tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera November 3, 2018 5:00am-6:01am +03
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and getting a shot are cool if you harbor. a willing marshal and if. doing it the seventh or dean you should how well as one material smith's torsion in facilis to fit me all the way in these parts are for in this but the final scene in the chicken dinner to be a lie was if your mouth were moderately being homestar she said oh well i had to say area. comparing death tolls can be difficult in a war with only partial written records. historian faisel should be things to museums who pitched in to the front line to protect french troops. passed through an abyss what are my own so who know who the heavy and how to. if you don't see you are in a living at one hundred or another. i have. had.
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many. of them and. i will how. i'm going to play my bad but the branches are. not and if you will ride method then you're going to. pay. for me at they. can buy them out of. the money to pay the fine. the theory here the homework. i would most but the. nikkei. not all historians share salif few most agree there were differences in the way
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colonial troops were treated compared with you opinions but facts about the war can be hard to pin down. french historian many believes figures vary from trench warfare and to hand combat it. fiddly to do that pretty statistic could. tell you to do something that your idea of a young that could be could kill them off they think the people. all truly. here. is forcing us in to feel secure or lazy or city or you go to the edge and you're raised it to my let's call it bill i get it for free at the steeple of this man this man this may not be intrigued enough to look for the mini i'll assume he'll pull off or look at jewels to cut through the only. good year to start doing. that you'll be elated for
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a middle road is that so remote the overall ripples could be said you're young. or she. could move say to inforce. sometimes or room rather than written history can shed light on this question. the father of tunis human writers was conscripted into the french army he'll have shown no doubt whatsoever as to how he was treated by some french officers. most who didn't at all but what can you could lead the buttons on so we will see him in belize again want them to beat up beat up where they can you some of the but raid but. such as and ok no day event if you were to. atone soften
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a will. accept me that. and he was asked me if he was of had an ad that will lead to bad wedding and that we don't want any. like a family member way way way beyond what he asked in a happy man. shared a kind. it has one of. my death. then i could only see that. as soon as father spoke of discrimination and this is part of a bigger question of army discipline in the. desire to face execution. but the french are accused of something more sinister the ancient roman army practice of decimation the killing of every tenth member of a unit for failures of discipline. france is reported to have used it against its
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north african troops. as in roman times decimation was used against a whole unit rather than individuals. investigated an incident here in the belgian village of zilla back you know the battlefield of on the fifteenth of december one thousand nine hundred fourteen. the word the last short of a coward strap it without a chest twenty algerian and to lizzie in soldiers from the kompany of the town for battalion of the it is you more mixed duty or your as you know were ordered to march towards the german lines their comrades ordered to shoot them if the enemy did it. it's not clear how widespread decimation was for gilbert many this is partly because of a lack of written records. that.
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is. in the song. the. she. did this year. of won't do it on awful d.c. of. one hundred. they make it sick but recently on a talk to sheet despite. the. young oh no to the new year it was edited to get i. may. tell you who. lives that is the set them occasionally but p.c. movie. big of a solution. they say they are pulling.
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a kiddie we resolve it is all you saw today because it opens up i thought she did this us only on a little time so much republican party stuff you say that your city could mean a song doesn't a leap it costs more as an oyster year is futile i mean a song that those are two separate yet but that if a to be a good scene is a read only one says so this is actually the. lottery jim would cowards like him say son make a new customer a little girl. as if he themself i mean it's all you need to come some measure see ya know you can see clearly is all it did for me. as a footnote to many sites the decimation of a french division for mutiny in one thousand nine hundred seventeen as evidence that it continued during the war. world war one saw
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a new deadly threat to the allies in the western front including north african troops. in the belgian province of west flanders was the scene of five major battles in four years in the second in april and may nine hundred fifteen the germans used chlorine. i guess against their own powers for the first time. algerians and moroccans fought alongside british french and canadians gas from over five thousand canisters blew towards them six thousand men died and many others were blinded the second battle of april heralded a new era of industrial scale warfare the first attack involved the forty fourth algerian division and the eighty seventh french territorial division those were the two units first exposed but of course they fled to other parts of the front subsequent gas attacks and there were a number in april afflicted canadian forces british forces as well as french.
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so several of the allied formations were exposed to gas fairly early on. armies have always used technology to develop new methods of warfare but world war one saw a step change in the level of collaboration between scientists and the military. when the kaiser vilhelm institute for physical chemistry opened in berlin the suburb of dahlan and october one thousand nine hundred twelve its first director was for. its scientists have since one thirty three nobel prizes but harbor is infamous for having invented chemical warfare because of his development of poisonous gas in the.
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harbor himself won a nobel prize for chemistry in one thousand nine hundred eighteen for his synthesizing of ammonium much food production depends today on harbors methods for producing fertilizer but the impact of the chemical weaponry developed from harbors chlorine gas. as being devastating. were first conscripted into the french army in one thousand nine hundred eleven. they found themselves fighting as part of a french occupying force in morocco and march nineteenth twelve. then they were called on to fight fellow muslims on a far greater scale. when the ottomans joined the warren of ember nine hundred fourteen it dawned on the chin is even conscripts they might now be ordered to fight turks syrians iraqis lebanese and palestinians.
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this deeply offended their our absence abilities. i hope this apprehension quickly turned to insubordination. here at the gymnasium board of visit there was a rebellion in november one thousand nine hundred fourteen by troops being sent by the french to europe the chin is eons refused to board boats bound for mach say. that if you mean the world better but them but are the. rude thought it had better over there it is a bit of it it might have to their ticket as theirs and they're not on that and i'm the head that has a guinea where the shore behavior and how the got it rough got it on thier dunphy have assuredly anyway not enough to really benefit the come about them or no neck i think our team there are scary a late at the one either should all us or all were is matter could have been with him but that who had there that up with you are lucky my bad in an aside i heard of
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mostly mena with dunno whether my lad but i link it here at the i love of money i know that when he did media but the look at it it had to be hired and money and monica and orlando martin must be me. ill you really do not only know what you know how to do in are. but by. rule. two so work. and money. even. so you're. a bad member had a. scene . where the rest of the.
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other muslims clearly caused on rest in the arab world but it's a fact also felt in. india. in january nine hundred fifteen and indian regiments in singapore rebelled because they thought the british were sending them to fight the old. you have a number of reports of of muslim indian muslim soldiers being quite unhappy about being sent to fight the holy fire really you know being sent to fight the ottoman empire there's one instance of an entire battalion refusing to board the ship to go but basically peaceably the most dramatic thing in what must have been terrifying to the english and very frightening is that in singapore the fifth light infantry which is composed of muslims actually stop opened fire on the english officers and soldiers and something like eighty plus they killed eighty plus englishman and the reprisals
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a very harsh and they're arrested rounded up you know and that must a really scared the english officers in command because the idea that you know when you have hundreds of thousands of indian soldiers if that kind of thing ticks off it's going to be a big problem so where there are mutiny is there really put down. harshly but it's not only the muslims because what's happening in india is you also have indian nationalists of all religions who want the british to go. coming up opposition to conscription and french colonial occupation feels more of a rest engine is a. man like me it's more descendants of north african war veterans and here is their personal stories. of how our of troops contributed to one of the allies most serious defeats of the war at literally.
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this stuff come out as a result of coming up each of his orders i do not order you to fight a war you to die. november on al-jazeera. 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 we'll look at the impact . 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 headlines november on al-jazeera. on counting the
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cost the usa still the largest on regulator in the developed world who pays goes wrong plus the seychelles leads the way in eco finance with the world's first blue ball. counting the cost. as it breaks. to contradict the information. i've been giving for the past two weeks with detailed coverage this whole area of mud was shops and houses and it was completely washed away along with the people who were inside from around the government doesn't call this tension center but it's surrounded by barbed wire fences and it's exits are manned by armed guards. in many countries pregnancy and childbirth are still extremely dangerous for mothers and babies most
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of the mothers dying from the infection dreaming they were dying from or had reparation algis even travels to my louay and looks at how hoover communities challenging tradition in order to reduce child in the toilet and improve maternal health anywhere else in life is too strong lifeline between life and death on al-jazeera. hello there i'm dealing with almost here in london the top stories currently on al-jazeera turkey's president has suggested the order to kill saudi journalist jamal khashoggi came from the highest level of the saudi government and one month since the journalist was murdered in the kingdom's consulate in istanbul and his body still hasn't been fun writing in the washington post rage at tyburn owen said he didn't think it was saudi king solomon who call the hit alan fischer has more
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from istanbul he does not put this in diplomatic language he is taking a fool aim so dear aby he said there are outstanding questions that still has to answer where is the body where is the local cooperator is the saudis call them collaborator in one's words we helped dispose of the body and who gave the order now he says that he doesn't believe for one minute that king solomon the king in saudi arabia ordered the hit as he calls it but he doesn't specifically mention crown prince mohammed bin some of the many people believe that is where this trail ends. sanctions are coming that's the warning from donald trump after the us said it was reimposing all measures on iran that had been lifted on to the twenty fifty nuclear deal trumpet this fall so on has to us if it shortly after sanctions were announced eight countries including turkey will be allowed to keep importing iranian oil when those sanctions are real pulls conservative muslim groups of
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called off their protest against pakistan's supreme court decision to free a christian woman accused of blasphemy a sponsor of the deal the mother of five s c a b b will not be allowed to leave the country as had been planned sure long as i was to prime minister is accusing his replacement of attempting to buy support in parliament that's ahead of an expected vote of confidence next week rana what cream singer has told he still holds the majority in parliament and his government should never have been to sole. indonesian divers assertion for the second black box flight recorder from monday's plane crash that killed all one hundred eighty nine people on board president joe cole widodo has visited the headquarters of the search operation in jakarta one of the two black boxes was discovered on thursday and the signals been detected from the second which contains the cockpit voice recording. all those are current top stories stay with us world war one through our advice continues next move be back
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and french. troops from the love and fought for the ultimates on the side of johnny and the central powers. really under the banner is. good and there's been more or less fervent you. know muslim wanted to fight against fellow muslim. and in the french colonies opposition to conscription and imperial occupation group. there were two uprisings in one thousand nine hundred fifteen and sixteen you know the southeastern chin is in town of calm peace on the libyan border. dissidents fighting the french joined other rebels under. himself resisting libyans. to battles to a place in which hundreds of french soldiers were killed. by
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the rebels. who fought the french like muhammad and wrote themselves into china's uniform he survived to fight the french many more times but was finally hanged by them in one thousand nine hundred twenty four. but despite regional resistance and rebellion the majority of north africans conscripted into the french army ultimately had no choice but to follow orders and fight. one such man was mohamed when they spoke. he had two daughters and money. to loose later married a man called lost eighty who went on to fight for french occupation and the jews in
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palestine. their father mohammad however was decorated with the medai military and the french military cross. randoms what. was the matter. as a matter of see if literally little little what it had a little less of which we had the same she. says that had him. could not have had a ballot not had a bleed that i will believe well the last and the who is on that. had the piano and i don't have to hear. all bad amel has a baby to a silly or it was down more as it looked as i say it now that i wanted to see it all who are. land. can look for market work from our man to get me that what i mean or let me add a little i believe to our. already the month will be to accept us we have you know
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where there are more. and it was our moms the most a brain that any can make them. and then we have to go see. the father of two new zealand writers i'll assume was conscripted into the french army in one thousand nine hundred sixty. save valuable wartime papers including some belonging to his father's friend months it all began. with me they were a lot of work and they not only offer an insight into months or time as a prisoner of war but also of visits paid to him but the leaders of a nationalist youth movement the young chinese eons pioneers in the struggle for independence and they. say you move on to
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been one hundred. a month old baby and the truth yes and it's. where betty has a passing away it is she wasn't aware you do know men were at the city what can a man in such a home what about. one other to be in my home. and they can at leisure and. where can they yes me too the home. bum. but i've yet to see would be found here what can a yeti ask. for help the other family man a weird way of home an affair what can i mean you couldn't home can be a day yet well. a day. many believe there were. many of us. said the fear.
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yet he. was there could be if he were going to have a family matter what can i. say at the helm set out who come with a set of stock and you'll see to this well known may want to accomplish she. come and have your money all of the. money order will a few friends all of you know. that was always on that as i was on a minute home where. students of the joes who to see at the end to this at the start a young man met facilitation but to me i started out up for the critical period. is unusual having kept his father's memorabilia few family still have personal records of ancestors war experiences. there are records of the small military museum enough either consensual. dear man i came across
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a man doing family research in an old suitcase they found french military records showing that the man's grandfather and even a mortal lock on me for two of the allies on the western front. of a little wooden woodwork on the move with world. war and. then the television on start up on a recent post on what about animals all over the world and i with or without a little most wilfully feel for that she was me having been an emotion of another for. i want to feel love in my players on local in her ability to be more clear and i know if you are my new motor the arm comes up so he's going to be the. one who were sure to come out of there no i'm not about us i'm from thirst we're going to bomb for a song moment i'm a little aussie on it from the jump is a point of view good the good of a million well see that was easy for you you could go see your lover on. those i
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i'm still sober so there's only one i'm sort of i mean v b n b yeah i know that it's going to sort of the francais a woman with them and i mean. i don't of course i'm not to be taken most of all i know i feel available when i have had the north on the malawi on i'm started by and have been it's as easy been at the lose a for one of them and then to go hard to vent rather than forgive him but that it will. be hot in there or something to me. but the western front was not the only theatre of war. with stalemate in europe and april nine hundred fifteen britain's navy chief winston churchill hatched a plot against germany's ottoman. he wanted to take istanbul and open a sea route to russia. the olsen is a p. weakened by
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a series of defeats the russians are nicholas the first had even called them the sick man of europe they failed to prevent an italian landing in libya in one thousand nine hundred eleven and lost most of their territories in the balkans by nine hundred thirteen and her own autumn an army officer mustafa kemal he would later go on to be the first president of turkey but in one thousand nine hundred fifteen he achieved the kind of victory one minister unwatched pasha had failed to deliver in libya or the balkans and he did it here in a bitter seven months of fighting not just with his own troops but we now know when the vital support of three hundred thousand hours. the battle was going to let them.
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win ships landed allied troops here on the twenty fifth of april one thousand nine hundred fifteen only a small unit of ottoman soldiers protected the coast with rapidly diminishing i mean a ship. most of all hope they might hold out until reinforcements arrived. and gave his now famous order which must have struck town into their hearts. it was here. coming through here the stuff of kemal leading the first of the autumn reserves into the battle time across the turkish soldiers the survivors the battle above the ages retreating up this why and he told them first stop i said the enemy if they were only a few hundred meters why then they tell him to. study of us will have no ammunition
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and then he told them to fix it by a nets and lie down and in fact this tried and stopped i thought of them as a strong turkish lot in front of them and they stopped advancing as well. then. mustafa kemal as a resist coming up issued his order that i do not order you to fight or you to die . he gave his order citing that other reserves would come up that a while buying time with the lives of these soldiers would give time for the rest of the forces to come up here and so you can tie in the invasion. most of the man he was with they did die but they did fight as well so he literally meant that because they had no ammunition there was no i mean if the ammunition did come up but they formed here they fought the battle slide backwards and forwards as one side than the other got more men and but the casualties here were horrendous and at first i very few men who came into this fight come out of it a lot mostly streisand zealander's their bodies were found here four years later
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but in the time that the bottom and soldiers fought and died here the reserves came up the door was bolted the. soldiers diaries no tell us that one thousand follow me was largely arab up to two thirds of the men fighting for him in the litani campaign from greater syria present day lebanon jordan syria and palestine mustafa kemal commanded moment the first day. twenty fifth of april all of the troops in this area and his personal division three regiments was only one turkish regiment the other seventy second seventy seven arab regions. there's another technician both are serving here joined they joined together to fight him in the vastly superior numbers of allied trades and killed two reinforcements arrive but yes it was tough at mo needed and relied on those never troops there
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might have been written out of some of the history in later years as part of the battling with the turkish republic grew from the ashes of the autumn in part and yet those arab soldiers fought stood here i fought and i died. this is the hill from where most of a command. commanded his troops his autumn and troops which included many arab soldiers and led them to victory against the most powerful forces of the age the british and french empires this victory started the rise to fame of most africa my first as military hero van as a national leader for modern turkey generations of arab school children learn to the poem by how much oakley in which he likens must of a camel to lead the famous muslim military leader and companion of the prophet
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muhammad in this poem he say's a lot who. can feel for a time you know as you would be highly that sort of key highly the lotto be subtle when i.z.'s on i learned how to been more of a father to a safer field than the one you have off in mosul being. the iraq dad of both sons grew buried in cemeteries across europe turkey and the balkans and prisoners of war transported to p.o.w. camps. the germans sometimes separated muslims from other prisoners so they could try and undermine their loyalty to france and britain they put north africans together in. on camera and talk to soldiers who fought for russia and another the first transport of french prisoners of war including north african prisoners of war was in autumn nine hundred fourteen and they were sent to sawsan and other places
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but they were together the french one and the not africans and then there was this idea and a suggestion to separate muslim prisoners from other prisoners and the idea behind this was to. have better chances for propaganda purposes and that's why there was does such as to be one camp which was exclusively for muslim prisoners of war at the end they separated the prisoners and there was one prisoner for camp insourcing which was quote the vine backlog where they are tyrion a carcass in prison us soldiers who belong to the russian army or so muslims but not exclusively muslims and the others first sent to the half moon camp which was opened in the beginning of one thousand nine hundred fifteen and this camp was
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meant for north african prisoners so for but also for indian prisoners of war and they also had a small group of korean and vietnam these prisoners at the half moon camp. the first mosque to be wrecked today on german soil was erected here at the half moon p.t.w. come on large ornate wooden structure completed in july one thousand nine hundred fifteen. was a showdown in which the kaiser german hierarchy took a strong interest. it was a key part of their campaign to turn muslim troops against their european masters dating back to the grand mufti is called to jihad in november one thousand nine hundred forty. they used the comforts of the half-moon p.o.w. camp to move the three to four thousand muslim inmates and turn them against the allies who conscripted them it's being combed this jihad experiment it was built in
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the beginning of the first world war i think in the end of nine hundred fourteen early one nine hundred fifty nine and it was painted from the private purse of williams a seconds of german kaiser it was also a type of a propaganda action there were about four hundred five hundred muslims living in berlin and they used after the wall this mosque. again as their mosque they came from berlin here at a friday and specially and you're on lockdown later they built their own mosque in berlin and then this visibility was made. by word it was not a concrete or something like that a very strong. building and it after i think in the ninety's late nineteen twenty fifth collapsed because there nobody took care of it.
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the muslim prisoners a tough movie certainly enjoyed better facilities than other camps offered. the half moon project was led by the german lawyer diplomat ancient historian and archaeologist max von openly. invited prominent on the back it emits and spiritual leaders to come and visit the prisoners at half moon there were activities they did some sports and there were as it was somehow part of the entertainment they were coming important arab nationalists like the egyptian mohamed thirty eight or the tunisian sally i saw the first to see who are. made propaganda for the ideas of an independent egypt on independent allness and there was also the very famous person of literature end of politics the syrian sharky. who for example toured germany and came here
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when he came to cornwall he met the mayor who happened to be the nice latest chancellor common law. and this was also a part of the see the daily life of. but the jihad campaign was ultimately unsuccessful some prisoners of war did later fight for the germans but with little commitment the half-moon p.o.w. camp however has rarely appeared in mainstream european cans of the room. in the german town of sawsan in the prison camp malik discovered academics of the time had created some priceless sound archives. having arabs from different countries and backgrounds in the camps gave linguists the chance to compile valuable oral history they captured the voices of ordinary north africans
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for the very first time. the arab soldier would no longer be a forgotten name in dusty archives he could tell his own story and though the words are indistinct his voice be heard by future generations. the birth of my. birth was born. many of these troops were illiterate but malik discovered a recording of american p.o.w. seen a tenth century poem the poet himself was
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a prisoner of the byzantines and his verse is about defiance something close to the horrors of the molten prisoner of war in germany in one thousand nine hundred fifty . zero. zero. zero zero zero zero zero zero zero zero or. zero. zero zero. zero zero zero zero zero zero zero zero zero zero. in the next episode the autumn in the story of the war the rise of the young turks and there are lines with germany. ottoman terran even greater syria and the suffering of the arab people. david ben-gurion israel's first prime minister and his courtship of the automobiles before changing sides.
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a cold front of it certainly living up to its name from melbourne temperatures dropped five degrees in just eight minutes so real change for us the system is out working its way over the sydney so sydney will see a maximum on saturday of thirty two degrees but as we head into sunday will just be a twenty five as that system eases another one begins to develop so do expect more in the way of cool weather as we head through the next few days as we head across towards new zealand you can see that system over the southeastern parts of australia is also affecting us and it's making things pretty stormy very wet very windy for many of us particularly across the south island and for the southern parts of the north island so a pretty stormy that as we head through the day on saturday and on sunday things will start to calm down so the winds will begin to ease and the rain will also ease as well up towards the northern parts of asia and we've cold weather working its way towards us it's all thanks to this weather system here and is that pushes its way south as it's bringing in some cooler weather so the temperatures in beijing will be dropping just fourteen as a maximum on sunday and just to the north of us expect some snow for japan though
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in a good i needed on washed dishes team hot. in here i'm lost to him in a pool. the content of the heady. m.p.u. who they. are they gave one of them was listening. to give me all this dirty. ignore how to keep she. beat back. the now or that vince. fuller might be able. to add a feature i must of been a. lot of i must be certain at all they are such then to have male would fuck them million years i hate my wife.
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until all cool and all of. their good i was a nobody in court and so without meeting assume that has come to that i had come to missions you generation. that did not want to be shot. hate violence revenge an increasingly alienated generation is finding new outlets to vent it's anger. in a new series al-jazeera takes an unflinching look at the allure of radicalized organizations to young people revealing their things and the often brutal consequences for those drawn into their extreme ideologies radicalized youth coming soon on al-jazeera a journey of personal discovery feel more american here and then more air and then yes al-jazeera is a mere average
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a bar of highlights the struggles and resourcefulness of one native alaskan people trying to preserve their way of life. owns one a because poker doesn't know if. your mom's from here you can. al-jazeera correspondent we are still here. this is. hello there i'm julie went on this is the al-jazeera news hour live from london coming up the turkish president suggest the order to camilla kill journalists come out because shoji came from the highest level of the saudi government the u.s.
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alliances its reimposing sanctions against iran described by the white house as the toughest yet. protests are called off and pop a son against judges to acquitted a woman approaches from a cost. of clothes at a crossroads former u.s. president obama on the campaign trail warning against the rhetoric of fear. on paul reece in doha with the sports among piles is off the charts as she wins so sir world title in qatar more than anyone else in the history of gymnastics. very warm welcome to this hour of news turkey's president rigid or a do it has suggested the order to kill saudi journalist jamal khashoggi came from the highest level of the saudi government writing in the washington post he said he
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didn't think it was saudi king solomon cold to hit becomes a stark officials have been drip drip feeding more details on the murder telling al-jazeera that the journalist body was dismembered and this all said. more now from istanbul. the saudi crown prince in riyadh welcoming evangelical christians from the united states a gathering of the muslim worlds most conservative country the kingdom's keen to repair its international reputation damaged by the killing of. the saudi journalist disappeared a month ago in istanbul after two weeks of denials saudi leaders eventually admitted the journalist was accidently killed then we pete earley changed their account of what we really happened saudi allies are worried about further repercussions of the international outcry and for the first time israel has
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commented on the killing voicing its concerned about possible destabilisation of the kingdom and the region what happened. in book consulate was horrendous and should be doing. that at the same time i say. it's very important for the stability. of the region and of the two that saudi arabia remains stable and i think that a way must be found to achieve both. hotshot just murder has solved relations between turkey and saudi arabia frustrated over what they describe as evasive saudi attitudes the turks are keeping up the diplomatic pressure on the kingdom at a memorial service in washington d.c. her disease and is hostilities fiance is grappling with the loss even though a month has passed since jamal's murder his body has still not been given to his
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loved ones and his funeral prayer has still not taken place this is the smallest thing that one can do after a loved one has passed in the religion of islam and we still haven't been able to do that and our pain is still as fresh as the first day. turkish investigators have brushed aside a saudi offer to fly to riyadh from walker. they blame the saudis will stalling the investigation and turning it into a coverup they are also demanding the extradition of eighteen saudi suspects to stand trial in istanbul it's been a month to the day since jamal hussey disappeared and every day since then turkish investigators have been trying to piece together what happened to him they say now they know what not where his remains are and sound if this will continue to deny allegations the royal family is involved. is the boy let's go live now to
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alan fischer who's i'm sorry the saudi consulate in istanbul hi there alan so in the past few hours there been some pretty strong words coming there from the turkish president in the washington post. there's an angry tone to what president the one has written this is not diplomatic language by any means he's saying that there are three big questions that the saudi government has to answer first of all where is jamal khashoggi body or the remains of his body second of all who is this look or cooperator as the saudis call him the person who is given the job of disposing of the body or of the remains and the third question is who ordered the hit itself though he says that he doesn't think king solomon was responsible for that but he says it must have been done at the highest level of saudi circles and he's pointing a finger at only a number of handful of people and one of those includes chrome prince mohammed bin
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salman now he also says that this was an attack on than in a nato country essentially framing this not just as the killing of a journalist but an attack on the need to state and he said it completely defies the vienna conventions which dictates how you behave in such diplomatic institutions such as the consulate behind me now he also talks about the eighteen people who are currently being held in connection with jamal khashoggi death in saudi arabia he calls for them to be extradited and he openly questions why the consul general isn't one of the was eighteen people he said the consul general stood and lied through his teeth that's the actual phrase he uses lied through his teeth to the media and he should be standing trial as well or at least being questioned he of course left turkey the day before investigators moved into his residence to search there and he hasn't come back since and he says that the offer from saudi arabia for turkish investigators to go and speak to there was eighteen
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people in saudi arabia was and i quote a desperate and deliberate stalling attempt he doesn't believe that saudi arabia is genuine when it says they want to help with all the investigations that their actions certainly. don't match their words and the most important thing he says in this is that this problem is not going to go away allan in terms of the investigation itself what details do we have now about what stage that is at what we know that there are three things that the saudis are looking for that has been reiterated by president the ones opinion piece in the washington post they certainly want excess to the console general's gardens one more time they have searched there while they were in there they found a well they wanted to go down and search inside the well but they didn't have
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a specialized search team therefore the saudis said if you want a specialized search team that needs new permissions and certainly the types of us for that but the hasn't been given by saudi arabia the reason they want to check that is because of this theory that has been put forward that many in turkey believe that the body was disposed of by putting it in acid no we've spoken to forensic experts who say that it be very difficult to dispose of a body in that we over a period of two weeks or so but certainly that is something that the turks are concentrating on and they'll be pushing ahead with that in the days to come hoping that that permission is coming in the next couple of days and the saudis stand by their word to help with the inquiry and fish their line for the latest from istanbul allan thank you all calls for justice of show he adds grown lived there with every detail that's a marsh from the case of saudi arabia is still refusing to extradite any suspects a diplomatic editor james bays looks at the international options for an
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investigation. will there be justice for jamal khashoggi the turkish prosecutor wants saudi arabia to reveal the whereabouts of the body and hand over the eighteen suspects but the saudi foreign minister has made it clear there will be no extraditions from his country so are there other legal options experts believe the u.n. could set up an international panel but the secretary general antonio could terrorists who would appoint its members and maria fernanda espinosa the president of the general assembly one of the un bodies that could mandate it a well aware this is a political minefield we will wait to see whether we get a formal request from a government such as the government of turkey but if we get something like that we'll evaluate it and then and then. make a decision based on the requests that we receive they think we all understand the process sill this is now a matter that sees in the hands of the requests that we receive the request could
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come from the body she heads the general assembly is she taking soundings of the wider membership of the general assembly or the conversations that she is having about this. caps we for her and the counterparts beyond a u.n. inquiry there are a number of other legal options and precedence former chad dictator his send our brain was eventually jailed for war crimes after first being prosecuted in belgium under what's known as universal jurisdiction the concept is controversial and the belgian law has since been repealed but international lawyers say as saudi arabia is a signatory to the un convention against torture it might face calls from other countries for extradition laws passed by congress in the us also might be relevant the magnitsky act passed in twenty twelve after the murder of a russian lawyer working for the american businessman bill browder could be used
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against saudi arabia there's also the possibility of private prosecute. stephen rapp who served as president obama's pastor at large for war crimes issues says the saudi crown prince mohammed bin soma should watch his stand as early becomes to america and tries to go to silicon valley or anywhere or to enjoy the company of investors or others he'll find process servers. around the meeting so i don't he's not going to be able to do what he's done before so let me ask that question again will there be justice for jamal khashoggi it's not certain and there's a long road ahead but along that road saudi arabia and key figures in the country face fresh scrutiny bad publicity and reputational damage as well as the possibility of a prosecution james bays out jazeera the united nations company ministration says it will we impose sanctions that were lifted on that they run you clear deal made
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with the u.s. britain russia france china and germany the e.u. back in twenty fifteen those sanctions will be reimposed on monday that's according to u.s. officials particularly reports now from washington d.c. . it's probably fair to say u.s. foreign policy has never been announced like this but this is an actual tweet from the u.s. president meant to look like a movie poster warning that sanctions are coming from the president later address on the south lawn sanctions are starting on iran and you know iran is they get a very big hit his top aides including treasury secretary steve minutia and talking tough as well on a conference call with reporters the treasury department will have more than seven hundred names to our list of bladder cancer days this includes hundreds of targets previously credited sanction for leave under the j c p o as well as more than three hundred new technology.
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