tv Radio Rohingya Al Jazeera November 26, 2018 1:33am-2:01am +03
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she will live with the new husband's parents. lance we both go to the country on a family residence permit which lie will have to re new every year but she doesn't have a work permit. yet. how . to do this for the. on track. list. i'm not. gonna happen. after mom doesn't understand the local dialect. yeah and them. you know i. gather you.
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live will probably never see indonesia or again. her in-laws sacrificed too much to risk escaping. through the town. but how many women will be burdened solved and how many men must live alone before tradition is legard. and the births of both boys and girls are accepted and celebrated with equal joy. china stopped the one child policy in twenty fifteen. couples and now allowed to
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have two children maybe it's time to remember another chinese saying women hold up half the skull. once held in one of australia's toughest detention centers now a world renowned surgeon one of many as follows dr moon. as returns to his hometown baghdad to give amputees the hope of walking again on al-jazeera. on counting the cost breaking the rules italy wants to spend its way out of an
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economic slump but it's up to its eyes in debt a big cryptocurrency selloff and a rock star c.e.o. finds himself behind bars counting the cost on al-jazeera. i saw this conviction that everyone has a deep reservoir of tonic billeted and if you can give them the opportunity wonderful things start to happen sometimes the simplest seditions optimist and pack for. the main things that sets out zero apart from other news organizations is that a lot of our reporting is about real people what about ideas or politicians and what they may want to do but how policy and how events affect real people it's ok it's ok it's ok to. rebuild the conflict that good operations happen if this is not an act of creation and i'm going to move to walk you. down like my family's status and wealth has benefited from their choice to enslave. some of us so scott
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even ski the speak out as a surprise that. this job isn't just about what's in the script or a piece of paper it's about what is happening right now. for this eleven year old girl football is a passion. and a ticket out of poverty. now she has a once in a lifetime opportunity to raise the stakes a little higher. in her long journey to success. championship dreams part of the viewfinder asia seen. on al-jazeera. this is the deal that is on the table this is the best possible deal it's the only possible deal european union leaders approve the braggs it deal but can britain's
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prime minister convince parliament and the people to agree. from santa maria and this is the world news from al-jazeera the search for bodies in lake victoria at the ugandans have drowned as they partied on a pleasure cruise more than three hundred thousand children now in yemen don't have enough to eat with health services near collapse after three years of war. and approaching. the protest in madrid to condemn violence against women to spanish judges clear to men of right. the head of the european commission has called it a sad day as the u.k.
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moves closer to leaving the european union leaders have approved a final agreement for the u.k.'s exit from the bloc a deal that's been sealed in brussels yes but british prime minister to resign might still has a major battle to get it through the u.k. parliament this from john hall in brussels. it took the european union members just half an hour to endorse the negotiated briggs's text and they did so unanimously a momentous step on the road to bring. the mood was resolute this is the best possible move forward this is the best possible for europe this is the only deal possible the tone in place is somber and poignant gardner thought how it will all end one think. we will remain friends until the end of days. and one day long. how it all
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ends depends now on whether the deal is indorsed by the united kingdom itself the live face of her critics to resume a must strike an upbeat tone what we see in this deal today is a deal that delivers for people delivers on the vote delivers in a way that protects jobs and livelihoods and protects all security and the united kingdom and as i've said before i believe our best days lie ahead of us for the prime minister the hard work is just beginning you leaders view briggs it now as a done deal they didn't want it but there's no need to sugarcoat it the british prime minister on the other hand has to sell the deal to parliament and to her own people she's got to convince them it's the best deal available. there is enormous opposition to may's deal at home and it could even be hardening with what's been described as her surrender on saturday over the future of gibraltar she handed spain and effective veto over future arrangements for the british territory the latest unpalatable compromise in the rising cost of brics it. if parliament rejects
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the deal in the coming weeks what then may was repeatedly asked if she did resign i said before it's not about me and i will say it again it's not about me but my focus over the next few weeks. as i've just said on making the case for this deal with the outcome in sat down to the break in gave may yet see britain stumble towards an exit without a deal or as a louder and louder voice is suggesting a second referendum on whether to breaks it at all don't hold al-jazeera brussels. or the man who is set to lead the house intelligence committee when the us congress returns in january has accused the us president of dishonesty over his response to the murder of jamal khashoggi island adam schiff said. donald trump's links to
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saudi arabia need to be investigated as the latest criticism of the president from leading u.s. politicians following the murder of the saudi journalist last month of course in a stand by let's check in with alan fischer in washington d.c. adam schiff he is an important player we need to be listening to what he says exactly right he in six weeks time will head the house intelligence committee here is the moment the ranking democrat on the intelligence committee he's talking about holding a number of hearings perhaps issuing a number of subpoenas one thing he definitely wants to look into is the white house response to the death of jamal khashoggi you remember just on thursday when donald trump went to his summer is home down in florida he was asked do you think the saudi crown prince was behind the killing as we're led to believe is in the cia intelligence report he said that the cia didn't make a recommendation he said maybe he did maybe he didn't know what the cia did not strictly speaking we're told that the cia they don't make recommendations they
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don't come to conclusions but what they do say is that we believe with a high degree of certainty and it's been reported in several lights that they said we believe with a great degree of certainty that muhammad bin someone was behind the operation to kill kill jamal khashoggi so when adam schiff appeared on the sunday t.v. programs he said that what the president is saying just isn't right. president is not being honest with the country about the murder of democracy. i think in part he feels that by saying that we don't know or that the world is a dangerous place or everybody does it he thinks it makes him look strong it actually makes him look weak it means that our allies don't respect us our enemies don't fear us. what is driving this i don't know whether this is simply an affinity that he has for autocrats he seems to choose them repeatedly over his own intelligence agencies or whether there's a financial motivation that is his own personal finances we do know of course he
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has openly bragged about how many millions he makes from saudi arabia. but it's not just democrats republicans are also concerned an unusual voice talking against donald trump just in the last couple of hours utah senator mike lee he is considered to be a trump in fact his name has been suggested this possibly the next attorney general of the united states it was even rumored that he could well be offered the job of head of the cia well he says that he has seen intelligence reports excepts that perhaps the president has seen different intelligence reports more intelligence but he says he disagrees with the president's assessment of whether or not mohammed been summoned was behind the killing and he says there has to be investigations in congress about the u.s. relationship was so do arabia and also other politicians talking about whether or not the u.s. should continue to support the operations in yemen there are those who believe that
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their involvement there is unconstitutional that is something that's going to come up in the next few weeks and of course we have the mogens act which is a human rights act in the united states a number of senators of us the white house to report back on whether or not mohammed bin someone was responsible for the killing of jamal khashoggi the white house is one hundred twenty days to produce a report if the senate don't like what they see they can then ask the sanctions are imposed against muhammad bin solomon so if donald trump thought by just saying maybe he did maybe didn't kill him and that was all going to go away he was sadly mistaken this is going to continue to rumble on here in the united states for the coming days and weeks alan fischer with the update from washington d.c. thank you. u.n. special envoy for yemen is due in saudi arabia on monday for talks with yemeni government in exile martin griffiths trip to riyadh follows a meeting with the rebel leaders in yemen trying to get all sides to attend the talks in sweden early next month millions of yemenis are still facing famine after
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three and a half years of war. in fact the u.n. says almost eighty percent of yemen's population are in dire need of humanitarian aid more than three hundred thousand children are malnourished health services crumbling many children not get to go to school but social workers if i think the odds to ease the children suffering as monitor reports from neighboring djibouti. it's a rare moment for these yemeni children at an amusement park in the capital sanaa they play and just have fun. because of the war our hopes and ambitions were destroyed but today we're laughing playing and we've enjoyed ourselves and did everything we wanted to do. they have witnessed the brutality of the conflict in their country foster and many are traumatized social workers organize the play day to give them some reprieve from the war. this event is to provide some help in light of the bad situation our country is going through our most sponsored this
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event as a way to give some psychological support to the children of yemen this isn't the first such event we organized about a month ago we also organized a similar event and we're planning more in the future they'll put in it is for these generation have been changed for. extreme hunger and preventable diseases are killing many children every day save the children estimates the daily average is one hundred children dying from starvation approximately thirty six thousand just this year alone. and that is a conservative estimate based on the u.n. on severe acute malnutrition affecting more than one point three million children on top of all the millions of children have no access to school or proper medical care aid workers say material positions that of the children most loved ones will suddenly gone yet many children's hopes for a normal life are dependent on
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a quick and lasting solution to the conflict mohamed. djibouti russian warplanes have targeted rebel held areas in northern syria just hours after russia and syria accused opposition fighters of a poison gas attack say t.v. reports breathing problems for one hundred seventy people rebel groups they don't have chemical weapons and deny it is suspected korean strike in the government controlled city of aleppo there are no international observers there to verify what happened remember there is a new round of peace talks due to start in kazakhstan on wednesday. a crowding in bad weather are being blamed for the latest disaster on like the torah thirty one bodies have been recovered so far in uganda but it's thought more than one hundred were on the pleasure boat dosage of ari has the latest they were having a party on the boat now their relatives are in mourning. close to one hundred people were on the boat when it capsized overloading in bad weather in the exact
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area is being blamed. to people were shouting the music was so loud and we thought that they were just having fun when the ferry capsized that's when we realized they want to help some of the fishermen who went to save them or side died because many people jumped into this small parts of this woman's nephew who is one of those fisherman who drowned while trying to save others why why did you go to the lake i wish you never went there a nearby resort has been turned into a morgue as police continue to collect bodies there was a boat which was climbing all of the shows with the speech from one of the island's cops says it. is just a bit of a tired over maybe a bit but. starting the bodies will retrieve the glass tonight. eleven with female poor men. both from the six.
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