tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera October 26, 2018 2:00pm-2:33pm +03
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you won't give up their fight for justice. al jazeera selects justice. there's other information and evidence that we are holding kids president says that investigators have more evidence to be revealed in the killing of jamal khashoggi as he calls on saudi arabia to disclose the location of the journalists body. although i'm adrian for the getting this is al jazeera live from doha also coming up she's a good mom and we're doing everything we can everyone from the ministry of labor at the ministry of interior a frantic search for survivors out for at least nineteen people were killed in flash flooding in jordan most of the victims of students who are out of school for
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. the f.b.i. intensifies its search for who's sending bombs to high profile democrats and u.s. president trump lashes out at critics blaming him for the nation's device most. of the popular tourist destination reopens in the philippines. has ramped up pressure on saudi arabia to explain who killed journalist jamal khashoggi in the saudi consulate in istanbul earlier this month in his second speech this week president bush i want to warn the kingdom the police have more evidence which will be revealed quote when the time comes he called saudi arabia's explanations for disappearance from the consulate childish and comical he repeated his call. for riyadh to reveal the location of her body and said the saudi
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prosecutor will be heading to turkey on sunday. of course there is other information and evidence that we are holding and they will be used when the time comes but there is no need to rush because in the first instance the saudi officials have to explain who killed. on monday they sent the chief prosecutor to stumble they will meet with our chief prosecutor and have discussions covered what other saudi officials made certain announcements which gave us considerable concern because they said that he had left the consulate of course these explanations were quite comical a person like. if he had left the consulate would he not pick up his fiancee who was waiting for him outside these childish excuses to not befits
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a responsible state and they did not befits responsible statesmanship. which one of the turkey's capital ankara zero seven course is the sort of what are the presidents of the one have to say. green his his sentences were very important actually because this time he was very tough when he said that those one thousand people who have been arrested in saudi arabia should be handed over to turkey and they should be tried according to a turkish law in turkey as this incident is murder was committed in. turkey and other question that he has been raising for the last couple of days which is the actually binding detail of this investigation file where is just by the this is what he is asking he said you are admitting this then you are saying that. he was killed in a fierce far a fistfight and then you say it was
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a premeditated murder then you have to say we're just buddies because it is important to close this investigation and take it to take it to a judicial level as long as you don't have the officers but you don't have to prove that he's killed that's why our dawn is actually trying to push saudi officials for that and he said that first the saudi officials will disclose who the murderer is and he has been asking the question that. a saudi official a couple of days ago gave a statement to one of the international news agencies saying that this squad of fifteen men saudi men have cooperated with a local a turkish called the greater and add on ses you have to answer who does turkish local culebra to raise and this is very important for our dog because he's he's the mending the answers despite the latest phone talk between our dawn and the crown prince and the conference very constructive statements regarding turkey saudi
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relations seems to be determined. and to chase after this also i had sad right after don had this had given the statement during. a provincial meeting with the ruling party members right after that turkish and saudi foreign ministers had to form talk over the case not much is given as a detail about this phone conversation but it came right after. dawn speech and now everybody in the prosecutor's office the police are waiting for the saudi officials who are said to be arriving on sunday to turkey to discuss the details but of course it is a question of whether he will also bring the testimonies. statements of those eighteen people who have been arrested in saudi arabia as well. so that many thanks indeed will not it is politics news and it's a daily sub a daily english newspaper in turkey he says the other one has hardened his stance
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on the saudi royal court i think this is one of the harsher remarks are than made on the case and he named both king solomon and mohamed bin selman the calm prince of saudi arabia i think the toning off the toning in the language he used was significant in today's speech he was definitely harsher he said the explanations so far made by saudi arabia were childish and he demanded more concrete and consistent answers from saudi arabia so if we look at our drawn speech on tuesday. and the day after he made this was a morse more sturdy and definitely more an attempt to basically corner saudi arabia and demand some substantial answers from them one of the issues that he highlighted is that who is the killer and who order the the incident
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basically so this these two he answered he questioned the m.p.'s as he's known mohammed and the king solomon himself as well but he also brought to to the table the domestic collaborator that initially saw you prosecutors have said about someone from from turkey being collaborating the eighteen or the fifteen people from saudi arabia so this they have to answer he said as well but i think one of the more significant in today's talk was the toning and the language i don't use toward saudi arabia named crown prince which he didn't even use during his or his tuesday speech in russia kremlin spokesman this made a comment on the cushy case to me trip eskom says that russia believes there is no reason to doubt the saudi royal family was not involved in the show she's mudda
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some first reports from moscow. well there has been strong condemnation around the world after the killing of jamal khashoggi it has been very quiet here in russia the initial statements comments from moscow were that they would just listen and wait for the saudi investigation done into the murder but now the kremlin is taking a bit of a different tone and saying that there's no reason to doubt the statements coming from the saudi royal family that they are not involved in the murder analysts are pointing out that russia is taking a different position after of course what happened in the u.k. and the nearly killing of scrip out and of course that was also an opponent of the regime of russia also pointing out that a delegation of russian businessman have still been sent to riyadh for this important business form that a lot of a lot of other countries had been pulling out of and also it is sad that russia might be taking advantage of the did terrio rating relationship between saudi
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arabia and a lot of western countries saudi journalist jamal khashoggi was the victim of an extrajudicial executions that's the assessment of the united nations special rapporteur on summary killings diplomatic it is the james various reports from new york. agnus color mark does a very specific role for the united nations and it covers exactly the crime committed in the saudi consulate in istanbul three weeks ago she is the special rapporteur on extrajudicial summary or arbitrary executions with regard to the gruesome exit q sion of saudi john at least jamal khashoggi i want to add my voice to that of my colleague david cave the un special rapporteur on freedom of expression. to call for an international investigation into this
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murder after she raised the case in the u.n. committee that deals with human rights the saudi representative said she was exceeding her remit right up there with us think they might get a geisha in wish like to denounce this statement by the special rapporteur we call on her not to exceed her mandate on extrajudicial executions currently do not give us any personal opinion in this official meeting thank you question but she later went further in a news conference the special rapporteur telling me she believes on current evidence saudi arabia as a state is culpable for the murder when where where do we stop the where do we begin where do we stop our construction of the state they where we preventing the state when they acted as he acted the state cannot twice sheets and for me to responsibly tease so it doesn't matter whether the crown prince or the king say
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they didn't know of course it matters but that does not mean that the saudi state is not responsible. the special rapporteur has added her voice to the growing calls for an international investigation but it's not clear how that would be launched the u.n. secretary general says he will only form a panel to investigate the case if he gets referral from one of the main bodies of the un the security council the general assembly or the human rights council or from one of the countries concerned james. at the united nations activists and jamal khashoggi friends have held a vigil for him demanding answers from saudi arabia they say the saudi crown prince has blood on his hands and they insist they won't accept any compromises in the case of his murder on this occasion and from this place where the spirit has been lost we clearly state that we do not and will not
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accept compromises in the case of his murderer and that we will not keep silent on any attempt to evade any criminal criminal from accountability and one from. we will follow all legitimate means to achieve full justice for demand will get a weather update next year on al-jazeera then the rest of the day's news and. i'm wayne hay in palo indonesia where it's been almost a month since the earthquake and tsunami so many people are still missing tens of thousands are homeless and there's ongoing concern for the welfare of children the most vulnerable in the aftermath of the disaster. hello there it certainly is a lot cooler now for many of us across the northern pas of age we're seeing
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a fair amount of snow from this system as it sweeps its way eastwards further south of course where it's far warmer there it is giving us some rain and we see plenty of what weather for most of us across japan there as we head through the day on saturday still giving some wintery weather in the north that's for the far east in parts of russia and the east impose of china as well and actually the snow digging a bit further south as we head through sunday so even around the border border with north korea we can expect to see a few flurries of wintery weather more snow to making its way in from parts mongolia there as we head through sunday and generally now for many of us here certainly feeling a little bit more wintery the further towards the south and for say there's plenty of fine draw your weather shanghai up at nineteen degrees so not too warm for us but it's hong kong still toasty up around twenty eight degrees which is maybe just edging down a little bit as we head through the day on sunday before the west that's where there's more of a change more cloud floating in here and that will give us a few showers for the rule them pause or viet-nam and making its way into the four
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western parts of china before the towards the south and no actually speaking that's drawing for us across the philippines just want to showers here but elsewhere across the southeast in parts of asia the showers and some brightness. a journey of personal discovery by a great grandfather he was a slave of the lead property algeria's james gannon explores his family's legacy of slavery ownership you know like my family's status and wealth as benefiting from their choice to enslave people and america's debt to black people today some of us even speak out because it's a problem. al-jazeera correspondent a moral debt.
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and again this is al-jazeera the main news this hour turkey's president wretch of top of the one says the police have more evidence in the case of the missing journalist jamal khashoggi that will be released when the time is right he's called on saudi arabia to disclose the location of from her body. a trim and spokesman has made a comment on the case dmitri peskov says that russia believes there's no reason to doubt that the saudi royal family was not involved in these murder and the united nations special report on assault on summary or arbitrary killings says that saudi journalist. was the victim of an extrajudicial execution act this column and says the information available on the national g.'s case points to the saudi state being
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responsible for the killing. rescuers continue to search the shore around the dead sea in jordan after flash flooding killed at least nineteen people most of them with children on announcing organized by the school around forty people were rescued after helicopters and diverse were drafted in to help let's take you live now to jordan. abdul hamid is on the scene what's the situation than now. certainly rescue and search operations are ongoing even though there is little hope that they could find anyone still alive civil defense is saying that they're not only combing inland but there we have seen them with some boats and combing the dead sea with the help of also some of the locals living in this area i mean just to give you an idea the exact point of the flash flood was a bit further down this road but it's completely blocked and there's
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a bridge that collapsed the children that were on this camping side were actually further inland behind this first range of mountain that you can see they were taken by surprise and the force of the water really swept them all the way down the valley for several kilometers according to the civil defense and some of them were actually found in the dead sea so that is quite a density but the gives you also the indication of the force of that water that was sweeping through these mountains down the valley last night and with these rains expected. what about these reports the students one where they were supposed to be at the time. well certainly the jordanian prime minister has put on his twitter account what he said was a permit for distilled and that was issued by the ministry of ministry of education
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to go on a school day out a sort of trip out of amman but to another part of the country completely in the east of the country i way from today to see so there are a lot of questions on how come that blood and change why no one was notified i have to also say that among the dead children is also the daughter of the director of that school she is obviously under pressure now but she has also her personal loss in this tragic story where it seems the wrong decision was taken and then after that another series of wrong decisions because from what we understand there were a lot of warnings by them into a logical office here in jordan and at a certain point that this is and should have been taken to pull these children out of this area all right how many things. lived enjoyed one of the world's most popular tourist islands reopened in the philippines all
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through it was closed due to environmental concerns boracay island which once handled two million tourists a year was clues takes months ago to allow time for a cleanup. reports this is supposed to be a new dawn for an island dubbed one of the wilds most beautiful for the last six months only residents have been allowed on baraka i now they're preparing to welcome visitors once again. this is an island rebranded with its rehabilitation some of its newest attractions upgraded sewer lines and drainage and an improved transport system that rain's been hampering construction methods. or thirty's of bulldozed illegal structures and shut down the island's three casinos and there have been other sacrifices tens of thousands left unemployed people here say they're desperate for life to return to normal and new hope there is the echo of
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hotels here are like a war zone what a ghost town we who lost their jobs had to go home to our province as white for six months before we could work again. in this new baraka fewer than twenty thousand tourists will be allowed on the island at any one time that's less than half its previous peak capacity back in germany as you heard that this island will be closed he said wow that's a good thing to really close the whole environment that nature is like can rest assure a second but i mean even though there are many renovations and it's not yet perfect when you go to the beach and you realize that closing it for six months is worth it . in april rule sewage was being pipes directly into the sea and the island's landfill was overwhelmed by more than ninety tons of rubbish daily the government said half of barca's businesses were violating environmental rules and decided to close it for a six month cleanup i will prove. what up there is says. you're
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going to do work there it's merely despite being criticized for an abrupt decision and disregarding livelihoods or dorothy's pressed ahead with the shutdown. tourists replaced on the beaches by riot police trails and trash collection teams now there's a slew of new rules for its fresh the pristine beaches no drinking no smoking and no vendors so no more of its multi day parties then nor its famous photo op sandcastles and while authorities admit it will take longer than six months to clean up baraka they say this is been a good start. out as there are bunkered who is the undersecretary of the philippines department tourism he joins us now live via skype from r.k. good telly with us so the island is open to business once again that's good news for people who live there and. run businesses on the island how are you going to
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ensure that this doesn't happen again. we just heard that there is a series of regulations that were going to be implemented primarily to just in force environmental laws and so it's already been there for quite some time national laws and ordinances to protect the environment and that's a primary will. still being all men and women have been that were up by in the egypt the past or worse has been on it since day one since you closed it and to me it's certainly an airsoft openly softening lives i let it be or appear different on two years that led some time end of next year six months hasn't been enough time as we were just hearing to go to the finish that the clean up of the island how much longer is it going to take to to return it to its pristine nature. we have managed to recover the beach you know the main beach should be seen it in for those
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and clips that the twenty five meter plus five meter lease meant has been recovered and that's basically what we wanted from the very start there's no temporary structures there and the beach should be the ready for a lot of tourists alike to enjoy the island and the second important thing they've done is to really improve the barley water we've installed that damages them in our sewer lines and managed to really encourage all of our stakeholders to invest in sewage treatment plants plants that would make make sure that the quality of water we throw out there is also a great quality straight before for the bunched of human skin house do you limit the number of visitors to the island in the future say i want to come and visit go on holiday there is a some sort of a lottery system a play here that decides who gets to go and who doesn't we have no one to be dry run we started last week and see looking at the chain in terms of the number of
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guests and. residents and we're coming in and within a couple of next couple of weeks asked or she'll need to really ascertain the kind of system we will do in terms of regulating the number two arrests that i have been pretty good to talk to so many thanks indeed we wish the island and the people living there the very best from the philippines department of tourism. yes think if the f.b.i. sent teams to such mail sorting census in the u.s. to try to trace who's been sending forms to high profile critics of president donald trump so far ten suspicious possums have been found it's pretty kohei in reports. another day another shot of a crude bomb being carted away to be deactivated on thursday in. similar to this found at a business owned by actor robert deniro two more devices found in delaware addressed
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to former vice president joe biden the targets are a who's who of the president's critics the very people the president has personally attacked many say this is proof the president has gone too far this has come from trump trump has used you know describe people who disagree with him as enemies of the people so people who support the other party are dangerous hateful crazy anti-american so it's very very hard to look at this and not lay a fair amount of the blame both squarely at the foot of donald trump but also what the other republicans who stood by for years let this happen at first donald trump took a conciliatory tone do you see how nice somebody. this is like i do you ever seen that it didn't last long he sent out a tweet just hours later blaming the mainstream media for the anger in the country his spokeswoman followed suit very. appropriately to disown her people used on your network a number of times not only to describe the president but to many people that work in this administration absolutely day in day out there is
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a negative tone ninety percent of the media attention around this president is negative despite historic job creation his supporters in the media when even further claiming both sides are to blame were and do not sit there and point to what the other team did to cause this we don't know the perpetrator we don't know the motivation but it was interesting because hillary clinton says we can't we can't step aside from hateful rhetoric and tell democrats have bullied their way she was talking about. america is a country divided so much so that even an attempt to carry out the mass killing of the country's political opposition is now seen as something to debate. al-jazeera washington at seven thirty six in the morning in washington d.c. president trump is awake and he's tweeting again the latest addressing the bombings once again the latest criticizing the blaming him for society's negative tone and here's what he says funny how lonely rated c.n.n.
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and others can criticize me at will even blaming me for the current spate of bombs and ridiculously comparing this to september eleventh and the oklahoma city bombing it when i criticize them they go wild and scream it's just not presidential. tens of thousands of people remain homeless on the indonesian island of super way months after a devastating earthquake and tsunami and for children who lost parents life or manes a day to day struggle is when hey reports from. in the shadow of destruction some schools have reopened as much as possible given the scale of the earthquake and tsunami rebuilding classrooms will take a long time as well rebuilding the confidence of the children on the first day back after the disaster less than a third of students showed up at this school just outside the city of palu. many students have difficulty getting here the roads in the north are still cut off in
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many places some of them are also injured so maybe they're still too traumatized to come to school. for those who did it in the makeshift classroom offered a form of healing and a sense of togetherness. and i really wanted to go back to school i was waiting and waiting but i didn't hear any news about the school. there are many children who remain unaccounted for probably way more than the officially registered number of just over one hundred the children who have lost their parents or have been separated from immediate family members there's an increased risk of abuse or becoming victims of child trafficking is. of course we worry there could be trafficking cases especially if the children are still babies they can't say anything yet so confirming identities can only be done through the parents and people around them. social workers visit
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camps to try to educate people about the need to report details of children who may be in need almost a month on from the disaster they're still receiving to every day on this occasion they investigate a report of an eight year old boy in a nearby house. they find that his aunt and uncle had been caring for him but he's now being taken to another city far away to stay with distant relatives this case highlights the challenges that social workers are facing in trying to find missing children they've been able to confirm some details about the boy whose entire immediate family is believed to have been killed in the disaster and are now recommending that he be brought back here to palu where he used to live but the point is that until now no one in an official capacity knew that he even existed. with candidates still in disarray it's a confusing scary time for the youngest survivors in some camps the government and
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aid groups of set up safe places to children to play and receive psychological support when given the opportunity to draw what they want they often choose houses perhaps reflecting on happy safer times and looking forward to their return wayne hey al jazeera palu indonesia. it is good to be with us adrian for the good here in doha the top stories this hour on turkish president says the police have evidence more evidence in the murder of the journalist jamal that will be released quote when the time is right he's called on saudi arabia to disclose the location of these body a kremlin spokesman has made a comment on the case to be true peskov says that russia believes there is no reason to doubt that the saudi royal family was not involved in. the united nations
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special rapporteur on summary or arbitrary killings says the saudi journalist was the victim of an extrajudicial execution. the information available on the case points to the saudi state being responsible for the killing. rescuers continue to search the shoreline around the dead sea in jordan after flash floods killed at least nineteen people most of them were children all organized ousting openness rather by their school was forty people were rescued japan's prime minister shinzo abe and his country's says his country's relationship with china has reached an historic turning point as the first japanese leaders a visit beijing a formal visit in seven years but you countries have signed a series of trade agreements. killjoy it from competition to cooperation relations between japan and china are in the process of entering a new era we agreed to move forward towards realizing peace cooperation and
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friendship this includes taking measures towards averting maritime accidents in the east china sea and working towards establishing a hotline as soon as possible between maritime an aerial communication mechanism three journalists have been released from detention in myanmar as the country's president intervened the men work for the country's largest private newspaper arrested earlier this month following the publication of a story alleging that officials in the ngo on had mismanaged public funds one of the world's most popular tourist islands has reopened in the philippines after it was shut down due to environmental concerns but arco island was closed six months ago by authorities for renovations and cleanup work there's the headlines the news continues here on al-jazeera a.j. selects next.
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