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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  October 30, 2018 1:00pm-2:01pm +03

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evidence many gang members and some very bad people are mixed into the caravan heading to our southern border please go back you will not be admitted into the united states and this to go through the legal process he concludes this is an invasion of our country and our military is waiting for you. u.s. administration officials point to the violence said broke out at what tomorrow is border with mexico as hundreds try to force their way across to join the large group of would be immigrants to the u.s. already on their way the main body of people now numbering some three and a half thousand is still hundreds of kilometers away from the u.s. border and could take weeks to arrive the timing of the deployment more likely determined by next week's midterm elections in which president trump has explicitly said the issue of immigration should play a dominant role mike hanna al-jazeera washington indonesian rescue
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officials say they're not expecting to find any survivors from a passenger plane which crashed into the java sea on monday one hundred eighty nine people were on board the lion air flight and they went down just minutes after takeoff from jakarta body parts of been recovered but the exact location of the wreckage hasn't been identified. as more from jakarta. the search operation did continue through monday night that's been made very clear by those involved in this operation those leading it including the indonesian president joko widodo saying that this operation will not stop it will be a twenty four hour a day operation so we saw that search operation continuing monday night but the divers had to suspend their work during the nighttime hours here in indonesia so the search very much focused on the surface overnight using sonar to try to detect the main wreckage of the aircraft so far they have not found that out but they also
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continue to pick up pieces of debris from the surface although again they are saying that they think they have found the majority of the debrief floating on top of the java sea so far twenty four body bags have been brought back from the crash site to the shore taken to a nearby hospital where the grim task has begun of relatives identifying those body parts we might be settling in for a long wait in terms of any official word on exactly what happened in the final moments before this aircraft crashed into the java sea still no word efficiently from those leading this search operation and leading the investigation or indeed from lie in the air itself about what exactly went wrong and really any significant results from the investigation will need to wait of course until they find the recorders from the aircraft to try to achieve that they broaden to make spirits from singapore with specialist equipment to try to detect exactly where those
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recorders may be in tunisia at least twenty people were injured when a female suicide bomber blew herself up in the capital tunis fifteen policemen are among the wounded the country has been under a state of emergencies in two thousand and fifteen after dozens of people were killed in a series of i saw attacks david chaytor has more from tunis. this attack happened in a main highway in the center of tunis which is known as the seans elisei of the capital the explosion occurred just two hundred yards away from the french embassy and very near the main municipal theater a thirty year old woman approached a police checkpoint and then detonated what appears to be in a bag of grenades it was a very homemade device now this comes at a very fundamental time politically here in tunisia because the the moderate islamist party has just broken away from the secular forces in the coalition that
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has been a very successful evolving democratic institution jane is of course is the country where the arab spring first started and the only one which is seen or talk see move towards a viable form of democracy so. that the president here that she is in president said that a sense lee they thought they defeated terrorism and driven the terrorists into the caves but he said now they've returned to the very center we don't know of any connections between the thirty year old woman who set off this explosive device and any extremist organizations she told her parents from the eastern coast that she was coming up to tunis just to find some work so nobody has any idea who was behind this attack but clearly it's meant to attack the main source of revenue here at a particularly vulnerable political time and that is to keep the tourists away and
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that would be destabilizing for the whole of to near zero. still ahead on al-jazeera jewish leaders in pittsburgh tell president trump is a welcome bad after a synagogue shooting unless he stops targeting the northeast. and nato exercises in norway for a closer look at new technology that could be used on the battlefield. going to welcome back well here across the levant we are looking at some clouds still lingering across parts of iran up here through parts of afghanistan some of those clouds will be bringing some rain showers over the next few days but temps wise fairly seasonal for this time of year there's the rain we expect to see maybe a little bit more down here towards iran over the next few days but still very warm
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over towards crotchety into the mid thirty's there not really changing as we go towards wednesday and quite city some clouds in your forecast with a temperature of about thirty one well speaking of clouds we've seen plenty of that across parts of saudi arabia or the last few days and that brought some rain showers that will continue we don't expect it to be as dense as they were but we do expect them to linger across much of the area here on tuesday and even towards wednesday towards mecca we do expect to see maybe a little bit more activity with the temperature there of thirty three degrees medina you're going to be out of clouds we do think with the time to there of about twenty eight and then very quickly as a break away down here towards the southern part of africa not too bad for the central areas with very warm temperatures there into the mid thirty's but down along the coast for cape town we do have a front that's going through winds are coming out of the south tempter a few about sixty degrees but as we go towards wednesday that front clears and we do expect to see better weather with seventeen degrees.
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when on line when you're looking at wildlife and the solutions come together to benefit all parties and that's where we're going to be long term or if you join us on sat if you could take me around the content why would you take me you don't have to set up your experiment for your experiment in the universe this is a dialogue everyone has a points you actually raise several interesting point there that several of our community members are going to join the global conversation on how to zero. you're watching al-jazeera time to recap headlines if you're on say
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a journalist says she holds saudi arabia responsible for his death. is also demands they return his body sources tell just two of the turkish prosecutor's office isn't happy with its meeting with saudi officials neither side is handed over its evidence. the u.s. military is deploying more than five thousand troops including armed soldiers to its border with mexico as part of president dog trance campaign to stop a so-called caravan of central americans from crossing into the u.s. search and rescue teams say no survivors are expected after monday's crash coast some remains of passengers have been recovered but the main wreckage has been found one hundred eighty nine people were on board but. trump will visit pittsburgh on tuesday the same day the first funerals will be held for the eleven people killed in the shooting at
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a synagogue but members of the jewish community have written an open letter to trump saying he's not welcome unless he fully denounces white nationalism and they got to reports. at the tree of life synagogue in squirrel hill people from across the city continue to lay tributes for the eleven victims that were killed on saturday morning the attorney general called the shooting an attack on all people of faith one survivor described the moments after the first shots rang out i tried to see if i could go back to get the eight remaining people who were in the back of the congregation but i could tell the gun it was gunfire was getting louder it was coming up the stairs and i couldn't a can save those people the suspected shooter robert vows appeared in court on monday the forty six year old faces twenty nine separate charges and could face the death penalty in another development a group of jewish leaders has published an open letter to president trump telling him he should stay away one exit reads president trump you are not welcome in
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pittsburgh until you fully denounce the white nationalism the president is jew in pittsburgh on tuesday we have no use for him. he's calling himself a nationalist the last medical group that i heard of the call themselves nationalists were nazis at a white house briefing the president's press secretary told reporters don't trump has made his feelings on hate crimes clear the president has denounced racism hatred and bigotry in all forms on a number of occasions will continue to do that i'm doing it here today and i would also say at the same time that some individuals they're grieving they're hurting the president wants to be there to show the support of this administration for the jewish community the rabbi said that he is welcome as well as this community continues to mourn the eleven people that were killed on saturday morning the first funerals a jew to take place on tuesday two brothers who were killed in what's described as
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the worst attack on the jewish community in u.s. history will take place meanwhile the phrase hate has no home here is springing up all across the city and gallacher al-jazeera pittsburgh pennsylvania. and top administration and u.s. law enforcement officials have increasingly focused on external sources of violence but the government accountability office is found that its right wing white think stream is and that it's proving to be the greatest source of domestic terrorism attacks in the u.s. she has this report. the mailing of pipe bombs to the democratic party establishment the killing of two african-americans at a supermarket in kentucky the murder of worshippers at a pittsburgh synagogue all of last week's attacks were committed by right wing extremists and that isn't a surprise given the statistics they have been several studies in recent years examining the source of extremist violence in the u.s. and their results differ depending on their methodology the conclusion is always
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the same the american right wing is responsible for most extremist violence in the us the government accountability office found seventy three percent of domestic attacks since nine eleven were carried out by right wing extremists university of maryland found islamic extremists killed fifty one people in that same period the far right one hundred thirty one and historical and normally appears to be occurring experts say that usually the right wing extremist groups increased during democratic administrations but declined under republican administrations that does not appear to be happening under donald trump if the people in power are using narratives about victimhood to justify their political platform and because they're in power that political platform has they've got them the bully pulpit they've got the megaphone and everybody's listening. in elected political leader can still magnify those narratives about victimhood of that identity group nonetheless the
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trumpet of the station has been attempting to make the main focus of the wind for islamic extremism well cutting back funding to combat far right extremists last week's attacks differ in motivation the pipe bomb was found was plastered in slogans supporting. donald trump the pittsburgh synagogue attacker was not a donald trump supporter dismissing him as a globalist rightwing shorthand for a person involved with a jewish conspiracy to control the world but that is the term trump himself has been using as he pursues his election with a narrative of an existential struggle between real america and of the democratic party mob every citizen benefits when we stop foreign countries from cheating our workers that's what they've been doing you know they called globalists they like they like the globe i like to do low to doldrum supporters are quick to point out that both his daughter and son in law are jewish so there's no way the president could be anti-semitic but it is clear that he's normalizing extreme right wing rhetoric ahead of the november midterm elections to fire up his base and that helps
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explain why a group of progressive jewish leaders here have made it clear the president isn't welcome in pittsburgh until he denounces white nationalists she had her town see al-jazeera pittsburgh nato is one of the most important military alliances in the world and its member states have to maintain that these readiness at all times al-jazeera as alex go topless travels central norway to find out how nato's new technologies could change future battlegrounds. it's not the terminator just yet but here the nato and hans logistics base in central norway they're trying to use new high tech hardware to solve the age old problems of protecting soldiers and keeping them supplied. trying to do is bring together existing technologies and then just examine force protection into one space in a more realistic environment so that we can then understand ptolemy and three d. printing will affect how we do water in the three d.
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printing will mean that a broken down military vehicle needing a spare part does not have to wait until want to rise from a distance supply depo that can be immediately made on location all these technologies on display are about doing more with less seeing further detecting threats having multiple ways of spotting one's enemy before they spot you we've heard a lot here about things like data fusion integrated sensors but this is the black hornet one of the smaller you if he's in the world is a flight time of twenty minutes and can see in the dark these products in their buzz words sound impressive but they're very much works in progress i think that we have some incredible systems however the integration of them is something that we're still pulling together these systems maybe in their first stages of development but some here believe they could change the way wars of the future of fort alex could topless al-jazeera trondheim norway mexico's president elect is facing criticism for cancelling the building of
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a new airport in mexico city where the. door says he's respecting the result of a referendum by the mexican people last week voters rejected the partly build thirteen billion dollar airport construction started three years ago on the current president and the nuclear bomb in the air. the world's newest and largest airport has officially opened in turkey commercial flights begin from istanbul airport on wednesday it's expected that by twenty twenty eight more than one hundred fifty million passengers will be using the airport every year other official reports. they held the official opening of an airport that isn't yet open when completed this multibillion dollar complex will take up space equal to almost all of manhattan and will be the biggest airport in the world the first flight into this airport brought president the one to the city back in june the first commercial flight will take off on wednesday but it could well be the end of the year before
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this airport is fully operational. it was the turkish president who performed the opening ceremony insisting the new airport forty kilometers from the center of istanbul is vital for economic growth some of what it was. with the opening of the airport turkey has become the most important transit point between north to south east to west our ports is connecting sixty countries in this wider region and connecting economies worth twenty three trillion dollars. new destinations. for many except the need for a new airport they've questioned the locations the cost and the number of workers killed to build opposition groups say there have been a large number of deaths the government rejects that idea and rights watch has also criticised the government's approach to safety during the build claiming those who complain have been jailed. behind the glamour of the opening ceremony there's
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a much sadder reality which is that thirty one workers are currently in prison just for protesting against poor working conditions and fatalities accidents on the work site. the one wanted to mark turkey's republic day with a grand gesture which. while hundreds of guests attended what is really a ceremonial start the road in subway service to the new airport will be finished soon but the project itself isn't expected to be complete until twenty twenty eight alan fischer al-jazeera at istanbul's airport. let's take you through some of the headlines here in al-jazeera now the fiance of journalist about a shrug she says she holds saudi arabia responsible for his murder at the age of chang is also demands they return his body meanwhile sources tell al-jazeera the
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turkish prosecutor's office isn't happy with its meeting with saudi officials neither side has handed over its evidence. you know on how you the need for a living is that i am deeply grateful for the solidarity of people enjoyed at the world i am however disappointed in the actions of the leadership in many countries particularly in the u.s. president trying to reveal the truth and he should justice be served he should not pave the way for a cover up of my fiance's murder let's not let money taint our conscience and compromise our values the u.s. military is deploying more than five thousand troops including armed soldiers to its border with mexico it's part of president dollar trumps campaign to stop it so called caravan of central americans from crossing into the u.s. . search and rescue team say no survivors are expected from monday's crash of jakarta's coast some remains of passengers have been found but the exact location
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of the plane crash is yet to be identified all one hundred eighty nine people on board the low budget lie in their flight are believed to be dead. in tunisia at least twenty people were injured when a female suicide bomber blew itself up in the capital tunis fifteen people are among the wounded the country has been under a state of emergency since two thousand and fifteen that's when dozens of people were killed in a series of i saw attacks donald trump will visit pittsburgh on tuesday the same day the first funerals will be held for the eleven people killed in a shooting at a synagogue but members of the jewish community have written an open letter to trump saying he's not welcome unless he fully denounces white nationalism the man accused in the shooting has been held without bail after his first court appearance . those are your headlines the news continues here on al-jazeera after the stream keep up to date with all the news too by heading over to our
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website al-jazeera dot com getting to the heart of the matter the three big challenges facing human point in the twenty first century they are nuclear war climate change and technological destruction facing realities whatever it is there is not. in the people of uganda hear their story on and talk to al-jazeera.
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grower today the strain meets a living legend a south african music. i'm femi oke a. we'll hear from d.c. about his music activism and inspirations sinister comments and your questions through twitter and you tube. to millions of music fans. is a music icon he has chronicled the lives of people in the apartheid era south africa as well as his hopes for justice and reconciliation post a pos hate known simply as the voice in south africa who see has released a string the studio albums and thrives as a live artist his performance was one of the highlights of nelson mandela's inauguration in one thousand nine hundred four and musicians such as dave matthews band paul simon and sting have been inspired to work with. bristly is now in
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a major talk or township it's a love letter to the music he heard in his grandmother's bar in the mamelodi township when he was starting out as an artist welcome lovely. i am looking here at the township tour dates october through the beginning of november what is this tour about what's the idea behind it. tall trees celebrating music from south africa. the music that i grew up you know listening. specially. because the place where i grew up my grandmother had. it should be. easy you. know entirely legal so we say no. that's right but there has to be quite a lot of people characters coming in and then also musicians and other singing you
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know the a capella form of music whatever so that's when i started to be in love with music and they were playing also some of the township music from the vinyl like in the. mountains of queens you know the likes of you must you know also played some of this music here in the states or small town sheet music also minimal came so it was more to celebrate you and nato should music great artists of south africa. so. for us i mean it's just to remind ourselves but also one also too many even the youth who are also into music to start to tap you know into the. you know the deal for grandfathers you know the music that was the because of the some of the music also with the subject matter which is really cool and all that and giving message to people but with good good very tough styles of music from. but the township that's what we're sort of like that happening right now you
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mentioned that it's where you fell in love with music and i will say their audience is in love with you and they have been since the beginning of your career this is me by here who asks a question that you probably just answered he says my question to mr. when are you releasing a new album and what is your biggest dream for now so we know what the new project is it is the township but what was the dream behind that project in answer to any of us question here well also it was all to celebrate pay tribute to my grandmother because the album was recorded at my grandmother's place in my milady where they she'd been was saw just to sort of leg ligament and this is the first time that something like this was done in one thousand nine hundred six i played it live late festival in paris and they build a special venue for me to perform which was called she'd been mamelodi yeah there was also the kids with the so it's a lot of them but celebrating township music as well so your idea is just
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also with this music you know to sort of like really spread the cultural involved evangelism you know i'm looking at a picture looks like your grandma should be in everybody having the k. on my laptop because it looks amazing she looks like quite a woman and i know when you were a youngster you would be the lookout person so she would be selling the business and then you would be looking out. well there's quite a lot of things that was really happening there but also she was a very special woman and i'm very strict you know and then she didn't want me to be exposed quite a lot into the it was kind of silly only when you know she permitted it you know that ok now you can be here and all that and sometimes when the police are coming we all ring the bell and you know. the rabble are. coming you know. you know that type of thing where they were but you know she wondered there's also two. kids you
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know be able to study you know they will to go to school and all that not to be exposed to expose quite a lot into what the others are thinking but when it comes to the music and everything whatever the mission of i mean i really have to make sure that i am watching and listening. now you mention the name of a number of great south african names marian mccabe or who massa cane or a current south african band who loves working with the dave matthews band and you took them to mamelodi your your township where you live right now and you took them there in twenty fourteen and they were surprised what it took for artistry an apartheid era to actually get to play their music and the play a little bit of that interview video that you did with them and the videos called scenes from south africa where the data has been paid tribute to your art and after that with that it's a play a song called untitled look at dateline festival. here
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they had to hide their gatherings to play music they had to hide and the police also. confiscating their instruments. it's pretty it's it's a pretty intense situation when i mean if i'm sitting here practicing with some of the guys that come over here in the novel certain police walk in and take all of my stuff they can that i'm like what are you talking about when you don't when you know it. how can you how can you understand it it's just so hard to understand anything like that you know just couldn't. the but.
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because last. month. a. little. bit of an islamist militant gets. to. come. a chance. to. find. some of.
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the alonso cuts. saw. him. the third the the in .
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but. this divided church to become something. more like one stands on. the sand dollar come sunday.
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you listening to. live on the stream on al-jazeera english our community is in through all this is climate watching live from south africa on you tube who says this is beautiful clear and goes on to say please read this to him we are proud of you all the way from home in south africa another person writes in on twitter. is a living legend his music continues to talk about social issues here and in the content and because it's so social issues that this person brings up raises an issue in this tweet this is from becky who says these songs spread across the african continent they spoke of revolutionary revolutionary as an excuse me about word revolutionaries and the struggle of the natives being persecuted in their own. talk
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to us. with this in mind about being a musician during the apartheid era. yeah it was a really quiet. really difficult time. of course having to witness what was really going on while i grew up being a had to have happy kids you know but with nine hundred seventy six came that's when i started realizing what was ninety happening and i ask lot of questions that was when there was operas in the so we to the students of so we to you know the language of afrikaans as a medium of oppression but also. the thing whereby you know our people have been segregated because of their tribal you know things and that is so it was decided is decided it's one must decide and they said no this is wrong we want to want to be one people and then also that you know everything that at this school we have to do like in biology mathematics in afrikaans what about our own language so
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that. time the students on south africa tend to the politics of south africa really know the students did that and i was eleven years older than so i started asking question what was really happening this also escalated to mamelodi way the students in my middle also have to like really support those students and. in nineteen eighty-four i saw also that you know they were it was really difficult whereby a lot of caspar's in mamelodi. police armies with the horses and there's a like giant tanks big mirrors hanks that the we used to terrorize people who lived in the township there's an easy one just to see why it's terrifies telephone and helicopters as well you know and then what would my mood was the only township in south africa where all this was deployed you know the kids bus and the horses and the just and the other was the south african because my memory they were like my
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wood was like the most. you know when they were good my military said the number of people or so he would put a political in some and left the country to come from a minority and of course we got solomon money from you know who was a handy as well. so i've also got a picture here of you and this is not so long after that this is nine hundred eighty six a year what twenty one at that time in your early twenty's and this is your passport which again speaks to how you couldn't move freely around your own country so what does that mean for your music what happened to your music during that time . well we could call in sort of like really play freely in open places of course here is where most part was playing quite a lot on political platforms political rallies and so on. music was not even sort of like really played in that ideal you know. that gave the motor is interesting no
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one has to like really. it was a point there were a time where they were confused to keep it in some of our instruments if you know what i tunes so for me i said well they can take on to. the point everything that i would it was here they take the papers but they cannot take also because i memorize what i want when i put it in toilet paper. yes there was incidents where but you know in solitary confinement but there were so there were just and there's nothing in the just sometimes they put a bible but when you put it they don't put anything you just you know a prison where there was very much understanding smuggle in you know the theme and then the title of the bridges perform was sort of to me it's a point it was that in my years it's a point it's more about at the pain of separation you know and support it with the people. it's interesting because you talk about the past and i
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think that is what is resonating with our audience here the idea that your music today in the present and in the future has this link this very strong link to encourage people to remember their history we got this comment from a poet herself who says you and your work inspired her to become a poet her name is philip by bill years she works at a vet university and she says receives true voice rang out from mamelodi to sweden and beyond as an african him body is a skillful play between the present moment and the massive sound archive which is his legacy a sound archive which in capsulated the spiritual little and social values of the all this humans on the planet sound archive if you think that there is a danger that might that not enough people are doing that. don't know maybe understand the question a little but i think you know relying on history and bringing out forward to the new generations make sure that they understand it as well definitely definitely we
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are still doing that and also even for the young ones so that we just do that and bring the some kind of a cultural revolution you know to them that they understand who we come from where we are now and where we are going but also i also use the word to that i mean even if we were traveling all over we were spreading the culture eventually you know so that you know when you're talking culture and all that that it's important for people to be able to be proud of who they are you know and not things being taken from them or they have all whatever they must just be able to bring them out and talk about it freely and all that so we're still doing it and encouraging you know quite a lot of noise in a lot of through to to to to to this and then the writers that the must not be afraid to criticize their leaders or criticize their governments. you know musicians in the right like the way i'm doing isn't for the we're doing it you know we have to like be days watchdogs and then say things that are not. so many
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people want to work with they they want to collaborate with me and i want to hire our audience why because of when you're in a stadium and you're playing your music this is beautiful it's very mellow what you're playing for us on the stream but when you're in front of a big crowd this is what it looks like let's go back to nelson mandela's and ninetieth birthday havoc. one. thing marty who. really. c. c true. in the making of the book. just didn't.
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want to be did it. and mandela was then you know watching i don't know what was so moving. and this is why you're called the voice when when did people start calling you the voice and how is that to be called a. well i think maybe there's two things here whatever to be called the voice we have to be does to disguise the when the time of day so that you don't use relating you know some of my other committees change their names and if like maybe let me see those changes into and what they have so that tricky. like i said it would be. yeah but yeah i was you know the voice because so fill my singing voice and all that but also it's. also by the subject in the method i bring into my music as well. as
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a question here for you on you tube. i wonder how he feels about popular music today and i'll extend that out to what do you think about performing artists and if there's enough support for them today. well in this case sort of maybe focus a bit more on the country. whereby ok there is still a lot that needs to be done in terms of getting your support. especially from the culture department and so on one of. those people who can come on and then you know be the voice that we are and then the likes of muscle and the ads needs to be supported because it's very much important the culture plays quite a lot of important role and music in the society so that needs to be supported. like education and then health you know dude you cannot separate that and you know but this is the problem is that europe we're facing whereby there are just getting
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you know laws. support and everything one of us so we need to see more support happening in that regard one of the songs that you play on tour and that people love africa. you're going to play that for us at the end of our show but can you explain what it's about what is the sentiment behind south africa well listen to when i. say africa it's a more of a good time to bring in the concept and the philosophy of. i knew you were going to say that which is. the the philosophy that we share you know all of us in the in africa from cape to cairo everywhere we sing it in different languages and all that but it's a way of life. as it were daughter traveling all over and all that the never thought there were some single is kind this is kind this a good enough way to describe open to. it's
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a trend more than that it's not just. because it's a bald if these kind. of empathy sympathy. for given is that a. redistribution of knowledge and skills. redistribution of wealth you know while we get you to perform that because this day and age it feels like we need a lot more that in our lives around the world so who say i want you to go and set up while you sit out we're going to sing some more nice things about you and then you get a pass out to say africa thank you so much we. set up our community is excited that we are ending with this song this is who on twitter who says my favorite song is say africa provokes reflection about africa as a continent or produce are exported abroad and imported back to africa to be sold to africa and africa is the exploited land of milk and honey.
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in north america around the united states if you look here on my laptop you can see the current dates he's still got to play and shouts fill in toronto in chicago as well and he's going to play us out with a number of course a africa which unites africans around the world take it away gentlemen.
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somebody waste. stranded. and can't tell. the law maginnis in the. speech. that the sky. has deflated still. looking in the streets of us he told them stood up from the dust on my person that made the mob say yeah. i'm looking in the streets of the city to london but the dust summed up the mob say i. say africa. same. same. same. state send stones in the us some to split whole. country is
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going to see. it's a big blow to have the whole. set of one of those poles that's just. november on al jazeera radicalized you a new hard hitting series comes face to face with the hatred and violence of militant groups that attract young people around the world on november fifth the u.s. will impose additional sanctions on iran targeting the oil sites we'll look at the impact that may have when migrant lives are in danger and see who should come to their aid people in power investigates the united states is getting ready for the u.s. midterm elections on november sixth join us for live coverage and analysis and a listening post continues to examine global media coverage and look behind the
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headlines november on al jazeera. the cost the killing of. focus the spotlight on saudi arabia that my child is the kingdom really wield of the global economy will look. plus the dynamic between the waldos tech investments and saudi cash. found in the calls on i'll just see it. when the news breaks and the story it's the fight against isis is still continuing in the ahmar desert when people who need to be home. and the story needs to be told by families in a status and wealth has benefited from their choice translated people al-jazeera has teams on the ground to bring you more award winning documentaries and lightnings on air and online. in the united states the religious right is on the mom we were always hunting for the guy who would take our script
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and read it their goal is to take control of one of the political parties and then perfect if we can that full lines examines the trumpet ministration special relationship with the religious right what he get out of it the presidency and what evangelical support means for the future of the country. on al-jazeera. the fiance of journalist says she believes saudi arabia knows where its body is and demands the kingdom returns his remains. on sammy's a dam this is al jazeera live from coming up the u.s. sends more than five thousand troops to its border with mexico to stem the flow of
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migrants. investigators in indonesia look for clues of what caused an airliner to crash in the sea killing one hundred eighty nine people as their habitat shrinks so too do their numbers qualis in eastern australia are on the great threat of disappearing. now sources tell al-jazeera the turkish prosecutor's office isn't happy following its meeting with saudi officials top saudi prosecutors so the logie had been expected to provide testimonies from the eighteen suspects being held in saudi arabia however neither side has turned over their evidence and fisher joins us now from istanbul so quite a bit of disappointment following the meeting with a top saudi prosecutor right allan. disappointment and
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frustration i would suggest sami quite simply because neither say got what they wanted out of this the talks were looking to see from this so it is if you'll accounting of the eighteen people that are currently being held in saudi arabia in connection with the murder they wanted to make sure that they hired the witness statements from them those were forthcoming the saudis from the turks they wanted to know what their full investigation men did they have video did they have audio with the be able to see it there clearly that starts getting into the territory of how turkey managed to gain some information on what is essentially so d. so over and territory so they were happy to share that no we nor the prosecutors due to fly back to riyadh there he will have consultations with a number of senior figures in this saudi government about what more they can give but it's clear that there are two things that the touch really really want from the saudis first of all is information on what happened to the body where is your mark
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you should use body or are we looking for body parts you remember that all of the hit team that flew in the so-called team that flew into istanbul one of them was allegedly carrying a bone sort to dismember the body did that actually happen was his body caught up and then where was it put and now they also want to know who was the name of the person that the saudis called a local collaborator a local coordinator someone who helped dispose of the body you know the turks accept although they still want the extradition of the eighteen people that the saudis can argue under international law that anything that happened inside the consulate actually happened on saturday soil but they see if there was a turkish citizen who was involved in disposing of the body at the instructions of the saudis he committed an offense here in turkey he is a turkish citizen therefore they should name him and certainly allowed them to interview him that name hasn't been forthcoming so it's fair to say the. even
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though or both sides have been talking about open transparent investigation neither side is willing to give all the information to each other at this stage and saw it's not quite as still me but it certainly doesn't help the diplomatic situation between saudi arabia and turkey. the turkish media talking about something about new evidence take us through what exactly are the reports saying. well certainly new lines of inquiry whether or not it produces new evidence we're not entirely sure we mean or in a couple of days but there's a couple of things that have been released first of all they have been in this outside the consul general residence very short walk from where i'm standing now you remember that we reported just a couple of days ago how the local municipality had been clearing the sewers near the as a matter of routine in fact at the time i said even the routine begins to look suspicious but the municipality assured is it was something that they did on a regular basis while the turkish police have now gone down into the sewers with
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cameras and they say that they will present an analysis of what they phoned in a couple of days the other interesting thing that has been flagged up in the last few hours is the fact that the turkish investigators realize that the fire police the consul general residence had been used which is an unusual even though it's not quite cold enough in istanbul yet where you would start a fire on a fairly regular basis but the fact that it had been cleaned and cleaned thoroughly is something that alerted investigators know it may well be that because it has been cleaned thoroughly there is nothing there to find but certainly that's something that turkish investigators are looking at as they try to build up this picture they have got a rough idea we suspect of what happened in the consulate behind me but they're trying to work out what happened to the body and that is the jigsaw that they're trying to build at the moment and all these little things they may seem insignificant like cameras down in the sewers but what happened in the fireplace
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they're all little bits of a bigger picture that they're trying to pull together at the moment. alan fischer thanks so much of a fiance of journalist has told an audience in london she holds saudi arabia responsible for his death. is demanded they return his body jonah hill has more from london. this was a memorial event recalling in the words of the director of middle east monitor dr dowd of the values that jamal khashoggi stood for justice freedom of the press political accountability values that he said were universal resonating everywhere it was also an event patrol perhaps the most public comment yet by her shoulder his fiance how did her during these if only i knew that there were blood thirsty evil people waiting inside the consulate for mine to mao i would have done all i could to prevent him from entering. this or the b.b.c.
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did a child to be the only mongers in the big the if only i knew that a death squad was inside yet we never imagined such a level of barbarity cruelty and evil could be voting for jamal miss these describe her as a journalist and an intellectual whose words frightened unjust and greedy autocrats trick called on the saudi off already is to reveal the whereabouts of his remains to allow a dignified burial jim i'll even bring all of the democracy even marginally this relationship did not receive generally rejection and i thought well i should have listened to it and once again everything. therefore i just in once again did not read is his body and then there was this powerful political appeal to world leaders taking particular aim at u.s. president donald trump whose invitation to visit the white house she has turned down i am however disappointed in the actions of the leadership in many countries
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particularly in the us president trump should president's term should help reveal the truth and ensure justice be served he should not pave the way for a cover up of my fiance's murder let's not let money taint our conscience and compromise our values. a mix of emotion and grief protest and politics recalling a man and a journalist killed apparently for speaking his mind joho al-jazeera central london . the white house says u.s. president donald trump is still considering action against saudi arabia for the killing of. a white house correspondent can believe how could has more we haven't heard much since we know that the cia director a hassle went to turkey she went there because the president asked for audio and video intelligence which was not supplies so we were trying to get some answers about whether or not she in a hospital actually heard the audio that is rumored to have been released and in
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fact details that not only interrogation of john but also his murder when asked about this sarah sounders had this to say the president met last week with cia director gina housefull after having gathered additional intelligence on her overseas trip and the administration is weighing different options will make an announcement about what the decision to action this. now the president did promise when this story first developed severe punishment for even the highest levels of the saudi government if in fact it was discovered there have been lies and deception was certainly the president has acknowledged he believes there has been but so far he has defended the denials of not only the crown prince but also the king that they had any understanding of what happened with regard to this that they did not in any way ordered the killing of jamil his shows but certainly the white house is as you heard there from sara sanders weighing its options they are not
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ruling out taking action against saudi arabia but again we should note with just eight days until a u.s. election the president it appears has decided that there is no electoral advantage to talking about this story and their peers he is waiting until after the vote given the controversy all nature of the story and the fact that it could play into the minds of the voters when they make their decision when it goes time when it's time to go to the polls the u.s. government is sending more than five thousand forces to the border with mexico will join two thousand national guard troops already in place to start migrants and refugees from reaching american soil president donald trump has described a group of central americans moving towards the u.s. as an invasion my kind of reports from washington this is what's described as a regina six the size customs and border protection officers deployed in full riot gear at the us mexico border a short distance away hundreds of people lined up to wait for
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a chance to request asylum in the united states. but with thousands more migrants on their way the trumpet ministration has decided to deploy soldiers in support five thousand two hundred the initial number on the border. we are preparing. for because the french quarter billion forty. right now if you think they are right now. if you look at how we organize for this bill before the rico are you around to protect. the border we are on the form and an insistence from the theater commander that the operation is constitutional and not in breach of course a comet taught us the civil war era law that prohibits the offensive deployment of troops on u.s. soil with respect to plus a couple touches everything that we're doing is in line with an adherence to posse comitatus the want to exception that allows troops to be deployed offensively is an
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invasion a specter invoked by president trump in a threatening tweet saying without providing any evidence many gang members and some very bad people are mixed into the caravan heading to our southern border please go back you will not be admitted into the united states and this to go through the legal process he concludes this is an invasion of our country and our military is waiting for you. u.s. administration officials point to the violence said broke out at bottom on his border with mexico as hundreds tried to force their way across to join the large group of would be immigrants to the u.s. already on their way the main body of people now numbering some three and a half thousand is still hundreds of kilometers away from the u.s. border and could take weeks to arrive the timing of the deployment more likely to.

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