tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera November 11, 2018 12:00am-1:01am +03
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mohamed atta is following the story for us from nearby. so mohammed what should we read into this decision and what practical effect is it going to have on the conflict right now or has been very little effect it doesn't mean that. are going to. be less because so do you have been. refueling in the while on the flight out of five. flights craft of its own that are carrying out the current. operation in yemen what the united states and the saudi government are saying is that this is a coordinated agreement so that everything has now the capacity to refuel its craft and that is how they want it to be the other aspects of the support the
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united states is offering this so the immorality whole nation such as the sales of arms as well as giving off much needed intelligence are going to continue which means. it's just business as usual and what are we hearing about operations in and around the fourth city of her data. well there is most of fighting going on outside the city of today the most of the fighting at the moment is complying to the outskirts of the city there are three lines to the militias or the fighters supporting the government that are being supported by the sodium and article aleutian how long against the will to fight their positions today they claim that they have taken a key hospital which is quite the near the highway that links they either to some
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now which is a strategic stronghold holder the flight is somewhere but the so the u.a.e. coalition is very keen to cut off to ensure that these little. supplies live in the day they're going to the north and strongholds of their abilities now while this is happening the bottles on the red sea of holes u.n. and other aid workers are saying could threaten. yemen into. an outright because this is the port of the day that is where seventh of pa cent of yemen's imports mainly food and also aid go through and any little disruption to the services of this port could because ostrosky can be warm. for us there in djibouti thanks on the other conflict in yemen has killed more than ten thousand people for those who survive the constant attacks life is forever changed thousands
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of lost limbs and that's made even worse because most people don't have access to proper treatment or even basic medical care down the road ahead reports. us when mohammed says a mortar hit her family's house was two years ago she lost both legs in the attack but she has not lost hope she says she's grateful to the yemeni doctors who have helped her overcome her injuries but something that i didn't know i was at home with my mom getting ready to go to school when a motor rocket hit i woke up and realized i was in the hospital according to the red cross thousands of people have lost limbs in yemen since the conflict started in twenty fifteen. that's largely as a result of bomb blasts mines or gunshot wants the immorality coalition that
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has been fighting alongside him many government forces has been conducting campaigns to remove landmines it accuses the healthy rebels of planting them but the coalition forces are accused of targeting the houthi areas with air strikes and killing many civilians at this rehabilitation center in the port city of aden civil of the able people are receiving artificial limbs as the work continues to create more victims officials here say the center is short of a staff and equipment eleven workers before the war we used to receive up to a thousand cases now we receive up to two thousand cases a month the centers capacity is not sufficient and we don't receive aid from any organizations except the red cross and unicef. is
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a victim of another war. he lost both legs in a land mine explosion in aid in during the one nine hundred ninety four civil war he also lost one of his fingers but he says that does not stop him from making artificial limbs for other this able the people i run in and later i'm calling on those who have been disabled by the war to hold on to hope also calling on the state institutions to stand by the disabled people and the other victims of the war . as the war continues so does the misery in what the united nations has described the worst humanitarian crisis in the world yemenis are facing famine disease and a lack of health care. us one's experience is shared by thousands like her and their suffering is unlikely to end anytime soon without that were hit and three zero all right now as world leaders gather in france to mark the one hundredth
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anniversary of the end of world war one tension between donald trump and french president emmanuel mccrone continues trump lashed out at mccraw on twitter before arriving in paris his comments come after the french president recently said france needed a european army to defend itself from the likes of russia china and the us here is more of what trump had to say in that tweet president mccraw france has suggested that euro build its own military in order to protect itself from the u.s. china and russia very insulting but perhaps europe should first pay its fair share of nato which the us subsidizes greatly our diplomatic editor james bays is in paris and has more now on the fallout and the attempts by the two allies to mend fences. at the elisei palace they were in damage limitation mode and just as he touched down in air force one president trumpet tweeted the president
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back rolls calls for a european army were very insulting as they met face to face the french president seemed keen to stress they were still on the same track france has for decades back further integrating the e.u.'s military resources but in a way that doesn't harm nato i do believe that my proposal for european and utterly consistent with their goals it means more europe was in need to mock fs and. whatever. in general. my attitude is. we want to see. which ever way we can do it the best most efficient with the. plans for a formal meeting between president trump and president putin were dropped because the elysee palace doesn't want politics to overshadow a weekend of solemn commemoration but with president trump in town there's always
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controversy president trump who tweeted throughout his flight late into the night and again well before dawn at the last minute canceled a trip to a cemetery where more than two thousand u.s. marines a barrett the white house blamed logistics and the weather it has been drizzling a little here james pays out zira paris. or thomas brison is a professor of political science with the university of paris c joins us now live from there thanks so much for being with us i want to ask you first of all about that treatment from president trump that we that we ran earlier is this. just kind of for public consumption back home is kind of rhetoric to fire up his base or how much of it is reflected in actual policy changes with regards to nato and western europe well i think it
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actually was i mean they're very clearly like president trump try to talk to his best friend back in the u.s. especially after like a difficult week for him like we saw a lucky somehow last midterm election so he has to give something to isabelle's back home again at the same time i think it is slightly and the progressively changing international politics i think it's a little first of all for example because president trump both said in the past that he was not sure that the u.s. would for example back article five which implied that any country should help other countries and angela for this is very damaging for france specifically it's not the imaging that it is for the alliance itself i sink but on this issue of the european allies military spending and the funding towards nato he's not the first u.s. president to bring this up easy does he not have
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a legitimate complaint if other countries are not paying their fair share. well it clearly is definitely not the first president to read the issue of barack obama actually started to complain that the u.s. was paying a lot a lot for their european allies he was according to them a free riders in this respect so he's definitely not the first one is the contrary it but is like the first one to do it with diplomatic turn of course is twitter but also like the way he. address these allies america in the first place very harshly we could say that he had to point to the fact in the sense that of course the u.s. does spend much more than the european allies in terms of defense for the rest it's a question i think of farms and torn of course and we should forget of course that the two leaders are there essentially to attend the commemorations of the end of of world war one what what lessons can today's leaders learn not just from from the
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war itself but from the end of that war and what took place in the years after that . well if there's been an issue which has been addressed like a lot recently about you syrians put it in as well and recently like emmanuel mccord drew comparison in between what is happening today and what happened in europe before the war and just after the war in one thousand twenties and one hundred thirty with this kind of rise of nationalism and soft course it's tempting like to see story repeating itself so to say. especially with the rise again off nationalism a little bit everywhere in europe and in the us as well as for me i would say that the comparison with somehow misleading and what's made that europe went into war in one thousand. internet intense is basically exact sense of anything to prevent it's
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the absence of strong and. robust military lateral system and this is them does exist today even though like as we saw with president trump it's someone. even though it's maybe not as robust as we sort it is still here so i think it's kind of difficult to actually like seeing that what we experience today with nato in europe and in the u.s. has a lot to do with what we saw in europe in the one thousand twenty's and thirty's thomas pre-song good to speak with. our rescue operations are continuing in jordan after flooding struck several areas of the country twenty twelve people rather reported dead more than three thousand seven hundred tourists have been evacuated from the ancient city of petra tarantula rain began on friday afternoon paul brennan has more. the deluge came barreling down the valley with a thunderous roar sweeping away everything in its path. visitors expecting the
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serenity of petra's two thousand year old architecture had to scramble frantically to higher ground as the water raged beneath them around three and a half thousand tourists were in the area at the time but none were injured overall petra's flood channels worked as intended the volume and intensity of a torrent four metres high test at the flood barriers to their limits numerous other areas were similarly affected the city of declared a state of civil emergency and across the country the fatalities included two children and one of the divers in gauged in the rescue efforts. were. searching incoming operations by the jordanian search and rescue teams and divers teams are still continuing backed by our armed forces john di maria public security personnel unfortunately the death figures have risen and include one of the civil defense divers in saudi arabia to friday's sudden downpours quickly filled traffic
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underpasses with water and hundreds of motorists faced being stranded by the rising floods. the jordanian response in the aftermath of this latest deluge has been an extensive search and rescue efforts but the receding water has left the affected areas in jordan need deep in mud and sludge making the search effort doubly difficult paul brennan al-jazeera. all right with joining us now is our meteorologist rob mccallum so rob pretty unbelievable pictures we saw there in jordan now is this is this just bad luck or could we expect more of this i think this is a bit of bugs because typically across the middle east we've seen floods in the last few days that you wouldn't expect to find because the infrastructure for is effectively a desert area is not they had to cope with much rain so you could argue that ok random showers that we get three times a year we can ignore that it happened but it looks like it's getting worse and i
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think i've studied the like the effects of climate change the hard to find ever here is a general increase in temperature but also there's no more rainfall what rain is likely to fall is going to be in heavy adverse that may well be we're seeing the start of that now. and is that i mean what happened in jordan could we could we see that elsewhere in the region possibly we have to resort in kuwait we saw it in iraq we we have she's sort here in canada that's right yeah yeah and i would think it's more likely we will see this as a gradual increasing trend so when you do see rain it will be heavier rain whether or not we choose to change the structure and cope with it or not a neighbor in petra how can you yeah and what's what's behind all of this i mean you know people sometimes compare climate change and i know meteorologists kind of hesitant to make that comparison but is there is there anything in that it's a trend as i just mentioned although in this part of the world we don't think we'll
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see an increase in the overall rainfall possibly they'll be a decrease heartsease signal but any india of it if usual thunderstorm is likely to be of a much more vicious nature which is just what we sort of course this is the season when you will get a shot when you are the season hasn't changed the intensity the showers house all right rob thanks so much. now flooding in jordan particularly in persia has many people talking on social media has more that right has and we are seeing a lot of video online being shot as well and these are the scenes in the agent's stone city of petra flash floods and mudslides rushing through the canyon as tourists try to say clear of the city's main road one resident told al jazeera that everyone was covered in mud and there was some panic the water in some areas rose up to four meters high according to state t.v. it forced nearly four thousand tourists to evacuate the area and this all comes
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after a public outcry last month when twenty one people including children died after they were swept away in fast fudge during a school outing near the dead sea emergency services were criticized for being unprepared and two ministers were forced to resign or some online and are blaming the authorities for this incident to the secretary general of the jordanian opposition coalition says this is the king's own doing his premeditated destruction of the country's infrastructure amounts to a first degree murder and then you have others who are concerned that the floods could have broader economic consequences we have from jesse marks. didn't happen these floods are valid when you consider the kingdoms population books i was also efforts to tourism more broadly the world whose economy increased or as a population paired with a relatively weak in georgia or structure are likely to amount to some form of tragedy like we saw in the tragic events of the last few weeks in turn jordan is investing in its long term infrastructure that is durable to chronic flooding areas
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that are in danger particularly the ones to simulate long term growth events within its tourism sector but also to protect populations that are already those areas in the jordan history tourism and with bodies can mitigate these risks by applying policies that create awareness of flashpoint risks as well as their access to areas that are danger or points of the season but if you are county in jordan we do want to hear from you keep sending us your thoughts are pictures all your videos is the hash tag to simply message me directly i'm him home it has a. last for him and now for those of you watching us on facebook you'll see a story about the world's largest exporter of weapons and later president rodriguez to ten days controversial war on drugs in the philippines we'll hear from some who say they are living in fear.
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hello you have seen the evidence of winter descending slowly across the levant and iran this is a line of her frontal system which still is giving you a few snow showers in northern afghanistan but the real winter is turkey in just the north of your screen the top of your screen there which will bring significant snow to the northern caucasus and rain showers thunderstorms to the south of that during monday now there's still a return of potential snow into afghanistan west of that where we have recently seen throughout places like jordan i just picked up because of the most obvious floods recently we seen some pretty big showers here and in iraq and in northern saudi it's a quite a spell for both sunday and monday i suspect but south of that we still got the active weather that's been running through kuwait and western iran recently the potential for thunderstorms in bahrain qatar east and saudi exists for sunday and indeed monday beyond that from the looks of fairly dry picture which is once again
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the position in most of southern africa what was fairly heavy rain is dissipated now you've got a streak of cloud running through mozambique at the top end of madagascar the storm is going to run for days now marches get the occasional thunderstorms but beyond that of the mainland with the exception of angola it's a dry picture. i think this is fun for me to think i'm having fun. if she. isn't her contribution hunters and beaches. just as it is tom. thanks for.
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saying a quick look at the stories that are trending on our website the latest strands of the investigation are still dominating that's the number one story that trending and then also that the u.s. sending. you even fueling supports in yemen ending it. and the turkish police ending their search for fresh bodies so that's still very much. dominating things for our readers there on our website the last minute as well there on you obviously the events in sri lanka still there at number five
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a story that we've also been covering it's all the dot com trending stories now as thousands of people are being forced to flee wildfires in the u.s. states of california donald trump is threatening to cut federal funding to the state money used to help manage forests the president said there is no reason for the wildfires blame them on poor management at least nine people have been killed and thousands of others left homeless rob reynolds reports now from ventura county . 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 my you're fearful that your house will burn yes. ok. very.
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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 how we got the back and i said i'm not going to remember going to have our what you think you became a good parent 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
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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 safety. in northern california the town of paradise turned to hell overnight these incredible pictures show a tornado a fire raging there the entire town is believed to have been destroyed twenty seven thousand people fled the area twenty year old colton person field shot. cellphone 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 witnessing nature's fury at its worst robert oulds al-jazeera westlake village california. in the philippines president rodriguez deter tazers so-called war on drugs continues to claim lives thousands of people
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have been killed in the last two years since detecting launched the controversial policy jimmy learned dogan reports from same. grief has come into the town police say five people were killed in what the police describes as a one time big time operation a raid that sweeps through communities for illicit drugs and other petty crimes. many are remembers how the police barged into their home at dawn looking for her husband he told me don't be afraid there are no drugs in our home they won't do anything. but mary and her children were made to crawl out of their home while her husband stayed inside the police then shot her husband dead. the police are reassures residents that operations here are meant to restore safety in very
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communities but that's not exactly what many people here feel they tell us they have never been more afraid the recent spate of killings here on scene in recent years. across the province drug related killings have gone up to cebu may be one of the most developed and populous cities in the vicinity it's region but police here say they will be relentless that's why the president called it drug war because even that will be. the police as the fight. and. sometimes we don't even know who only being at the side of the house in these houses are made. deals that will it's going to penetrate if we fire our guns she admits many officers are now less willing to implement the government's so-called war on drugs that is because president to tear to is now halfway through
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his term and there could be legal repercussions once his steps down from office complaints against other government officials for crimes against humanity are no pending at the international criminal court police say almost five thousand people have been killed in drug related operations since they launched these weren't drugs in two thousand and sixteen but the rights groups believe the number is much higher they promise to continue their investigation and say witnesses will soon be ready to testify. for some families that is the best they can hope for they say. their loved ones are gone and there won't be an end to their grief. province central philippines. or next guest has been keeping a critical eye on the president world relate to turkey's government in exposing
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corruption in extradition killings by the police now the government is threatening to go after her and her news organization for allegedly of voiding taxes maria ressa denies the accusations and she joins us now from paris maria thanks very much for being with us so let's talk first of all about the discounts of russian war on drugs from president to territory was your organization reporting on this and is this part of the reason that the government is coming after you now with these alleged tax dodging. certainly one of the reasons one of the key things there is really impunity rate you're talking about the police has actually admitted that they've they're five thousand people that have been killed in shootouts with the police but when you see them all of the evidence points that it looked like
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a police killing and then you add all of the deaths under investigations that they put and human rights group put that casualty toll at a much higher number tens of thousands killed anywhere between twenty to thirty thousand the exact number no one really knows because it's been obscured so much that's one of the reasons we need to keep looking at this our last series the impunity series took a look at this story from the killers perspectives killers who said that they were paid by the police and how would you describe the current climate right now in the philippines in terms of journalists realty to to to do their jobs and the whole issue of free speech there. this is a cult but also the time when i think journalists and part of the reason we're rising to the cation is this is a time when we have to make sure that. our our democracy doesn't change which means
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this is the time to fight what we've seen now is that anyone who is deemed to be critical anyone who questions extrajudicial killings are attacked on two fronts first on social media facebook is essentially our internet and then those attacks on social media cross over into the real world which is what happened to rappler the basis of these legal cases against us were floated on social media by pro detective friends and networks paid accounts as well more than two and a half years ago and then they came out as cases after that so again this is the time to stand up and to draw the line and what sort of when you talk about the time to stand out what sort of pushback is there in this in the philippines or the institutional level the courts the legislators and so on how strong are filipino institutions. extremely weak
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that also is another problem what we're seeing is this is a president to take this extract is very popular right now he is also perhaps the most powerful man even more powerful than former president marcos who declared martial law for twenty one years right president detective holds the executive he holds the legislative and he'll appoint he's already appointed more than a majority of the supreme court justices the judiciary is extremely weak this is part of our problem regardless what we're going to do is we'll continue doing these stories will expose the propaganda war on social media and we'll fight the cases and there are numerous cases i've run out of synonyms for the word ridiculous for the foundations of some of these cases the one where the government says they're going to indict both me and rappler. presupposes the idea that they're trying to show here is that rappler is actually
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a security source trading firm which we're not so we'll challenge these and we'll continue to fight them in court pre-show you talking to us maria ressa in paris how major cities across the u.s. are struggling with lead leaching from all pipes into water systems the latest to chicago where the local newspaper the tribune found that seventy percent of homes have lead in tap water john hendren reports. sam corona fears the pouring from his tap is a blend of life giving water and brain damage when i was younger i remember one to the filtration plants and taking a tour of it being told this is the safest drinking water in the world right what i was like eleven thirteen years old and here i have thirty seven years old finding out that there is lead inside the waters over the past two years the chicago tribune tested water from nearly three thousand homes in nearly seventy percent of
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the samples the newspaper found lead in three out of ten samples lead levels exceeded five parts per billion the maximum level the u.s. food and drug administration allows in bottled water it's a health hazard in cities across the united states and around the world. lead causes brain damage especially in children flint michigan recently stopped delivering bottled water to residents after declaring its let water crisis over some cities including chicago actually required lead service lines between the main drinking water line in the street and homes until congress ban the practice in one nine hundred eighty six there's an irony here the great lakes of north america are the largest source of fresh water in the world water from lake michigan is generally lead free when it leaves water treatment plants here but it becomes contaminated when it runs through lead service lines underground and chicago has more than three hundred thousand of them more than any other city in america
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chicago's park service has shut off or remove half of its twelve hundred water fountains and it is leaving hundreds of others on around the clock to minimize lead levels but it is not replacing all of its lead service lines i think that cost is one part of it i think there is also just the public at mention of having claimed for many years that the water earth by the city's department of water management told down jazeera in a statement year after year chicago's water exceeds the standards set by the u.s. e.p.a. led in copper rule for clean. safe drinking water additionally the chicago department of water management takes a proactive approach to mitigating lead in the water system chicago is also offering free water testing kits but sam corona is still waiting and his water is basic right we need it to survive and it has a contaminate in it so how is the quality of our life of our residents if they're drinking contaminated water waiting and hoping he and his family have not been
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drinking poisoned water all these years john hendren al jazeera chicago and still to come and sport a football match so big oftentimes qantas side wanted to call it the super classic i would call them mega classic but we've got to want to sideways for boca juniors versus river plate but first a check of the international weather. a moroccan man spoke out against french colonial rule and was exiled. regular isolated by our extremist views. he spoke out against the regime and was sentenced
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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 montana. as migrants seek sanctuary on it shows the e.u. must choose rescue or deterrence. eighties and immigration government has allied with the libyan coast guard in an operation often at loggerheads with n.g.o.s trying to save lives. people in power is on board with both sides rescue at sea announces iraq.
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and now we go for a hit with the sport and it's good good time to be a football fan and want to start he adds going to historic match one of the most monumental matches in the history of world football is set to take place in just a few hours in argentina as the first leg of the final the cup at liberty doris boca juniors will face neighbors and arch rivals were ever played daniels while reports. never before in the fifty eight year old competition of two teams from the same country mix in the latin america's. final that has happened this between two of the world's great his rivals in peak condition is a football fan is green. jr is a six times whenas the first game will be played in the daunting
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a stadium before some of the world's most passionate and expectant fans. every block a fan has dreamt of a final against riva plight and what could be better than an international told wilt it's a dream come true. the ultimate i'll be in the clouds i'd rather win this in the national championship or see argentina win the world cup a ground ten times the size could not accommodate all of his 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 juniors in the working class area of one of cyrus a stark contrast to here just fifteen kilometers a world away river play known as the millionaire set in the affluent pneumonias neighborhoods a clash of styles of culture and history three times with his of the river plate of some catching up to do he's a not the only two clubs in one of cyrus although it sometimes feels that way so
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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 is when we always beat book. i've been coming here for forty years and this would be the best deal in my life i. historic it's what i want more than anything in life hopefully will do it by the phrase it's only football has never resonated in argentina these two who now they calling it the make a final the super super classical they do the work to cool their baseball could you news this is river plate in the libretto gordie's final game ask it is jay what
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more could you want. to enshrine there to see it when osiris. let's go back to danielle who's live final fans there are saying this match is more important to them than argentina winning the world cup that seems crazy to me and in boca against never going to be more hotly contested than let's say argentina versus brazil. where you can make a little over four hours till the kickoff here you can probably see behind me some of these bulk of fons waiting to get in to take their place in the stadium which is just in front of me it's a really wet and miserable day they said nothing to dampen their spirits and certainly some of them would say this is the biggest game of their lives real fans on the other side of the city would say exactly the say this is the one they want to win above all else but by no means all argentineans river fans are coming to day one for instance he's an independent they fund he's told me at least three times
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today the independent they have won the couple of years ago to seven times that's once more than baka and four times more than river plate so although it's at the moment it feels like only pocket if that counts only this final count there is life beyond its final although very hard to gauge at this particular time ok we understand away fans are banned from both legs of this final is there still any danger of trouble. i mean the bad happened a few years ago because there was a lot of trouble there was found there were funds fighting found some level clubs there were funds fighting police and also internal battles raging between the funds so a few years ago they stopped visiting funds it must be said that things have come out come down substantially a different kind of person now comes to football families are coming people are bringing their children to the game there was talk of letting the fans come to these two games simply because it's not an argentinian game it's an international
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match or an international final your third has decided against it it's likely to be calm today this huge security here around the stadium there is still the possibility of violence of clashes really depending on the result but as i say very tight security both here around the block a stadium and in other parts of one of cyrus as we heard in your piece these two clubs essentially came from the same place but have you fell it's a real difference between them. well you know there's a huge difference certainly in this neighborhood level this was the working class port area of the city the place is up in the neighborhood in the north of the city about fifteen kilometers away a very affluent upper middle class area the boy no means are all the book. of the working class the current president of argentina but he's still not these the former presidents of corporate juniors there's big business involved in the club of
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a plate also they pull their funds around whether cyrus around argentina those aspiring to do better in life or the river so there is a big but the perception here is that yes dr judy is the fire is the club of the people over to the plate with the nickname the billionaire is setting that affluent goal that they were good at the club of the wealthy citizens of whether it's adults and so you know ok danielle stay dry and we'll catch a bit later thank you for now well to give you an idea of just how fierce this match is going to be radio stations in argentina are providing special commentary to fans with hard conditions zang music will be played instead of stadium noise to keep the fans calm will free to read tweeted these pictures saying previous meetings between the two clubs resemble armageddon and the meaning of this game for locals may be hard for outsiders to understand but to put it into context tickets for the final leg are being sold on the black market for a price of
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a single house incent tweeted the loser of this tie will never stop hearing about it it will be a story told to many generations who are yet to come a message of peace has been launched ahead of the final by both boca and river it says the couple the british dora stays in argentina so let's suggest celebrate now here's some video that's been taken at a kid's football game it's been viewed almost twenty five million times and received a lot of different reaction take a look at this. gore. i'm. going to. i'm. as i said opinion is divided between the majority who think this is a dad having a bit of harmless fun and trying to help his son and those who think he is interfering at his son's football match and actually seems to be what the one that has distracted him before taking the shots supportive or disruptive what do you
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think do let us know you can tweet me directly at after scoring a small we'll be back with more at eighteen hundred g.m.t. but for now we'll hand you back the house and thanks so much for a while these are that'll do it for this newsgroup to remember these all the ways you can get in touch with us on social media the hash tag as ever is a.j. news created all the other ways to connect all right there we'll see you back here at studio fourteen fifteen hundred g.m.t. on sunday.
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travel often. by tranquil warp speeds and local forests may provide valuable. vox if only. by icons landmarks valleys and scotland's. live for adventure. discovery jobs because far away places closer to the face going this is together with cats i always. i'm a historian say for the every weekly news cycle brings a series of breaking stories told through the eyes of the world's journalists these two voices journalists were one of the few journalists that were actually doing investigative. listening post as we turn the cameras on the media and focus on how they report on the stories that matter the most biased the rights to those stories but then he never publishes the stories they're listening posts on al-jazeera when
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a parent loses their child to a terminal illness. they often feel that they've taken on the weight of the world. but mr huang is determined to find out what cool. and brought him such heartache. the story of a committed parent turned activist a father's protest parts of the viewfinder asia's series on al-jazeera. turkey's president says they've shared recordings related to the killing of jamal khashoggi with saudi arabia and the us this amid reports presidents trump and
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micron have agreed the journalist murder could create an opportunity to end the war in yemen. hello i'm maryam namazie in london you're with al-jazeera also coming up twelve dead after more to run show rain and flooding hit jordan and other parts of the middle east and allegations of fraud as florida again finds itself at the center of election control and a possible mid-term new count. now turkey's president says a shared audiobook orderings relating to the murder of jamal khashoggi with saudi arabia the united states britain france and germany but. has yet to confirm media
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reports that turkey possesses ordeal of the actual killing of the journalist inside the saudi consulate in istanbul more than five weeks ago. we have given the recordings to saudi arabia the americans the british the germans to everyone they've listened to the conversations almost recordings but you know what's being said there's no point in distorting this funked among the fifteen they know who the mood will raise or the mood was are in the saudi arabian administration can succeed in bringing this to light by making the fifteen speak. well i do on also said he might meet u.s. president donald trump in paris where they are both attending commemorations marking the one hundredth anniversary of the end of the first world war trump already discussed the case with his french counterpart emmanuel macron they reportedly agreed the fallout from quiz show geez murder could possibly create an opportunity to end the saudi led war in yemen well let's speak now
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to show you how he is in istanbul outside the saudi consulate that and why might president of chosen to reveal now that those audio recordings are in possession are in the possession of western intelligence agencies. well i mean where we're looking at the fact that this comes on the eve of those meetings not just the expected one between iran and the us president donald trump but also possibly between our two on and several other european and world leaders appears that the turkish president wants the wall to know that those meetings are happening in the context that for the leaders that he will be sitting down with are aware of the details of the assassination of tomorrow casualty there is no proles able deniability for any of the wild superpowers no we didn't know exactly what happened that can be used as an excuse by the countries that consume you to arm and support for the saudi regime as
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far as the turks are concerned they wanted to be very clear that's those who continue to do business maybe with the saudis or maybe are not being as forceful in their demand for the all to hold to account those who are behind the murder of jim artificial tree that this they're doing so whilst they are in full knowledge of the details of the evidence of what happened and therefore releasing this statement or making the statement just prior to those meetings is yet again the talks demonstrating that they are the ones who are in control of this narrative and that they will continue to put the pressure on until they get the results that they deem fit to a crime which really has gripped the world's attention right now thank you very much from istanbul jamal i shall let speech national he joins us now from paris and hashem we continue to see this the diplomacy if you like around the murder and jamal khashoggi continuing to play out as well as leaders meet in paris for those
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well one commemorations what is the latest from that. money and limits just give you an idea of what i stand this is just about one block from the music say that's where world leaders converging for the one hundredth anniversary of the commemoration of the end of the first world war will meet and i think it's on the sidelines of the dinner that we may get some interesting meetings because somebody lateral meetings one of them could be between the turkish president but as a player. and the american president earlier today president from president manuel mccrone stressed the need for saudi arabia to come out and provide more details about the killing of about the same time they said they were pretty much concerned about repercussions from the killing and whether that could destabilize the region they said also that the fallout they were hoping the fallout from the jamal khashoggi killing could pave the way for
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a political way out to the crisis in yemen and this explains why the united nations has been asking all the parties to converge and meet in sweden and it's time soon in the future for them to be able to put an end to the war the second crucial meeting between trump if it happens that's where the president is going to press ahead for more international pressure against saudi arabia turkey says that he has been willing to see the saudis fully cooperate on the killing of them they said that each time they were approaching the saudis the saudis were still there so aim was basically to stall the investigation and this explains why i spoke today about the recording they shared with the british with the french with the americans and with the saudi is basically to have the international community stand together and try to put more pressure on saudi arabia when it comes to the case of the hostages thank you very much from paris. well in all the developments the u.s.
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will no longer refuel saudi led coalition aircraft that are fighting in yemen civil war and there was a. now spy the coalition in washington on saturday it comes at a time when reality is under increasing international pressure the civilian deaths caused by the ass strikes critics say it will have little effect on the war. and help that we feel i'm going to does. the agreement between the united states and so there is still the u.s. refueling all. seems to be a coordinated agreement with so that of us saying it's now haaz the capacity to refuel its own involved in the aerial bombardments that have been cut it out on positions inside yemen and now many people say however that this is just. the united states government so that it be a by extension of congress which has been really critical of u.s.
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involvement and support for this so the whole issue but other aspects of the support the u.s. has been giving the sodium right equalisation such as selling them and also giving them why toll intelligence particularly on who he positions in various parts of the country will continue which means it will be business as usual on that front then why has the fighting is going on the outskirts of the fourth year for the government why it is cheering there also on three different. lines trying to retake the city of. the fighters today they claim that they have taken a hospital outside of the city and u.n. workers are calling for a cease fire saying that and the little disruption to the vital services of the port of data could put all yemen into an outright. all the saudi led as strikes
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in yemen are on course to kill more civilians than last year according to a database tracking the war has despite repeated claims from the united states of the coalition is taking precautions to prevent such casualties only armed conflict location and event data project says one thousand two hundred fifty four civilians were killed this year up until november third that includes fifty one mainly schoolchildren in a bus attack in august if the desk continue at the current rate that figure will rise to one thousand four hundred ninety one by the end of the year that would be an increase from the one thousand three hundred three hundred eighty six civilians killed by the saudi led coalition in yemen last year well as strikes not hillary attacks have left many more people with life changing injuries thousands who've lost limbs are struggling to live in a situation made worse due to a lack of basic medical facilities mama to head reports.
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us one mohammed says the move to his family's house two years ago she lost both legs in the attack but she has not lost hope she says she's grateful to the in many doctors who have. overcome her injuries. i didn't know i was the time with my mom getting ready to go to school when a motor rocket hits us i woke up and realized i was in the hospital according to the red cross thousands of people have lost limbs in yemen since the conflict started in twenty fifteen. that's largely as a result of bomb blasts mines gunshot wants the. coalition that has been fighting alongside him and government forces has been conducting campaigns to remove landmines it accuses the host the rebels of planting them. but the coolish and forces are accused of targeting areas with air strikes and killing many
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civilians at this rehabilitation center in the port city of aden civil of the able people are receiving artificial limbs as the work continues to create more victims officials here say the center is short of a staff and equipment eleven workers before the war we used to receive up to a thousand cases now we receive up to two thousand cases a month the center's capacity is not sufficient and we don't receive aid from any organizations except the red cross and unicef. is a victim of another war. he lost both legs in a land mine explosion in aid in during the one nine hundred ninety four civil war he also lost one of his fingers but he says that does not stop him from making artificial limbs for other this able the people i love on the are going on like
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that i'm calling on those who have been disabled by the war to hold on to hope also calling on the state institutions to stand by the disabled people and the other victims of the war. as the war continues so does the misery in what the united nations has described the worst humanitarian crisis in the world yemenis are facing famine disease and a lack of health care. us one's experience is shared by thousands like her and their suffering is unlikely to end anytime soon without the head injuries iraq. well as world leaders gather in france to mark the one hundredth anniversary of the end of world war one there's been a war of words between donald trump and the french president a manual on the american president criticized macron for saying that france needed a european army to defend itself from the likes of russia china and the u.s. they've since agree.
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