tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera November 2, 2018 11:00am-11:34am +03
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they seem to go to one of the ws put up you don't know the street up and want to see what you see when you're living with this what will make up with why he want to pull this whole cripple them and then. he'll to pull this all out of what did he do . more for the poor design as are. going to do say don't be so that guy was in jail. don't want only say de mint knew more women want to. boost your alcoholic in the usual way to school feeding tube movements him. in the last mile you can live with that yes it was worth. the while if you're going. insane mccain don't see if you can imagine what they were just emotionally take and own plane is a hobby you're not going to put your community or the. girl that put up with i
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think. it's like if you see. this indonesia you know something fishy on the mend. ok he's on the course. and. one of the sons of she. had there and then the other resistance fighters shipped here eight hundred seventy three. did return to algeria after thirty years in new caledonia but died only a year later. and muhammad allowed that however both escaped the island a few years after being deported. but mohamed died in mecca. paris trying to make his way back to algeria. his remains were returned to his home country for burial. very few of their descendants in new caledonia have been able to realize their mission of following in his footsteps back to algeria.
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history it only got cup waste i kept on one of corn exist cannot really sure whether or not such. a new piece or too good to mention on the let's all. work or not but we on that one i doubt it was he didn't all going to be used as kind of book would have. to move your ease up on the new more. secure. yesterday morning imagine this for. him in my. god this. morning as you know of ecclesial call.
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he. said yeah i get why you. look a simple views if it was all. that's good for. everybody your people and marked with decency. but it will be a good figure persona. for the b. of the program going to read. the second i see. you want to be fair. for him to. come in. on the. new caledonia is still a french territory but on the fourth of november this year will be a referendum when citizens will vote on whether to become independent from from.
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but the vote comes too late for both new said to him. and i'm already been a member who have died since the film was made. they both buried in the muslim cemetery at black. american man spoke out against french colonial rule and was exiled to love me. when we were isolated by our extremist views is that he spoke out against the regime and was sentenced to life imprisonment he spent twenty two months in hiding thirteen years in exile and seventeen years in jail. al-jazeera well tells the story of the dissident abraham so fatty morocco's mandela. oh oh . helen looking down from space is a. must you probably think it's funny it's
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a cold front is coated behind it i think you're probably right it might well induce a few showers serious about possibly norton passed around but nothing too much but it eastlands always been rather more active with temperatures approaching zero we've got snow with no great highs in the bad zero person to person plateau. back in the sunshine of four degrees on saturday couples in the sunshine it eleven and it's sunny over baxter terror on towards the mediterranean coast but there is a massive cloud in the red sea and the hint of a circulation jerusalem at twenty one degrees could be showery most of the showers are south of this and even in saudi arabia arabia for the last week or so the drifting slightly north patch of terra was hints at something that the green suggest for the sunlight to be which means squat to conditions the bahrain qatar the u.a.e. was temp is never rising up in the low thirty's loved if this time of year was very low humidity as well not quite as good there were in the red sea coast as you can
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see the rain has persisted in the still developing on the eastern side of south africa but is drifting in the next one for us just over the border i think soliciter into southern mozambique where it will still be pretty wet. well the online when you're looking at wildlife and how the solutions come together to benefit all parties involved 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 way would you tell me you don't have to set up your experiment for your experiment in the universe this is a dialogue everyone has a voice you actually raise several interesting point there that community members are going to join the global conversation on how to zero. zero. three.
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the u.s. says sanctions are possible against saudi arabia in a few weeks over the killing of jamal khashoggi. a lot has i'm sick of this is al jazeera live from doha also coming up schools are shot mobile services suspended protests spread across pakistan two days after a christian woman is acquitted of blasphemy. plans for a sanctuary in antarctica to protect wildlife facing stiff opposition to have a live update. there's no question it is against the right thing to do. walking out
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on google thousands of employees around the world to protest over sexual harassment and workplace inequality. allow the u.s. may now be getting tough with saudi arabia over the. killing of jamelle saying it couldn't post sanctions on the kingdom within weeks it's one month since she walked into the saudi consulate in istanbul and disappeared turkey says saudi agents strangled the journalist dismembered his body and disposed of it in a premeditated attack international pressure is mounting on saudi arabia to explain who ordered his murder castro reports now from washington. the u.s. secretary of state says sanctions against saudi arabia for the killing of jamal khashoggi are likely coming to take us. probably have four more weeks before we have enough evidence to actually put those sanctions in place but i'm i think we'll
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be able to get there we're going to find the fact that a president said we will demand accountability for those who are involved to the commission of this i've described sanctions would not be the only repercussion from the u.s. more than a week ago the state department revoked the visas of twenty one saudi nationals identified as involved in the operation to kill. secretary michael impale said at the time those penalties would not be the last word even as the u.s. continued to gather facts that included cia director gina haskell travelling to turkey and reportedly listening to the audio recording of killing turkey is leading the investigation it says she was strangled almost immediately after entering the saudi consulate on october second. no one will escape responsibility this issue has become universal it cannot be covered up and it is watched by
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everyone in the world turkey will transparently share with all international institutions the data of the investigation process we expect saudi officials to cooperate with the turkish side in the investigations through joint work to uncover all the circumstances of this crime. meanwhile the washington post report. it's saudi arabia's crown prince mohammed bin cell none spoke with senior trump administration officials prior to the kingdom of knowledge killing in the private call been someone reportedly said he was dangerous and a member of the muslim brotherhood a point the journalist had long denied later in public prince amman would change his tune calling the show he's killing a terrible mistake and not justifiable key questions remain about what exactly happened including what his killers did with his body the u.s. state department says it's calling on saudi arabia to return remains to his family
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as soon as possible heidi joe castro al-jazeera washington. a lot of not to say no harder in. what can we expect next. well it hasn't been an easy process this investigation because turkish officials have been frustrated at the lack of cooperation on the part of saudi arabia we have to remember it took them three weeks before they acknowledge that she did not leave the consulate as they initially claimed and that he was killed inside that building and it took two weeks for saudi arabia to give turkish investigators access to the crime scene to the consulate as well as the consul general's residence and earlier this week saudi arabia's top prosecutor was in istanbul he held meetings with the chief prosecutor who is leading the investigation into that murder and those meetings were unsatisfactory according to the prosecutor's office so there's
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a lot of frustration the prosecutor issuing a statement even though the investigations have not ended saying that this was a premeditated murder in fact giving details how they have to murder how she was strangled just after he entered inside the consulate dismissing the saudi arabian narrative that there was some sort of an argument that they were trying to persuade him to return to the kingdom and that he was killed by mistake really the feeling here in turkey is that this plan was not just about killing jamal khashoggi it was also trying to implicate the turkish government in this murder they believe that the presence of the fiance outside the consulate she's a key witness that he did not come out and the fact that this body double was exposed a man who left from the backside of the consulate wearing clothes this was all part of a plan to implicate turkey and say she's disappearance is your responsibility so there is frustration here about the lack of cooperation on the part of saudi arabia but
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there's also frustration it seems that the u.s. administration is not moving quick enough we heard the deputy head of the ruling party say yesterday that he believes trump statements show that he may be covering up the whole incident and if you read the added. oreo's in the pro-government media here in turkey they're saying unless the u.s. exert its efforts or sorry pressure saudi arabia will claim that they punish those responsible so there is little faith in saudi arabia and the goodwill of saudi arabia in this investigation and the message here really is we are not going to let this go all right dana thanks for that live for us in istanbul we want to let you know our one hour special on the hush agi murder awaiting justice as later on friday at twelve g.m.t. right here on al-jazeera. i'm peter darby here in istanbul a little later we'll have a live special news our program for you one month on from the death of jamal
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khashoggi more than four weeks since he walked into that building behind me there are still three questions which have yet to be answered who killed him who ordered his killing and where is the body of jamal khashoggi. special with live coverage from istanbul from twelve hours g.m.t. here on al-jazeera. following the spotlights turned to how much money saudi arabia spans in the u.s. trying to buy influence in both politics and education some universities are now considering whether to cut ties with. reports from washington. this is the university of new haven in the state of connecticut not the most scenic campus or the most well known but it is now drawing nationwide media attention for its relationship to saudi arabia it has a partnership to train saudi arabia security officers executive director of the middle east crisis committee stanley heller says his group protested when the deal
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was announced two years ago we were appalled that any u.s. college would be helping the saudi regime in any way but especially to help police college. since we know the appalling situation of the of the justice system they were ignored then but are hoping now that saudi arabia has admitted to murdering journalist jamal khashoggi increased pressure will force the university to reconsider the prestigious university the massachusetts institute of technology or mit says it is reconsidering its relationship with saudi arabia now but these are just a couple of the dozens of universities the take money from the government and people of saudi arabia this is the the press did an investigation that it found the most saudi money goes here to george washington university in washington d.c. if you look at the database the tracks this information in all over the last decade the government of saudi arabia its citizens and its businesses spent more than six
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hundred thirteen million dollars in u.s. universities but they're not alone just in the gulf nation of qatar the same timeframe more than a billion dollars the united arab emirates more than two hundred and eleven million . asked about the saudi money much of which goes to research or scholarships for saudi students many university said it would. he wrong to deprive deserving students of an education as for george washington university it says it regularly reviews programs with saudi arabia to make sure they are consistent with their educational mission giving no indication that they plan to change the relationship anytime soon. al-jazeera washington of the saudi erotic coalition in yemen has targeted an airbase in the capital sana'a and says the base is been used to north and drones a t.v. channel link to the hotel rebels reported more than thirty air raids the coalition deployed more forces in the port city of a day the earlier this week the u.s.
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and called on the warring parties to stop the fighting and begin talks muhammad reports. it's the latest military buildup near the besieged port city of the data even as calls grow louder to end the hostilities reports of the saudi led coalition in yemen has sent thousands of extra troops to the area come after the united nations announced its backing the resumption of a political process to end the fighting. the special envoy will continue to work with all parties to agree on tangible steps to spare all yemenis to disastrous consequences of further conflict and to urgently address the political security and humanitarian crisis in yemen u.s. defense secretary james mattis and secretary of state mike pompei o have also called for an immediate end to the three and a half year war data which is controlled by the who is to teach a cli important the red sea port is a vital lifeline the entry point for the bulk of imports and supplies the u.n.
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says that the already dire humanitarian crisis is far worse than they previously estimated warning that fourteen million yemenis face serious threat of famine and the deepening food crisis is largely the result of fighting around the data unicef says over eleven million children have been affected. reported today also a long line or a million children throughout yemen but it will be little more bark. than. on the whole day god is good to the lives of. the children didn't see him. un let talks with the saudi iraqi led coalition and who the rebels are expected to be held in sweden this month similar talks faltered last month after the representative said the saudis blocked their flights to geneva the question now will the renewed push for
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a diplomatic solution to the conflict ensure the wearing parties make it to the negotiating table this time around mohammed al jazeera a front services have been caught in parts of pakistan and protesters continue to block roads as anger grows over a blasphemy case that demanding the government overturn supreme court's decision to release a christian woman who was convicted of insulting slam in two thousand and ten she was acquitted on saturday. a come out joins me live now from islamabad so kamau what is the situation right now so they're still very tense. yes the situation remains.
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