculation and calls for on says u.s. president donald trump has said he now believes that missing saudi journalist jamal khashoggi is dead is also warned saudi arabia will face very severe consequences if it's found to have been responsible turkish police are searching a forest on the outskirts of istanbul and a city near the sea resort of marmora the remains of the dissident journalists who
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went missing earlier this month in a moment we'll have the latest from istanbul first those reports from alan fischer in washington d.c. . he's been briefed by his secretary of state donald trump believes jamal khashoggi is that it certainly looks that way to me it's very sad charlie looks down he says they'll wait for the investigations to be delivered but there will be consequences well it'll have to be very severe i mean it's just bad bad stuff but we'll see what happens my pump you know arrived back from his trip to saudi arabia and turkey and met with the president first thing on thursday he says both sides promised fuel transparent investigations they also assured me that they will conduct a complete thorough. investigation of all of the facts surrounding mr to show you that they will do so at a timely fashion and that this report itself will be transparent campaigning in colorado vice president mike pence insisted they will wait for the results of the
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study investigation but the president knows he might have to take firm action when we have that information and we won't soley rely on that information we'll collect all the evidence and then the president have a decision to make about what the proper course of action is for us going forward but the world deserves answers and washington d.c. jamal khashoggi was the main topic is middle east experts gather to discuss the implications of his disappearance for relations with the u.s. this points on the table all those issues that the artist has opted to review or for decades and not just in saudi arabia but across the region and so you wonder if this is the beginning of a turning point the washington post on thursday published an opinion piece written by jamal khashoggi and sent by his assistant the day after his disappearance prophetically he criticizes the lack of international response to the abuse of journalists and out of countries like saudi arabia and egypt writing these actions
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no longer carry the consequences of a backlash from the international community instead. these actions me triggered condemnation quickly followed by silence as a result he continues arab governments have been given free rein to continue silencing the media at an increasing rate. reminding the u.s. they cannot turn their back on this incident no matter how strong the historic ties alan fischer al-jazeera washington and new development of the new york times is reporting that the rulers of saudi arabia are considering blaming a top intelligence official close to crown prince mohammed bin salomon for the killing of a newspaper suggesting general amendola sciri a close adviser to the crown prince could be cited as being responsible for the murder due to a misunderstanding over instructions and generous sciri there to be served as the spokesman for the saudi led military intervention in yemen. andrew stevens is and i
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first sat outside the saudi consulate in istanbul so there's investigations that have been going on the details emerging on that. yes of course you have the evidence being examined now from the consulate and also from the cold sea to the consul's residence just two hundred meters away d.n.a. investigations of blood samples and also soil awards but there has been a development now in that the prosecutor general's office has confirmed that there have been some police investigations outside of the city in fact on the outskirts of the city in a forest called belgrade forest a number of. police have been looking at this area the reason for that is that they are tracing through various c.c.t.v. cameras and traffic cameras the movement of the saudi diplomatic cars on october
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the second the day the cars shoji disappeared and they disappear subsequently established that he has been killed and there is also an operation that's been going on in yellow which is the name you live which is quite near the sea of marmara but this is apparently farmland and indeed a farm house it's being investigated now any homicide inquiry normally the key to the point would be finding a body in this instance it would seem certainly scene that's all i can say here that investigators are trying to find body parts they think that could have been hidden away either on the seaside or indeed in the forest but we are hearing that there has been no developments in this investigation at that point however what we are hearing and we did hear in fact in fairly distinct terms was a brief. thing earlier on thursday by the justice minister holman it's goo who said
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these words the investigation is going on very carefully and successfully so as far as the turkish a concerned whatever the new york times might say whatever the saudis might be planning to say this investigation is on course and developing a quite a rate and so it will report back we are going to get a report back it would seem it is unclear when on who the main suspects are and that is going to be what some of the fifteen if not all of them who was sent from saudi arabia and landed here in private jets now there's one key figure amongst of them we saw on thursday a pro-government newspaper of publishing photographs c.c.t.v. pro photographs of abdel aziz metry but he is known for his background in intelligence he was a first secretary at the in the embassy in london of the saudi arabian government and he has been
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a very close to the royal family he's certainly definitely directly linked to the crown prince mohammed bin nayef bin seller solomon and he has also been serving in security services in terms of bodyguards jutes is it at least five separate cities which have been visited by the crown prince included new york madrid and paris so he has been seen in these pictures arriving in the consulate behind me head of cutchogue g on monday. october the second not only that he's also seen with a suitcase checking into a hotel and then leaving going through the airport leaving istanbul in the evening of the of monday so this is quite strong evidence that he was definitely here and there are suggestions from the proc prosecutor's office that he did seem to be leading the operation so definitely it would seem he is the chief suspect as far as
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the turkish concerned on the ground here anderson thank you very much. to senior political analyst. i began by asking him about the significance of u.s. treasury secretary steven newsham pulling out of the saudi investment conference next week it's a huge development basically that's the end of the road for the so-called davos in the desert once the europeans pulled out it was clear that the united states is going to follow suit and once the united states does it's clearly putting the saudi leaders on the spot this is no longer simply a screw them to investigate themselves now they're saying we cannot be seen with you in riyadh while the investigation is going on in turkey and i think all others banks corporation and so on so forth will eventually follow because if you are a minutia or you are a liam fox in the u.k. you don't want to be seen in riyadh when the investigation result is being voiced
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out of one car or istanbul and you are sitting with those who are accused of murder i mean one of the links that has been made is clearly between this whole episode and the crown prince mohammed bin son and people like lindsey graham in the states that are said he's he's the problem and we shouldn't be dealing with him at what point does that kind of does that link get made do you think by the white house or i mean has it already been made look i think there are two things that we have to distinguish between and this is very important one is american so did relations the second is american relations with saudi arabia through mohammed bin solomon you see america likes reliable allies trump likes reliable autocrats he likes she likes putin he loves all kinds of autocrats. but he doesn't like under liable autocrats he like an autocrat to do what autocrats do you know you want to silence is in you silence them you don't make it into an international scandal you want to
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launch a war in your neighbor you launch a war but you end it you finish it you win it you don't kill countless of people and still continue your way of diplomatic nicety is not to hold the prime minister of lebanon hostage in our country you have a way of resolving a dispute with your neighbor qatar is not to block it it and to threaten to invade it your idea of social opening is not to arrest women who wanted to drive your economic reform should it be marching business men into the ritz and give them a good beating this does not make for a reliable this makes for a fretless wreckless i said but given the fact you mentioned all those things and in some cases yemen there are sort of thousands perhaps of civilians who have died in this war and why do you think this particular instance of the one genesee disappears as tip the balance against one incident if indeed the balance has been
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tip is that it is not he still there isn't there are two things one this is the sim question we ask in social sciences about every one of the one incident that just tips the balance why did mohammed was this is death so good the tunisian revolution why did the death of khalid saeed triggered the egyptian revolution because sometimes the death of one person culminates into the entire episodes of cry and repression and oppression and so forth in a one country two i think people's anger just continued to build up over the last three years because of the all of these things i mentioned so the killing of does not replace everything else it sums up everything else except that this time it is recognisable it's inhumane it is very in our eyes the killing of a journalist who only wanted to write freely. ministers from the u.k. the netherlands and france have all.
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