tv Japans Disability Shame Al Jazeera November 10, 2018 6:33am-7:01am +03
6:33 am
continent it's a dangerous journey and its toll remains largely invisible. columbia spring sick man in office as registered to death of at least two venezuelan migrants from the cold but it's unclear just how many might have died because nobody is really keeping track of the deaths or the missing along these routes and there's little formal help along the way. you can use this to cover your nose mouth the colombian red cross set up an assistance point at the start of the trick here migrants receive help in health services but the most important thing is information but of course. they don't know what they have to face or where to go and most have never crossed the border. by the end of the day and her group reached the top of the mountain there's nowhere to stay and temperatures are dropping by the minute. colombian soldiers help lidiane in haiti get
6:34 am
a lift to the closest city the rest decide to continue on foot now as you get there bring you must have faith that will accrue prolong the boat i will sleep tonight they don't know but with no other option they can only press on i listened to them . with a willing. so i have for you on the program taking the fight against pollution into space we'll tell you why scientists are about to blast laser beams into the sky. and install a supporting actor who fell off his lines at the start of the wild chess championship . business updates brought to you by qatar airways going places together.
6:36 am
welcome back time now for this but with andy. thank you so much martin well it's the biggest date in south america's football calendar the final limits of doris but this year it's not just another finalists two of the biggest rivals in the game meet in that suit like final argentina's bucket unions are taking on that one is there is name is river plights reports i never before in the fifty eight year old competition of two teams from the same country met in latin america's limited or is final that has happened this between two of the world's greatest rivalries in peak condition is a football fan history. in the last few months river have improved a lot unbeaten for a long time they've got
6:37 am
a well balanced team and must be strong contenders baka though they were better than river in the semifinals. junior is a six times witness the first game will be played in a daunting stadium before some of the world's most passionate and expectant fans. every block a fan has dreamt of a final against river plate and what could be better than an international told wilt it's a dream come true. here is only the ultimate i'll be in the clouds i'd rather win this in the national championship or see argentina win the world cup at ground ten times the size could not accommodate all of the baucus fans and the frustration is tangible oh my god i'm in one side of a divided city a divided country outside the people who don't have club look at unions in the working class horsehair of one of cyrus a stark contrast to here just fifteen kilometers a world away river plate known as the millionaire set in the affluent pneumonias
6:38 am
neighborhoods a clash of styles of culture and history three times with his of the river plate have some catching up to do these are not the only two clubs in one of cyrus although it sometimes feels that way so why such intense rivalry. as they were neighbors then became big clubs that began to win championships at the same time that's where the rivalry was born then they've always been opposites river the million is for the people but the dreams and expectations this side of when osiris a no that's intense i want i want boca do you want to know why i've lived the good and the bad with river relegation when we always beat book always beat us i've been coming here for forty years and this would be the best deal in my life i was historic it's what i want more than anything in life hopefully will do it i the phrase it's only football has never resonated in argentina least of all now they
6:39 am
calling it the mega final the super super classical they don't know what's ok. well there it could junia's versus river plate in the libretto gordie's final game ask get s.j. what more could you want. to enshrine there are two zero one of cyrus. french champions perry son jamaal have admitted some of their scouts did racially profile players when deciding whether to recruit them for the club by collecting personal information about an individual's race religion or ethnicity is illegal in france are investigating why the practice was allowed to carry on until early this year in regions outside of paris the french website media part made the claims after publishing leaked documents or in a statement pierce she said it reaffirms its firm combination of all forms of discrimination racism or ethnic monitoring forms with a legal consent were used by the training census department responsible for players
6:40 am
counting outside the il de france region these forms were introduced at the sole personal initiative of the head of this department's aspirants of china's you have staged a stunning comeback to win the african champions league subtly win the second leg of their final against al-ali of egypt three nails finished up as full three aggregate winners it's their third champions league title and first since twenty eleven now a planned exhibition match in saudi arabia between the world's top two tennis players has been called off note djokovic had been due to face rafa nadal in late december but an ankle injury means nadal won't be fits the pair were under pressure to cancel a concert after the murder of journalist janaki shoji in the saudi consulate in east on ball should be fine of women's team tennis is lost yet more star power the czech republic's patrick of it's a has pulled out of saturday's singles matches against the united states due to illness or an oppressive or is already out of the prague of an injury while sloane stephens and serina williams are among the big
6:41 am
name absences for the u.s. . yeah i printed les i'm not able to play tomorrow we decided yesterday after practice today down in a bad and i stay there so i had a little bit of us as waste and bad and when excited but as i did it's mentors and yeah and first and last week i had antibiotics but i'm not still really a century from home and pretty cool got it in need for a big win in the opening game of the women's t.t. twenty world cup she's taking place in the west indies the indian camps and became just the third woman said one hundred in a world t twenty match one hundred and three helping india to score one hundred ninety four for five in guyana in reply to new zealand weather well short finished up one hundred sixty for nine india winning by thirty four roughs. england's long run without a test when away from home is comes to an end after thirteen when overseas matches sri lanka in the first test of this series the home team were chasing unlikely
6:42 am
victory target of four hundred and sixty so i really took four wickets and gently each three a striker or bowled out for two hundred fifty on day four the bank gave england victory here by two hundred eleven rockets. across the board when it comes to international test cricket it's not just those it's not. the only side that struggles away from home it's very difficult to win test matches abroad now and i think that's makes even sweeter when when you do come to very difficult venues like go in and manage to win games pakistan of level three much won by series with new zealand they chased down a victory target of two hundred seven with ten hours to spare in abu dhabi. early drama at the world chess championship final involving american actor woody harrelson he was employed to sprinkle a bit of stardust at the start of the london encounter between reigning champion magnus carlsen of norway and his us challenger carlotta are also my first not so i
6:43 am
was working and then moved the wrong pace this is the first game in the best of twelve concerts i tell them it is for let's get but some are in london right now to nearly anyone thank you andy oh fine tests are preparing to fire lasers into space to blast some of the one hundred seventy million pieces of manmade orbiting the earth that cosmic poses a constant threat to satellites spacecraft and people marry on a honda explains. we've been launching things and people into space since nineteen fifty see them satellites be a favorite programs spacecraft to explore the unarmed people to take our first deep sea and in the more than sixty years of space exploration with managed to leave behind. around one hundred seventy million bits of junk to give you a sense of just how big the problem is take a look at this graph from scientists at the university of texas these orange dots
6:44 am
a functioning satellites orbiting the earth every day everything else this sea of pink the below is debris junk basically some of it's tiny some of it says big as a bus all of it's hurtling around the earth at speeds in excess of twenty seven thousand kilometers an hour crisscrossing at different two orbits and on a potential collision course with the things and people that we want up there. scientists warn it has the potential to create a string of catastrophic even unstoppable collisions that could read up parts of space unusable nesa scientists donald kislev first identified the scenario thirty years ago scientists have been trying to come up with ways to clean up after ourselves if a sentence has the predicted that when the population density of space debris reaches a certain point it will start to cool i would self and start multiplying by itself
6:45 am
and we're seeing the beginnings of that we see greece a number of satellite collisions. through core you know the best minds on the planet in this to mine we have another ten years we could be very lucky and have twenty years or twenty five we could be very unlucky and it could happen tomorrow scientists are making progress with innovative ways to clear the class a but none of it's ready to launch just yet that's where a new use of well established laser technology comes in ataman astray leah working with the experts from around the world is preparing to fire high powered lasers to blast space debris away to a safer orbit yes it is rather cool using simple high browed lasers to gently know which name to side gently gently match the space race one order to another we don't have a solution for space to bring out we have a means to reduce the scale of the problem and. the doomsday
6:46 am
event so we get more time space based laser technology dates back to the one nine hundred seventy s. and now has a myriad of applications that already make a real difference to us down here on earth but it's this latest use of laser ranging technology to clean up the cosmic junkyard around our planet that's capturing global attention it's the biggest clean up if it ever the same and this corner of the universe at least madame hond al-jazeera. that's a phonies out but i'll be back in just a myth. a
6:47 am
moroccan man spoke out against french colonial rule and was exiled. isolated extremist views. 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 world tells the story of the dissident abraham serfaty morocco's montana. lives in fear constantly looking over his shoulder she says she was threatened by armed men as they ransacked the home she knows who ordered the attack and why they want to develop on her community and. parts we can't let the men to imitate us we need to continue they can kill me i'm not afraid of being killed i need to defend my people who have been here since fifteen sixty nine without any help from the government
6:48 am
and now they want to destroy the forest that is part of. the land ownership in brazil is among the most concentrated and unequal in the world those who ordered the intimidation the murders are rarely brought to justice the un's man in charge of middle east and north africa has refugee crisis warns that the end is still not incites the war doesn't arc like in cos or some other countries followed or does not like that there ought to be a new order to make that contribution is above the shame or it with the i mean i was talks to al-jazeera. and. the us is to reverse its controversial decision to deny asylum to migrate see across the southern border illegally.
6:49 am
in london you're with algis they're also coming up. wildfires raging north and south california five people are dead and more than one hundred fifty thousand have fled their homes. boring sides are warned they will be responsible for the death and suffering of millions as preparations begin for a new battle and a data. and political crisis is deepening the president paving the way for the elections. the u.n. refugee agency says the united states must ensure migrants fleeing violence will persecution a given protection promptly and without obstruction it's in response to a proclamation signed by president donald trump which denies asylum to migrants who
6:50 am
cross the southern border illegally the move comes as a so-called migrant caravan of thousands of people from central america makes its way towards the u.s. border our white house correspondent kimberly hellcat reports. for years u.s. law allowed those fleeing persecution to seek asylum in the united states were guard lists of how they entered the country no longer i just signed. the proclamation on asylum but again i reiterate we need democratic votes using executive powers president donald trump has reduced the number of asylum claims now mandating a claim can only be considered if a person entered the united states through a legal checkpoint. the presidential proclamation is trump's latest response to a caravan of migrants headed to the united states thousands of u.s. soldiers have been deployed to the border to discourage a flood of illegal entries trumps also cast doubt on claims migrants are fleeing
6:51 am
persecution in their home countries a condition of asylum and the reason this is happening is we create is such a successful country is that our mcleish said everybody is flooding used to our country or refugees or the white house is defending what immigration activists say is trumps latest draconian immigration policy like the travel ban implemented early and presidency the white house argues the changes are necessary for u.s. national security the travel ban was tossed out of the lower federal court challenges but ultimately prevailed at the supreme court the highest court in the united states the white house argues after decades of congressional failures to reform immigration the expansion of executive power is justified or he can't accomplish what he wants to accomplish simply by his unilateral decree to go to congress. or whatever cannot unilaterally change the landscape of.
6:52 am
the white house is already preparing for more legal challenges but believes it will ultimately win with the support of the president's newest supreme court justice brett kavanaugh now. on the bench the president's effort to end an obama era program for the children of illegal immigrants now adults to go to school and work is also mired in the courts but the president says as it heads now to the supreme court he is hopeful for what he calls a fair decision on his hardline immigration policy kimberley health at al-jazeera the white house. five people have died in northern california as firefighters continue to battle a fast moving blaze which quadrupled in size of the night but is ripping through the area so fast that fire service is a struggling to contain it well one hundred fifty seven thousand people have been
6:53 am
evacuated from their homes as five move across the state. reports. fire is ripping through southern california with high winds driving columns of flame and smoke from the mountains to the sea. tens of thousands of homes are threatened many have already been destroyed my friend's house is totally bundt i don't know but mine you're fearful that your house will burn yes. ok. very. residents of the wealthy seaside enclave of malibu are fleeing under a mandatory evacuation order the fires sprang up thursday night the source is still not known but intense wind gusts rapidly spread the blaze through bone dry chaparral and brush into communities now we got the bag and i said i remember going to sit down when you think you became a good parent
6:54 am
a huge tower of smoke rose thousands of meters into the sky and the smoke made air quality hazardous for people with respiratory problems california's acting governor gavin newsom has declared a state of emergency and while authorities say most people heeded their warnings and evacuated when they were told to we are also told by authorities that there have been some deaths firefighters are working desperately to keep up with the fast moving widespread blazes when you have forty fifty sixty mile an hour winds blowing fire at your heels the importance is to get people out of harm's way and get them to see. in northern california the town of paradise turned to hell overnight these incredible pictures show a tornado will fire raging there the entire town is believed to have been destroyed
6:55 am
twenty seven thousand people fled the area twenty year old colton person field shot this cell phone video as he drove through hellish conditions outside paradise he somehow made it to safety severe fires have ravaged large areas of california since october of last year now the state is once more with dissing nature's fury at its worst robert oulds al-jazeera westlake village california. as president my trip to syria saying a has dissolved parliament paving the way for a snap election and they just about and follows two weeks of turmoil which began when syria's cena sacked the prime minister and installed a form a strongman and the royal now fernandez he explains. the dissolving of parliament by president by three policy resave another board out of the blue two weeks after
6:56 am
he started off this constitutional crisis by sacking his prime minister brown of the commissioner and appointing the former president mind the rajapaksa as his successor now the many people had been saying there should be a floor board parliament should be reconvened because the ousted prime minister claimed that he still held on the parliamentary majority he had the support in parliament and he challenge the appointment of mind rajapaksa which was which he said was against the constitution the president had seemed to bow down to pressure and brought the date forward as to when parliament would sit that being the fourteenth of november next wednesday but in recent days we've heard problems and the government seeming to have problems making up that magic one hundred thirty number which would give them a majority in the two hundred twenty five seat assembly and tonight as a result possibly of not having those numbers we see presidency recently taking the desperate measure of dissolving parliament now the nineteenth amendment of this
6:57 am
country's constitution brought in by the citizen a government expressly forbids the president from dissolving parliament less than four and a half years into its term this dissolution comes way ahead of that it's one year and three months before that number and critics are up in arms they've said this is against a constitution it's antidemocratic the ousted prime minister's party has already decried it and said they will meet the election commission of tomorrow morning and challenge that so we're bound to see this is not the end of this issue. so news from yemen where government forces backed by the saudi led coalition say they've launched a major offensive to retake the rebel held city of data ili half a million people have fled the area since june although the un has warned that thousands of others remain trapped by the fighting and the heywood reports. on the edge of her day the battle for territory is intensifying it is a relentless spite with both sides claiming they are making gains data is the prize
6:58 am
at the center of this nearly seventy percent of b.m. and commercial imports passed through the city's port practically who un supervised eight pro-government forces backed by saudi arabia say a major offensive is now underway to try to take her data back problem rebel fighters the ones that have remained in order. and sunny dition. scarcity of decision goods basic needs like food the prices of basic commodities have double. doors for structurally cause because and schools have closed because of the war. the who three say they are also implicating heavy losses on saudi backed as this war which is poor years old began when the point is captured the capital sanaa a coalition led by saudi arabia then launched
6:59 am
a major campaign to try to restore the government recognized by the international community since then the country has descended into chaos and in a place where war has become a daily plight pursued leibel hunger has become the norm one child under five in yemen dies every ten minutes the diseases which are killing them are entirely preventable half a million people have fled the area around to data since june when government forces try to recapture the city but for many in the poor city there is no escape and little chance of outside help while the number of those remaining and how dangerous is he is difficult to gauge you know and it's the hours of worried that people needing to flee for safety are unable to do so they're traps by military operations which are increasingly confining populations and cutting off exit routes there are continued calls press ceasefire and the political solution to be found
7:00 am
for yemen these so far have been ignored with neither side willing to compromise ever haywood al-jazeera. or elsewhere flash floods of killed at least nine people in jordan including two children twenty four people were hurt and dozens of others evacuated from their homes just skate rising floodwaters hundreds of terrorists were also forced to seek higher ground in the ancient city at trial. israeli soldiers have shot dead a palestinian man during clashes at the gaza israel border rami was one of twenty eight people who came under israeli fire during the violence now ruffa protest backed by gaza's rule is a massive taken place along the frontier with israel since march palestinians are calling for an end to the blockade on gaza and the right of return to their ancestral homes in israel. well to somalia now where at least twenty one people have been killed in the capital mogadishu in a series of attacks in the heart of the city witnesses say gunman tried to storm a hotel when the.
48 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on