tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera November 12, 2018 1:00am-1:34am +03
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washington obviously as you mentioned there this comes off the backdrop of. prior to traveling to france saying that he had or his governments rather and security services had shared that evidence with their american counterparts therefore trying to force or maybe really encourage let's say the americans to take a stronger stance i am being told maybe that this stance will be publicized around about the g twenty summits when that takes place later but we're not quite sure exactly the details of it second these things are have been from the very beginning dealt with either with a lot of secrecy or through leaks and therefore what we've managed to ascertain is very difficult to say the least obviously aside from this. there has been other elements to the case not least how people have been viewing saudi policies in particular not only how they've gone off to dissidents both at home and abroad like jamal khashoggi but also how they've been undertaking this war in yemen which has
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gone on for several years and people have been using the spotlight that's been focused on saudi arabia to bring to light the case so there has been despoiled protest outside the consulate earlier today they were or it was organized by supporters of the militia themselves they held up pictures of did a medical procedure so they're not exactly let's see neutral in their holes however it just shows just how significant the case of dramatic subtlety is in terms of bringing under scrutiny the policies of saudi arabia but because saudi arabia is so influential in terms of lobbying and money spent and so forth when it comes to people like donald trump and others to get them to take a decisive stance is proving difficult for the turks they feel they may be close to making headway well too and quite sure exactly what's the one and trump of agreed and whether that's will come to light in the next few days thank you very much john is that a stumble. so i had fun on the program bangladesh's main opposition line says it
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will contest elections next month calling it a fight to rescue democracy i'm andrew thomas in newcastle australia i'm on the deck of a ship that's going to be sent to the ship wrecks a vessel sunk in the second world war there are more than three thousand the bottom of the south pacific ocean alone and then leaking oil. and i was reading it in china this is no big surprise is it you wouldn't think much of be coming out of the sky from what you see by satellite because the cloud tops are not particularly want the more of a graze it doesn't look like heavy rain but something may well develop in the next twenty four hours we're talking about monday daylight hours i think hong kong will stay dry and so probably will shanghai in the last tries to fade away come tuesday which is this breeze coming down the coast of vietnam in the bottom left hand side
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of china that's bringing fairly frequent showers and the northeast monsoon is set a nice day you'd think cross india now but look what's happening in the bay of bengal that spinning out to be a tropical storm of some sort of a tropical cyclone in its nature and it spins by the look of it slowly west was towards china in the next day or so now the rain doesn't get there immediately so we're just looking to focus be on tuesday but it's interesting to note the sea could be a pretty wet event some significant showers been falling around the middle east some in the arabian peninsula the forecast for sunday on monday takes a line from riyadh through bahrain and almost done is done for the next winter for potential for thunderstorms it drifts further north and east and saudi and like go back into kuwait we've had some pretty big downpours in kuwait and jordan in the last few days. in twenty twenty tokyo will host the paralympic games when the nation has
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a troubled history caring for people with disabilities when he examines japan's disability shame on al-jazeera. a congress divided between democrats and republicans. what does it mean for america and the world in these remaining two years of donald trump's presidency. find out on al-jazeera. welcome back you with al jazeera live from london our top stories now the french president and his lead tributes to the millions of soldiers who died in world war
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one a ceremony marking one hundred years since the end of the conflict called for the world not to forget the ideals principles and patriotism of those who fought. fierce battles to retake yemen's port city of the danger of spilled on to residential areas as thousands of civilians remain trapped by the violence that at least sixty one fighters from both sides have been killed over the past twenty four hours. a protesters have gathered in the turkish city of istanbul to demand justice for the murder of john is jamal khashoggi the white house has confirmed that u.s. president donald trump in the turkish leader russia type discussed how to respond to the killing. when all those stories are watching closely aid agencies are warning that the ebola outbreak in the democratic republic of congo could spread into neighboring countries the worst outbreak in the country's history with three hundred nineteen confirmed and probable cases and the death toll of more than two hundred people a stasia tell you how small. this is the tenth ebola outbreak in the democratic
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republic of congo but this one is also to the west and the world's fast in a conflict zone. since twenty fourteen about two thousand people have been killed in northeast india in fighting between armed groups and now since august a record more than two hundred people there have died from. the bull epidemic in north kivu wanted to reprivatize has surpassed that of the first epidemic and b.r.c. is history which occurred in one nine hundred seventy six in the province of a quarter to go up or if the health ministry says medical teams in the area are attacked on average three to four times a week and unpressed to. and today level of violence compared with previous outbreaks to medical agents with the congolese army was shot dead three weeks ago. fifty nine people were killed and a dozen children abducted in subsequent attacks around the town if any the world
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health organization says it's become the outbreak epicenter because of what it calls a toxic mix of violence and community mistrust the outbreak is not under control and it's been. a large number of ration in the town of dany and we are very concerned about another town. where you have a million people and cases from a tribal area. and we are now worried that transmission with. this he says is a window of opportunity. a vaccination program has already reached some twenty five thousand people that are going to choose he said it will have a neighboring uganda has become the first in the well to administer a vaccine without an active outbreak targeting frontline health workers near the border really trying their hardest to vaccinate many people as possible about potential exposure to a bowl of ours because the vaccine. really seems to work the problem is it's
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challenging to access people because of you believe you the area and it's hard to ensure that people who have had a possible bowl or worse actually know that our system works only for safety reasons and borders here are porous these roads like this one in south sudan lead across sovereign from tos and as people travel they give it the ability to travel with them. becomes something difficult but good enough to know you don't have any. kissel few boileau even. states but if. there is any kids that entity to be very challenging to people who comes through deport as well as as the death toll mounts in the neighboring countries are watching closely to start their. the u.s.
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state of florida has been given five days to recount eight point three million ballots cast there in last week's midterm elections an official recount was ordered on saturday in the races for governor and the senate after they would to close to call only a few thousand votes separate account of it so it's very close the races are yet to be declared an hour zone and georgia as well as all know is following all of this for us from washington so tensions rising inside florida how the process might this recount be. well recounts in florida are never an easy thing and all we have to do is look back to that famous recount eighteen years ago in the two thousand presidential election between george w. bush and al gore florida went to a recount there bush ended up winning the the state of florida by less than six hundred votes as we all remember the rest is history that gave him the electoral college advantage to go on to the presidency that went all the way to the supreme
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court now we have another recount in florida which will it go on as long as the one thousand years ago will it go to the supreme court probably not never the less the process of recounts are complicated particularly in florida over eight million people voted in florida they're now going through the ballots. electronic machines but if they find a big discrepancies that bring the margins down anough to point two point five percent that means they can then do a hand recount as well which could extend things even further but i can tell you both the democrats and republicans have sent a team of lawyers down to florida they're already lawsuits threatening to go back and forth here this could be a process that drags on perhaps longer than five days we'll have to see yes florida once again at the center that they see a political battle what about the other states where the results from an unresolved in our zone are in georgia. yeah arizona is key because that's
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a senate race that is still undecided and unlike florida and arizona they're not in a recount phase they're simply counting ballots that have not been counted since tuesday these are absentee ballots people that mailed in ballots and they're just still going through them and there are still so tens of thousands of ballots to go through from the various states there the democratic candidate for senate in arizona has about a twenty eight thousand vote lead over the democrat but that's a very narrow margins were still a lot of ballots to be counted that's interesting because if the democratic nominee or democratic candidate does win it would be the first time since one thousand nine hundred eight that a democrat has a senate seat from florida i'll just quickly go to georgia that's the governor's race there where the republican brian camp is already declared victory but the state has said hold on still a lot of votes to go through returned ballots disputed ballots there that are being looked at and so the state has said we're going to continue to count to count all
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of this they should have a better sense of that by by the middle to the end of this week ok thanks very much deborah in washington. host in windy weather conditions expected in california on sunday will make it more difficult to fight wildfires ravaging the state at least twenty five people have died and thousands of homes have been incinerated hundreds of thousands of people have been forced from the area the town of paradise in northern california has been destroyed. so news from bangladesh where the main opposition alliance has it will contest the upcoming general election despite the ruling party rejecting a series of demands about the vote the leading party in the coalition the bangladesh nationalist party has point costly to previous campaigns it now says it will participate in the elections set for december twenty third calling it a fight to rescue democracy the ruling awami league with jacques to the opposition's main commands to put a neutral can't take
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a government in place try it. has more from dhaka. major breakthrough in the there's a sigh of relief among the mass population in bangladesh there's a lot of uncertainty whether they lection will be held now this announcement coming from the grand alliance along with the main opposition party bangladesh nationalist party would actually be a positive news for the population and they want to have their choice of voting for the candidate of their choice they don't want to repeat of the two thousand and fourteen election which was marred with a lot of violence it was a walkover election now a lot of people we spoke to in the ground do still have some concern because the election will be held under the current government and they can influence the election commission they say whether they'll be really a level playing field opposition didn't have enough time to prepare for the campaign now the opposition today declared that they want at least thirty day deferment of the election which is supposed to be held on december twenty third now
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the government say they don't have any objection to the deferment for another thirty days but it will depend on the election commission to decide on that despite everything it was a strategic move bangladesh nationalist party specially could have lost its registration with the election commission for not participating the next election so by and large this would be a good news for the population it be a break from done certainly the that the country was facing within the last two months. north and south korea of both was drawn troops from eleven guard posts inside the demilitarized zone which divides the two countries the steps were agreed during recent into korean talks and the truce village of panmunjom to a discussing demolishing the old guard post inside the d.m.z. is relations continue to improve around two hundred posts remain inside the buffer zone now thousands of people have marched through the polish capital warsaw to mark one hundred years of independence was jointly organized by far right groups and the
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government the government was forced to allow the nationalist organizations to take part in the rally after they had threatened to use the same route. well now fountains of ships were sunk during the second world war their wrecks litter the ocean floors decades of corrosion tidal movements and storms of course some of them to break up and leak oil but a couple from australia has come up with a plan to stop an ecological disaster under thomas reports from newcastle. to rob the films of the nonstop offensive in the pacific the pacific ocean saw some of the best system able to the second world war more than three thousand ships were sunk three hundred of them while time it's now after decades on the water some are starting to break up leaking oil into the sea as recreational pull the wilma adams swam to wrecks in choke lagoon in micronesia where in one thousand nine
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hundred forty four u.s. fighter planes sank sixty five japanese ships. there the couple saw the early signs of pollution for themselves. like bubbles coming out of the tanks potential of the problem was spreading. if you look at other incidents in the past and you know what can do to the environment and it really hits you the couple has decided to act the ships are there and they stand a leak someone somewhere has to start taking responsibility for. no one can take responsibility for it also and till we actually find out the extent of the problem the information that's out there at the moment is so miniscule that research urgently needs to happen before they start actually. the couple is so serious that they've paid new zealand's government hundreds of thousands of dollars for this second time dive support ship having sailed it back to australia they next plan to
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convert it into a vessel that can sit over the wrecks of others sending divers down to investigate how damaged they are and experiments with ways to preserve them this ship is forty years old but it could almost have been purpose built for this task it already has what's known as a diving bell essentially a platform that can take a quick month's divers on the air that they need to the bottom of the sea and if any of those divers get into trouble well this. already has a decompression chamber on board that could save divers life the ship also has cranes and four anchors one chill at the mound is a kilometer age direction of cable and i believe the ship is very stable in place exactly how to directly over the wreck where we want to work divers would inspect shipwrecks to work out the likelihood of them cracking up they could also
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experiment with preservation techniques passing a week electrical current through submerged metal can help stop corrosion in the longer it's thought genetically modified microbes can be developed to eat oil paul adams thinks he's to raise two million dollars a year to cover the initial cost of investigating the ship wrecks ultimately dealing with each would take millions more but that will be cheap compared with cleanup operations after the big oil spills from ships some seventy five years ago . angelus al-jazeera newcastle australia. does a quick look at the top stories now the french president on as a tribute to the millions of soldiers who died in world war one as a ceremony marking one hundred years since the end of the conflict called for the world not to forget the ideals principles and patriotism of those who fought us
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president donald trump russian president vladimir pierce and german chancellor angela merkel along with dozens of all the leaders attending the event. but the u t's patriotism is the polar opposite of nationalism and nationalism betrays patriotism when one says it's first and who cares about the others we raise what is most precious about a nation what makes it live what makes it great so most importantly it's novel values. and our other top stories fierce battles to reach. yemen's port city of danger of spilled into residential parts as thousands of civilians remain trapped by the violence at least sixty one fighters from both sides have been killed over the past twenty four hours a pro-government alliance fight by saudi arabia in the united arab emirates is trying to seize for data from the who theories the white house has confirmed that u.s. president donald trump and the turkish leaders. discussed how to respond to the murder of jamal khashoggi. friends and colleagues of the journalist have been gathering in
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istanbul demanding justice for his killing was murdered inside the saudi consulate there almost six weeks ago the u.s. state of florida has been given five days to recount eight point three million ballots cast there in last week's midterm elections an official recount was ordered on saturday in the races for the governorship and the senate after they were too close to call only a few thousand votes separate the candidates bryce's a yet to be declared in arizona and georgia as well and bangladesh's main opposition alliance says it will contest the upcoming general election despite the ruling party rejecting a series of demands about the votes the leading party in the coalition the bangladesh nationalist party has boycotted two previous campaigns it now says it will participate in the elections at the december twenty third calling it a fight to rescue democracy the ruling awami league rejected the opposition's made demands to put a neutral katty government in place prior to the vote they're up to date with all
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of our top stories more news coming up later on now it's one i want to east. when tokyo hosts the twenty twenty paralympics japan's most talented disabled athletes will get their shocks at bank and glory. but outside the stadiums is a society that still struggles to accept people who are disabled in the past the japanese citizens were forcibly sterilized for having intellectual physical disabilities now
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victims are demanding compensation of what. they were right that the way was. untrue embroidered on this episode of one a one a we make the people fighting to overcome japan of protection. even on a rainy day such about her looks peaceful. but in twenty six days this small town near tokyo was the site of japan's biggest mass killing since world war two. by. your intent by so. much chickenhawk. to kashi and to kick her own news
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disabled son was badly injured that day in july twenty sixth jane now the best all . access dog and i've saved a lot on tonight by one of the they did something when we did an adult day there not a case on it. in the early hours of the morning with a knife the kill-a way matson broke into a care home for the disabled. the famous i'm going to funnel cool right big book right big who got big quinnell frugal quinnell on along. a former employee at the care home when matsu knew his way around. as he made his way through the building he stabbed the disabled patients murdering nineteen and injuring twenty seven others. after the attack he surrendered
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himself at a nearby police station reportedly saying it's better that the disciple would just disappear the northern is still named dave who knew that cutting back on night day still nine to one up close to one so me and then a man done me so when you do not think i saw this in the. military sense. then you can do the utility in rome since you don't and i. did a. month before his killing spree when not super resigned from his job at the care home after delivering a letter to japan's palomas. in it he wrote the disabled people should be euthanized and offered to kill four hundred seventy of them. keysets on. more thought since it takes their. second car. and i stay warm coming out
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skit on the side journal today but we don't know. what it does that isn't in it but not this one and no i was going to comment on as there. are you know. there was an overall tone or. some other dignity on the net called the ninety who number stand up among. the owners first heard about the attack through news reports. as the bodies were being taken away and the police gathered evidence from the killer's house to keep her rushed to the hospital to see her son because we are all got along i got there now by my stand. and money. and. before. that it. was. joel learnt. that a.
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car or do that's not that or the. there at the all there then. you know get out a. moral code i was. done a lot there won't. see much. in the days after the cash he says the families remained in the dark so i don't know. going out more about the money there. were. none of my cunny very kind of his make i had to meet it. kazuya has a profound intellectual disability epilepsy and autism he was first institutionalized at sixteen thing i was shown while not the bunny. i was some. pay. them up.
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there doesn't mean. yes i have table. book i can't because. i mean my second home better condition i. stay so that the more this can go. two years after the attack cousin has busy clear recovered and lives at another care. but his mother says he is still haunted by what happened call him. once a month at a makeshift memorial families affected by the massacre lay flowers so that those who died can reach heaven. when a total stranger arrives at the vigil the owners are overjoyed thank all of us that
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have received. the visitors says he had nothing to do with the incident but was so affected by what happened that he traveled an hour and a half by bus to pay his respects how long that have been on it and then in the line of any color there was a man been in the store glad to be going into the saloon realizing of a not full welcome of. the only one of two families to speak publicly about the attack the rest of the victims have never been named. no council couldn't even look at the must do the wants to get shown why did six seats in the right ha. ha. i know cory is the matter saw you do him a day you don't need to has any modicum of personal signings and i cut.
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down from the institution come to pack up the vigil. was there all the good they are there the owners farewell and my friend you are. in twenty twenty tokyo will be the first city in the world to host the paralympic games for a second time. the japanese government hopes this event building crease awareness for the more than seven million japanese living with disabilities. at a training camp for the national team i meet long jumper. tokyo will host the next paralympic games your home country those that make you exhausted or a little bit more nervous.
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had you started training in high school at the time a does more junior was growing in his right arm and doctors were considering amputation. rational for the. wrong on this can all. but if i feel guilty and or. with these tuman no longer spreading. paralympic career is taking off in leaps and bounds. after winning bronze in long jump at the recent asian power games how do
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you muse ultimate goal is to compete at the summer olympics. japan has a long history of discrimination against the disabled while the country was hosting the paralympics in nineteen sixty four people considered bentley and physically inferior being forcibly sterilized. the eugenic protection law began after world war two when japan was struggling with food shortages and
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a ravaged economy. close to twenty five thousand japanese citizens with sterilized over the next four decades sixty eight thousand of them against their will. the policy only stopped in ninety ninety six. for years victims have suffered in silence and shame only now some demanding compensation but such is the stigma most do so anonymously. in the northern province of her cargo key cooker jima is the first to speak out publicly on tiny green or in the civil war the net well that's the dream we are in this is joys of the money so regroup can do a new what the on the zero and the over all of us are now my oldest in a story they will restore and they think they need more eight days she.
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says his childhood was tough he contract of polio when he was only two and grew up on a farm with a foster family above the noise there while most. others in my. mind all did they could us too much stuff so the murder moved out of there with the one i see. so now you've been so good you have some really buddy michael moore who you are there buddy. because of the we're about as you are you go there you mean are you seeing one of us here are the worlds. sort of up on the there in there with us on all of. that i mean they're excited. when we dare not you are in that are not on the in then that are me she in this in my head with you are it under seal.
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