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tv   NEWS LIVE - 30  Al Jazeera  October 22, 2018 7:00pm-7:34pm +03

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between the three couples what is the stake here for the u.s. in the way it is it's approaching all this because president trump keeps talking about these arms deals which he says over one hundred billion dollars and so on first of all is it really one hundred billion dollars because as i understand it this is what it's been pledged and that's a big difference from contracts that have actually been signed and is he kind of making too much of that i think he has ship here have. maximized the would be u.s. interests. in terms of one hundred ten billion dollars that would help him create about five hundred thousand jobs out of the twenty five million job dream he has for this first and second term so this is on the one hand but fuck chicken reporters have come to the conclusion that the lower the number of unknown and not really. delivering on those promises therefore i think we are left with this
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a symmetry between political economy within the. relational reserve be more of politics and protest of a regime that has lost its legitimacy legitimacy therefore i think the the future of m.b.a. does not depend only on what happens within the royal palace in riyadh but also the kind of pressure or compromise coming from his relationship with the oval office ok all right good speaking of how much of kerry thanks so much. also other news now in russia is warning that the world will become more dangerous if the u.s. withdraws from a cold war era treaty on nuclear weapons the us president said on saturday that he would pull out of the immediate range nuclear forces treaty donald trump is accusing russia of violating the pact vasant is in moscow for us so what's the russian foreign minister been saying about this. well these were the
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first comments by the russian foreign minister saying laughter of the u.s. an ounce went over the weekend that they wouldn't want to pull out of the most important nuclear pact between the united states and russia that was signed thirty years ago the foreign minister said that russia will only decide on their position of this nuclear treaty after receiving clear information from washington at the moment the security advisor from washington is in moscow john bolton and he will meet later today so of course the foreign minister hopes to hear more details from him directly but also love for us at any action from the united states will be counted to maintain russian security and this is also exactly what the kremlin has sat about the u.s. step but the kremlin also sat until now these are all have hypothetical suggestions we need to know exactly what the united states wants to do and we need to see some
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first actions some first steps that they actually withdraw from this important treaty and step a president has been criticized in the past for his position with regards to russia and what's been seen as not being tough enough on on russia so is is this position then being taken with some surprise in moscow. not at all russia was expecting this actually president vladimir putin only this summer last year said that he feels the u.s. was deliberately blaming the russians for violating this treaty so they could have an excuse to step out of it basically the russians also believe that the united states want to get out of this treaty because they want to counter china and want to go on a new arms race because china is not bound by this treaty so there's
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a lot of concern here in moscow as some have said it will go in on a very dangerous part towards a new cold war so a lot of people of course are really willing and wanting to hear from john bolton what he actually wants to to do with this very important nuclear treaty. steverson live for us in moscow the latest suspected attack by rebels in the democratic republic of congo has killed at least fifteen people fifteen others mostly children were abducted the attack in beni near the border with uganda could be a major setback to containing an outbreak of the a ball of virus mariana honda has more. the attack is came in the middle of the night as they have so many times before the true cost of the violence in and around the northeastern city of binny only clear the following morning in addition to the deed at least fifteen are missing most of them children aged between five and ten
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years old the fear is they'll be forced to fight alongside the captives just to get it to people outside and shot them in a neighborhood the can seven people living here don't believe in him is now able to operate without fear but on public. streets in these new security you're more on. the funeral procession became a. protest march mourners confronting congolese troops who day say have yet again failed to protect them they believe rebels from the ugandan elijah's democratic forces are responsible it's a safe guess idea if rebels have killed more than seven hundred people in the last four years. the i.d.f. was formed in neighboring uganda back in the one nine hundred ninety s. moving to the democratic republic of congo after failing to tune uganda into an
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islamic state in ghana says they're aligned with somalia's fighters and binny is vulnerable to another killer at least one hundred eighteen people are dead from in a bola outbreak but the world health organization has suspended operations due to the violence oh people in the northeast say president joseph kabila has abandoned them . but he does how many times we consolidated in the hall as soon as it is time for us to take charge of security the few here now believe the president's promises that the killings only made him the honda al jazeera. or talk more about this i'm joined now by tariq just on a beach in geneva he is with the world health organization thanks very much for being with us so how concerned is your going to zation about this how how bad could things get. well the this is a very big concern for us and it's
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a serious setback for the response against ebola outbreak we have seen in the past that following attacks such as this one it took place on saturday there were protests in the city and these protests would put on hold all the response teams and then that would result obviously increased number of cases what happened yesterday is that our teams were not able to go out and do the all the measures that normally we are doing going to treatment centers following people who are in contact tracing program conducting burial save burials and also trying to do a lot of work to rework and vaccinate people so basically every time there is a security incident but the population is as you have shown in your in your report are demanding security from your territories but also this increases the mistrust to all the ebola responders that put our operations on hold and that obviously will
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have negative impact so we really demand for everyone to accept to evolve our response teams because we know very well that we doubt access to the population we cannot control this outbreak we knew from the beginning that this outbreak will be complicated to deal with because of the security situation and that unfortunately has just been proven of once again i talk to our colleagues in a battle to smalling only a few off we're able to go out and we cannot really function hundred percent in this sort of environment and many of us i think still remember the outbreak of ebola that occurred in this region of africa a few years ago so obviously that's there must be on our on your mind as well i mean how much of a danger is that in terms of not being able to contain this. well exactly that outbreak in two thousand and four in west africa showed us how devastating the bowl
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i can be to communities if the response is not. there in a timely and in a robust way being done and this is exactly what we are fearing right now we have this really scenario where there is an insecurity where our teams cannot go out and do what they need to do this is how we lose people who have to be followed on a daily basis this is how people who should be in treatment center do not come forward this is how we cannot vaccinate all those who are eligible for vaccination and that obviously. situation where we'll not be able to tackle the bowler re understand we while talking with the population and danny that everyone is concerned about ebola but again population feels that or turkey's including international component is failing to provide them with the security and therefore mistrust against ebola responders may come as well and we have seen occasionally that the community would not accept interventions from from our teams and again we
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hope that situation will improve so we can go directly into community and do all those things we need to do because there is not really a magic bullet against the bar it's a it's a it's really hard work and it will take weeks and months before we are able really . to contain the the outbreak this is not unfortunately helpful what happened in past couple of days good to speak with you terry yes or a witch in copenhagen thanks very much for the lawyers. early state figures from afghanistan show that fewer than half of eligible voters took part in the elections which were hit by violence and technical problems at least forty five people were killed in taliban attacks when polling stations. but on saturday elsewhere frustration boiled over as electronic voting systems failed
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meaning some people had to cough their ballots the next day. one hour for shot ballots in kabul. afghans queue outside this polling center in kabul patiently waiting for a chance to vote it's the second time they've tried. of the nearly five thousand polling same tis four hundred was slated to open a day late after a host of logistical issues because of security threats only two hundred fifty six actually opened it is a moment then being as he would see some agreement yesterday we came here to vote but there were a lot of irregularities and the biometric system was not working and there was lack of employees at the polling center systems. as the voting system is very weak and slow the voting started from this morning but so far only ten people have voted. their resilience is counted in ballot papers and lives. the government deployed seventy thousand security forces to protect vs this weekend the taliban said it
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would target the polls disparate to stop the democratic process the armed groups sees as an extension of american influence george got out. on us this is the time to be proud of our national army national police and our intelligence forces for ensuring security but still violence slipped through the cracks the ministry of interior tell it up nearly two hundred taliban attacks nationwide on saturday. the worst came in kabul just after sunset voting seemed to should have been closed at the time but were extended to cope with the long queues of people still waiting to vote a suicide bomber tried to enter a polling station more than a dozen people were killed by the fire there was said there's a good i was there was a blast and i fell down on the ground blood was everywhere and there were many casualties don't know what happened next. afghans knew they were risking their lives to vote the taliban have reminded them many times and yet they turned out in
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the millions defiant. young of the nine million registered to vote one third turned out on election day it's hope sunday will pick up another million ballots with two provinces get to vote initial results will be revealed in three weeks these are the third parliamentary elections since the fall of the taliban in two thousand and one if this is the appetizer the main course is the presidential election in april despite logistical and security concerns forces themselves more engaged in a shallow ballasts out is there a book or you may not have heard of but mary on the mary shower was once considered the darling of europe's far right youth movement she's recently shown the political spotlight but the niece of marine le pen leader of the national front in france has a new venture as the tasha butler reports from leo she's set up a political institute which critics see as a platform to spread the toxic ideology. she has dropped the look pen name but
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mario marshall is part of france's famous far right political family his marine le pen leader of the anti immigration national front party marshal quit elected politics last year to embark on a new venture opening a conservative institute called essent in the french city of lille q did you separate the idea of essentialist offer an alternative education one that will train new leaders in politics or economics with a new approach elites who are patriotic and rooted in culture and history. there were sixty students at isa and more than a dozen lecture is the marshal a former m.p. the school is another way of doing politics only a dozen different and more are in a dozen different critic i saw today we are seeing a moral and political capitulation in this country there's a sense that france is weak and no longer wants to be powerful we are not political activists our teachers are not elected officials that we have
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a political approach in the noble sense africa's politics for me is serving the community. he said student take nair is a young prison or to preserve involved in right wing politics what if in the goober moore is most business schools teach the same thing capitalism is destruction of the family multiculturalism like shells africa service of education to create a pattern of the leaders of unbridled liberalism but critics of the institute say it's a thinly disguised training camp for the far right party of and their firm. is also part of the far right that wants to train managers candidates and activists and bypass a university system run by people whose beliefs the despise. cation in leo is not by charles the ancient bulls made this their capital so to the resistance for those looking for french roots they run deep here mariel marshall says that her institute
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is about selling her political. rants of racism campaigners here and they are disagree they say the school is propagating far right i did in an attempt to give them mainstream acceptability of. creating the school allows the far right to spread their ideas and teach students to communicate them there to which messages work and which don't they learn propaganda which is what you would expect from a political party but not a school. marcia wants to make france great again to do so she'll need the support of a new elite powell has so far eluded her aunt fresh spin on foreign politics to put it within her grasp. al-jazeera france all right kevin is here with the weather in a moment and then standing trial at the international criminal court the commander of a group linked to one hundred thousand deaths we report from uganda. rallies on the
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right protests on the left the latest on brazil's divisive presidential election campaign. and later in sport when rooney caps his first season in the united states with a trip to the playoffs or will be here with more. from the waves of the sales. to the contours of the east. this hour we're going to take you to spain i want to show you the satellite image over here to all of those clouds that are rolling through the southern part of spain well those particular clouds caused quite a bit of flooding across the region i want to go closer in and show you the area we're talking about we're talking about the state of mollica take a look at that thunderstorm normally this part of spain is very very dry and it doesn't take much rain to fall to cause flooding across this region we had some
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unofficial reports that some areas received over several hundred millimeters of rain in this is actually what it looked like take a look here in camp e.o. as the flooding caused this in the area this video came in across the region causing the town to be daily rich with mud as well as debris shutting down the town as well as many others across the region one person died in this area when they were washed away with their vehicles across that area can see many vehicles were also affected by this area now we're going to be seeing much drier conditions across the area today temperatures normal for this time of year but across other parts of spain we are looking at dry conditions but not says sarah lee here across the central portions of the med this next storm system that we see down here towards the southern part of italy well that is potentially going to bring some very heavy rain and flooding not only for italy but also for southern parts of greece over the next several days we'll keep you informed on that as we take a look at the weather. the winter sponsored by cat time riis.
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you know the first time i notice i had the disease i said it's not possible i've been urinating blood for a week now enough that it. has always been the home for she said ever since the down thirty two here the disease is danger that's why i can't read the mind of anyone whenever i am given people i stamp on minds and when i go to bed until i've treated them on lifeline the quest for global health on al-jazeera. u.s. citizens obstructed from saving their families as the crisis in yemen worsens some have fled the horror of war only to be entangled in bureaucratic limbo with their lives and dreams of a future put on hold. to. fold lines explores the old to legal effects of trumps immigration policies. between war and the ban on
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a. hello again you're watching i do see a reminder of our top stories this hour choose day is the deadline being set by turkey's president to reveal all details of the turkish investigation into the killing of jamal khashoggi type one and donald trump agreed in a phone call on the need for clarity about what happened to the saudi journalist indonesia's president has joined a growing chorus of world leaders calling for a thorough investigation into its death. toll be visiting saudi foreign minister full transparency was needed his comments echoed those from germany the u.k.
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france and our. earlier saudi foreign minister to bed described death as a grave mistake and denied that crown springs crown prince mohammed bin said man was involved saudi king and the crown prince and many suspect of ordering his killing have called family to offer their condolences on his death. and turkey's richard type speaking right now in the head of the cabinet meeting there so. we're going to go back to c.n.n. because he is in ankara for so cinema has he had anything more to say about the. well. donna speaking. at a party is the ruling party's vivan branch right now but he hasn't said anything
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related to his case but of course in the cabinet meeting he will be discussing this investigation case with every detail with his cabinet members and our john is expected to ask for the cabinet members to prepare it in ventry of turkey saudi relations not only economics also cultural and intellectual level as well because depending on the inventor that he's going to receive today it will it will shape his speech for tomorrow because we don't know what he's going to say to morrow but we are sure that he is going to reveal every and in each detail unknown detail of the investigation case and also we expect him to speak about the voice recording the eleven minutes voice recording that is the is that is the evidence in this investigation file but of course none of us were able to hear about this voice shrek we heard that turkish officials made mr pawle impale listen to this voice recording when he visited on the courier and met with turkey's president and
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foreign minister last week so the unknown the unspoken truth is going to be revealed for many turkish people who are following the case but are gone is expected to is also. expected to targets address the international public opinion as well because unclear of believes that despite a united states thought to. crown prince mohammed bin seven months. like him the crown prince to be held accountable because they believe that all these names who have been dismissed and arrested for the last couple of days have direct links with crown prince mohammed bin ceremony also we mentioned on al jazeera that the leader of a squad the hits men. had form for for for i'm told with crown prince private office so probably president are done with also be after that's. seen him
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because ali thanks very much. our we failed to listen and we failed to provide justice those were the words delivered by australia's prime minister says he gave a national apology to survivors a second of child sexual abuse scott morrison is emotional speech follows a five year inquiry which lifted the lid on decades of horrific crimes in churches schools and other institutions andrew thomas reports from the capital canberra. for most the apology is decades overdue a five year inquiry which ended last year heard from thousands of victims who asked children suffered sexual abuse by people they were supposed to trust priests in churches teaches in schools carries in orphanages coaches in sports clubs the stories of what they inflicted are appalling to die a stray or confronts
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a trauma an abomination hiding in plain sight for far too long there are so many survivors as most prefer to be called that a ballot was held to get into parliament to hear the apology others watched outside well then ian demarco fought off a catholic teacher who tried to abuse him and he saw the teacher abuse others demarco was selected to hear the apology in parliament but last week he was wary of what we said yeah i would like to hear what they have to say. and what they plan to do is ensure that it doesn't repeat itself. after hearing the apology demarco approved of the tone and nature just fantastic. this isn't the end this is the beginning this is the beginning of an ear out for you where people in positions of authority. priced interest the children for their own
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personal interest during his two speeches and meeting people on the lawns outside parliament scott morrison was at times heckled some feel he's a hypocrite but what his government is currently doing to refugee children held in the prison island of nuru is a new form of child abuse others feel this apology is too little too late hundreds of people were here in person to hear the apology but thousands were not many died before they got the chance to hear an apology to them by an australian prime minister a chair was left empty at the front of the hall to symbolize them and many others boycotted the apology altogether some feel angry that institutions such as the catholic church continue to receive hundreds of millions of dollars of taxpayers' money to run schools and the compensation schemes don't go far enough so that many people on their larger committed suicide what are we doing for their families. sorry only goes so far after thomas al-jazeera camera rescue
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teams in taiwan worked through the night searching through the mangled wreckage of sunday's train crash the poor human express the rail was speeding around a bend killing eight hundred passengers. britain's prime minister to resign may plans to tell parliament the brakes in negotiations are in her words ninety five percent complete she's facing another mutiny within her fractured conservative party one of the biggest sticking points how to keep the irish border open after the u.k. leaves the e.u. in march both sides want to avoid customs and border checks between ireland the e.u. member and northern ireland which is part of the u.k. but they can't agree on how to do it or trying to break the impasse prime minister may has indicated she could accept a longer post-divorce transition period that's infuriated her progress that colleagues who fear being tied to the e.u. for years to come and some of them preparing
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a new bid to topple the prime minister get more on this now from nadine barber who is live for us in london so nadine what more about the prime minister's message after the summit last week. well has him as you said she'll be talking to parliament in the next few hours updating them on that you summit last week in brussels and after the summer ended she did hold a press conference in which it became clear that she was still sounding very positive and getting a lot of positive noises from her e.u. counterparts hoping for a deal before the deadline of march next year which is the end of the article fifty process and if there's no deal then basically that the united kingdom will be crushing out of the e.u. so positive noises but very little of substance she doesn't insist as you say that ninety five percent of a withdrawal agreement has been thrashed out mainly what they call the divorce bill which means britain will be paying around fifty billion dollars to the
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european union a fixed sum that they've agreed mutual rights for e.u. citizens living in the u.k. and u.k. citizens living in the rest of the european union and the idea of that transition period lossing until at least the end of twenty twenty. in the effort to find a trade agreement the future relationship but she does face a lot of opposition she also is set to tell parliament that she opposes the general idea from brussels that there needs to be a timeless irish backstop to get around that problem of a hard border between the between northern ireland and the republic of ireland she will tell them but that's not acceptable the e.u. has been made it very clear that that's what the backstop means that it it can't have a time limit it's just in case it's an insurance policy in case there is no detail
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in the actual withdrawal agreement or further down the line she also needs to placate her allies the d.-u. pavan or northern irish unionist party which say that they can access. a brussels proposal which would create a customs border in the irish sea effectively separating overnight in from the rest of the u.k. now just today in the irish press the irish foreign minister simon kovan he says there will be no withdrawal agree with all agreement without the backstop end of story that's why it's so crucial and a dream i know this is an ongoing topic of conversation for some time now but how precarious is the prime minister's position at the moment hard to say i mean if you believe all of the talk at the moment there are over forty m.p.'s who are ready to go to vote against her version of what she says will be the deal they call it the checkers proposals then possibly that would be
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enough to defeat the deal even without the votes of the opposition parties but we've been in this situation before there's lots of plotting behind the scenes but nothing has come of it she has been phoning her cabinet colleagues over the weekend she meets the cabinet on choose day and then backbenchers on wednesday some of those backbenchers are extremely unhappy with what you were mentioning the idea of the you of the u.k. remaining in the customs union and the single market during that transition period longer beyond twenty twenty meaning that years after the referendum was held as they see it the u.k. would still be virtually a member of the european union there's been a lot of tough talk some using language such as she's entering the killings own assassination is in the air it's not clear if that will actually come to fruition nadine thanks very much. our former senior commander of
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a ugandan rebel group is on trial at the international criminal court for war crimes and murder dominic on when was a member of the lord's resistance army during the twenty year civil war has now come web reports from kitgum the army's link to the deaths of one hundred thousand people and the abduction of twenty thousand children in the gloom of the carb i was sixteen years old when rebels abducted him forced him to meet a late and killed and mutilated him to eventually escaped and opened this bar in northern uganda now it's his livelihood but he told us he struggles with the memories every day. i kept complaining that enables tactic and me from my home so they cut off my finger and part of my lips to punish. the rebel lord's resistance army fought the government in northern uganda for twenty years it was one of africa's longest and most brutal civil wars there was
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a ceasefire in two thousand and six by then the n.r.a. had forced thousands of children to become soldiers and sex slaves this man dominic on when was also abducted as a child now he's standing trial at the international criminal court in the bush he rose to become a commander the prosecutors say he was then responsible for war crimes the i.c.c. issued arrest warrants for five rebels week leading the l r a's leader joseph koni who still at large went on grounds the only one who's been caught not only the rebels who are accused of atrocities people living in the villages around here so when the conflict began in one thousand nine hundred six the rebels frequently use this part at night they say that government soldiers assumed the local community was supporting them and so rounded up forty five villages and shot them dead right here the memorial.

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