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tv   Rescue At Sea  Al Jazeera  November 16, 2018 6:32am-7:01am +03

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and of the crime this was france for a population that i mentioned earlier there have been targeted sanctions imposed by certain countries and the u.s. is going to challenge doesn't that then. it will be more encouraging in others that so it's very important that other countries you know not allow the minimality to be treated as some have a respectable statesman when he joined and in this case and they know of a lot of countries in the asia pacific region i think you go and see countries and the entries are members of blocs like the shanghai russian ones asian. economies on the one hand they do to condemn and they and they pay lip service to what has happened but we haven't seen the levels of international assistance and we haven't really seen them distanced themselves from the myanmar government after all the protection of the myanmar government enjoys right now is because as a supporter of the giants in the region india and china we need that situations change and turn came when you sit and you look at the prospects
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for your people who are suffering in such a horrific and and continuous way where do you see the possibility of change and i'm presuming that this repatriation deal between the governments of man and bangladesh you would like to be scrapped completely i think you know we need to look at. before all this repatriation to talk about why bomb his government is source years of war repatriation we need to see this question you know where they want to is international pressure why not international community the reason or repatriation cannot is it is too early the situation it is still not safe yet why not they talking the pressure in burma his government to restart the full
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citizenship rights and to stop you know a general sidle acts against rohingya in burma where five hundred thousand rowing us are in rakhine a straight now you north one hundred twenty thousand are still an idea if they are not getting proper aid and chopped off you know me. as you don't actually there is you know many rohingya as they are not a getting access for food and medical aid and fishing in door pocked our people are leaving us team clams so they have to treat drug equal citizens like other nationalities of burma that need to be done fast thing before anybody talked about repatriation secondly we need to look at as an internationally protection is the most important one nine hundred seventy eight for you know two hundred seventy five thousand flap they repaired created but bad because of international pressure not as a citizen or at all there where speed less in would. in their speed around one thousand
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and if a one man or fein repaired we've run out of climbs or turn like ok i know late genocide it's got ongoing so this need to be stop this is important we need to look for the solution effective pressure or ion burmese got a little here no reaper term care thank you very much indeed. thank you as well thank you both for taking part in this program and as ever thank you for watching you can see it again anytime you like by going to the website al-jazeera. if you want more discussion you can go to our facebook page facebook dot com for will slash a.j. inside story and there's always that conversational twitter handle is at a.j. inside story i'm at martin dennison from the whole team here in doha exactly.
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when i'm on line for you looking at wildlife and how the solutions come together to benefit all parties and that's where we're going to have long terms of theft or if you join us on sat if you could take me around the content what would you tell me you don't have the set up your experiment of fear experiment in the universe this is a dialogue everyone has a voice you actually raise several interesting point there that several of our community members are going to join the global conversation. fresh perspectives. possibilities. thinness. debates and discussions how can you trust them a lot about how can work again with
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a monologue about she seems to be saying if facts all of us and we just don't know or care enough al-jazeera is award winning programs take you on a journey around the. only on al-jazeera. senator robert kennedy was assassinated in june one thousand nine hundred eighty eight. is still serving a life sentence for his murder. but there have been calls for decades for the case to be reopened including from robert kennedy jr. all the evidence was destroyed after the trial they had a legal obligation to shape the evidence because hand was going to file an appeal al-jazeera world asks who killed robert kennedy. new yorkers are very receptive. because it is such an international city they are very interested in that global perspective.
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you're watching all does their own whole robin and these are all top news stories u.s. senators are proposing sanctions on saudi arabia over the murder of journalist jamal khashoggi the war in yemen if it becomes law it will block or prevent saudi war planes from refueling at u.s. bases the bill has support from members of both the democratic and republican parties as mike hanna reports arrives today to call for an end to the u.s. involvement in the war in yemen well the issue after it was not on the senate to gender today it was very much on the minds of senators it was the senate that invoked the global magnitsky act in terms of which the sanctions have been imposed and while the move has been welcomed senators on both sides of the aisle insist it does not go far enough. senator rand paul is one of those who insist the saudi
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crown prince should be among those sanctioned maintaining muhammad bin solomon at least knew of the murder and probably ordered it he said in a tweet the united states needs to project strength when dealing with saudi arabia putting sanctions on people who are already in jail means nothing these individuals might lose their heads you think they care they are pretending to do something and doing nothing of you echoed by senator bob corker the administration today sent out notice that they were sanctioning seventeen of individuals that were involved hopefully additional steps were made up asked for a briefing with matters peo and you have asked for the come in as soon as we get back to share with us what is happening with saudi arabia on both fronts both yemen and what is happening as it relates to the journalist who was assassinated in my opinion at the direction of the crown prince of saudi arabia us and this from the democrat senator ben cardin i remain concerned that the administration is enabling
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the kingdom of saudi arabia in its effort to protect crown prince mohammed bin salman from accountability the u.s. state department describes the saudi announcements up indictments as a good first step implicitly implying that the should not be seen as the end of the process this is a step in the right direction it is an initial investigation finding it is important that those steps continue to be taken toward full accountability we will continue to work diligently to ascertain the facts but congress making very clear it will maintain pressure for stronger action to be taken by the trumpet ministration and introduced in the senate what is called the comprehensive saudi arabia accountability and yemen act the bipartisan legislation demands among other things the suspension of u.s. arms sales and a sanction for both the saudi role in yemen and. murder of jamal khashoggi if
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possible could face the veto of a president too strongly opposed to economic moves against saudi arabia but this veto in turn could be overridden by a two thirds majority vote which with congress in its present angry mood is a real possibility mike hanna al-jazeera washington well as mentioned in most reports saudi arabia is seeking the death penalty for five suspects charged with the murder of the journalist. riyadh insists that prince mohammed bin salon had no knowledge of the operation. and fall short of expectations or what's the suspects to be tried in turkey. british prime minister trees may is standing firm as politicians from her conservative party launch a bid to remove her from office is in response to her draft of all steel to withdraw the united kingdom from the european union hardliners say the deal makes too many concessions to the e.u. calles has broken out in sri lanka's parliament are to the speaker declared the
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country has no functioning prime minister or cabinet insoles some objects were thrown around the hurdles deepening of the country's political crisis the recently appointed prime minister in the rajapaksa insists that he's still in charge and is now calling for a general election and bangladesh has suspended plans to return written during fiji's to me in law officials say they were unable to find anyone who was willing to go thousands of writing to have been protesting in refugee camps saying it's not safe for them to return home those were the headlines and back with more news here on al-jazeera in half an hour we continue with witness do stay with us.
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when i was twelve i saw a film in school about christiane that after the war. the film was supposed to scare us away from drugs instead it showed me a world i had never seen before. the music the atmosphere was fascinating and all i wanted was to be like her cheating herin in a bad nightclub. anything
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dark and dangerous attracted me. when i was sixteen i joined the far right. yeah yeah. yeah but. the way i did it was i was all they are and. i've kept the propaganda for more than twenty years. and my family has just moved to a new place and i have to get rid of famous i don't need. it's embarrassing to look at. it's hard to understand now what was so appealing about it.
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but when i was a teenager the propaganda i was very important. the music the films be watched it was like a drug. i remember how to not symbols fall so for bitten my heart started beating foster. for many years i kept my pasta secret but every time a violent extremism is mentioned or when a terror attack happens it also speaks. what if i had stayed in the movement.
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i don't remember what's gave me the courage to leave the museum and. i just remember very difficult. i want to meet other former extremists and find out both made them change. thanks it. was.
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i remember reading about the. leader. when i was still in the movement. when i left the movement ingo was an inspiration to me if he could do it i could do it. but. it was taken months to get to meeting with ingo and i have to promise not to share any information about his current life but. the young nazi days are attracted a lot of media attention. they called him the fuehrer of. a german filmmaker winfried born knowing it started making a documentary about ingo. it was the beginning of her life changing process. the filmmaker followed around for about
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a year questioning everything. else on this fall he was on top because of about the way i love your life nothing could come from a top. level. concomitant. he hated me. if only hated me and the first six months we were shooting here still hated me i mean because i was so i mean for something totally to disagree with you know i was disgusted by everything i said. because of the need to get to the show is sort of him and she sort of the little one toy with me on mobile phone so consonance for the shows that was for show in vegas you know it's all. so much to. just walk on all those notes just. a little. celestial almost allude to the.

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