tv Up Front 2018 Ep 23 Al Jazeera November 26, 2018 11:33am-12:01pm +03
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no three one of them say if. the woman can send the other two they said that the the would be not concerned by their worth more then i think. also going to mutation why because it was more threat than the woman was no threat then the woman who was not the numbers she did not receive by orleans. so at the end the dodgers decided that there was an abuse no the rape. sunday was international day for the elimination of violence against women un secretary general antonio terrace said every woman and every girl has the right to a life free of violence spanish courts received more than one hundred sixty thousand complaints of violence against women last year a sixteen percent annual increase in spain we have a comprehensive compression safe and no it gains in the base violence but only when he crap and is buying back by her marrow experiments six of violence is invisible
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story these are the also read these there are not missioners there are no progress is there not and there are no free dress for those women that are suffering. is excited by the names of all types. this year alone more than forty women in spain died in gender violence so if it these protestors there's still a long way to go captain stansell al-jazeera was sent up selby joins us on skype now from los angeles and california she is the founder of the organization women for women international that's a humanitarian group that helps female survivors of war zainab salbi whole significant is this international day for the nomination of violence against women and do you think this campaign can really make a difference. i sure hope something makes it their friends you know their rates about domestic violence and about bias against women in general has not been reduced in the last recorded fifty years it used to be one of three and it's still one in three women why i say sexual violence in some way some form out the other
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so there is it's and it's a problematic issue that you really do need to see to face it head on you know one in two women who are murdered worldwide are murdered by a partner or family member compared to one in twenty men seventy percent of trafficked people in the world this is the second largest illegal industry in the world are women and girls so something has to shift in here and it can no longer be just the women's issues it has to be also a men's issues frankly yeah those numbers are quite worrying out there because as you say the un's office for drugs and crime released those alarming figures recently saying that of the eighty seven thousand women murdered globally last year over half of those murders were committed by some members or someone close to them so how do you how do you think these figures will impact on what you're trying to achieve. well look in the we have the figures right now we also have some last two
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thirds of the world's countries have changed laws that made it illegal to domestic violence but we still have one third of law countries that are it's not even illegal you have thirty seven countries that is not even illegal to rape or to actually you release a rapist from any prosecution or anything like that if you marry said straight this so is some of the and the endemic thing we have in my opinion is that public opinion and perception that it is not privy to any man to commit such violence against women and of there is some serious actions the last changing is no longer enough we really need public awareness and we frankly need more men to step up than ever before now it's not usually most men who commit crimes but the small percentage of men who do commit crimes get away with it and that is problematic and we need more meant to rise up in here too to create that this is ok longer than zero and we've been showing some of the pictures on our screens i mean women have taken to the streets around the world demanding more protection from violence and
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human rights violations so what do you think needs to be done then to fight the evils of violence against women well through a signet we need to have more stricter laws the laws need to be really really implemented so often the laws get changed but there is no training of the police force or the judiciary. team or or lawyers to actually agree to prosecute the crimes then we need a public awareness campaign that's reaches out to men as well and to engage more men in that discussion we need the societal shift in here that is seriously seriously back. up just very quickly because we're running out of time violence against women often goes under reported why do you think this is briefly. mostly because none are shia women are shamed for you know that narrative of every woman as this is something everyone everything we are told to be silent less we ashame our families or our honor or you know ourselves in any society now you know we women what happens to women are bellwether to be directional for society we need to
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not longer look at violence against women as a marginal issue we need to look at it as what is it telling us about that nation that society and so often women hold that was sponsibility personally as opposed to because of public shaming or honor or anything like that even in western countries as opposed to saying the same is actually on the matter is they are the coward who is the man who would rape a woman or violate her in any shape or form so we need to shift the shame in here from her to him somebody thank you very much for talking to al-jazeera pleasure. will tell you what happened in the final.
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thanks very much for the second time in twenty four hours the couple the british tourist final between river plate and boca juniors has been postponed until further notice the match was due to kick off on saturday but was delayed after a fans attacked the bus carrying book of players heading to the stadium daniel swarmer has more. this time the argentine north or it is got the security rights controlling the situation at the previous day had spiraled out of control. the bulk of june his team boss attacked him players injured running battles between police and fans and violence inside the stadium the south american football thirty commie
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bowl said the much would go ahead and three hours before the scheduled kickoff they said it wouldn't and these fans for the second time in two days streamed out. i'm annoyed because we came to enjoy a party we were ready river were ready to play and because of a police failure to protect one bus seventy thousand fans are left with this twice i'm angry for those that came here from other countries other cities around argentina the river supporters who have had to return home because they can't spend another night here and have to go back to work as well could jr said the players after their boss was attacked were in no fit state to play either physically or psychologically and the prestigious. should be awarded to them let i mean we were clearly outages advantage yesterday and we ought to sporting disadvantage today and i believe the best for a bookcase to not play because we do not have the same conditions as a roofer. meet at the headquarters in the paraguayan capital on tuesday to
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decide where when and possibly if the game is to be replayed the copa libertadores final is still not over neither is the political fallout from saturday's violence with questions still being asked of the security forces river plate football club the south american football authorities and the wider arts and sciences sati the phrase it's only football has never really resonated here least of all now. what went wrong and who is to blame is still to be decided to name all the fans as they so often all have been left indignant angry and confused. by argentina yet again is faced with a dilemma how to tackle its violent. crime. does it when osiris in italy napoli's chances of catching serial leaders event is to have taken a blow when they were held to a draw by bottom of the table cave he was goalkeepers to follow sorrentino stopped
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every now please chance it ended in a mill trial harlan chalabi side falls eight points behind the dunces who looks to be on course for a record expanding a. five time world champion lewis hamilton ended his f one season in style by winning the season ending abu dhabi grand prix american actor will smith started off the race but then minutes later it was held up after nico holcomb bird was sent crashing into the barriers he was unharmed but was unable to finish the race for hamilton though it was smooth sailing in the britain led from start to finish and one in one hour and thirty nine minutes heat ferrari sebastian vettel to secure his eleventh victory of the season red bull's max for stop and came in third . i know next year and then come back strong so to make sure i try and come back with it but i'm really grateful for the. congrats and as you said it was dry we
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were dry and i think of the whole team will try to come back stronger to make sure we give him. a run in to take the. antanas caray should be defending champions and host france to win the davis cup final on sunday croatia's martin challenge was relentless giving francis lucas polio little chance of a comeback the world number seven stayed in the lead the entire match not giving a single break point the home crowd was roaring in support for the frenchman but chile quenched the title seven six six three six. this is weekend from the dreams and. just incredible incredible feeling to play like this in a final dropping even one serving in three singles matches this is that is just incredible the level of tennis from even today look up played the great mass first serve was was really really tough just that probably one point decided that's a break and just extremely proud of the rhythm in australia or the new women's world two thousand and twenty champions after beating england in the final in antigua it going got off to
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a decent start after choosing to about first but australia came into the final as three time champions and were soon rattling through the english batting line up a total of one hundred and five no problem for the aussies they not bad off with twenty nine balls to spare captain mag landing having winning run and lifting the trophy. it's definitely the most satisfying when i've been involved in. especially as a lot of company is the last couple of world cup exits for us and our team a lot and we spoke about that as a group and i'm not hiding away from that fact but i think the biggest things being that we'll be able to learn and really grow as a group here win lose or draw today we are really happy with where we are as a group cultures test you can win this really enjoying what we do and i think we showed that out there tonight. and the united states has mckayla shift friend won the women's slalom at the alpine ski world cup in vermont on sunday even with the
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dense fog the olympic gold medalists get to her thirty fourth world cup slalom when she ranks second for most wins in the discipline. and that's all you sport for now more later thoughts on the news not website there isn't a screen the address is there a dot com. all right that's it for me daryn jordan for dennis will be up next a moment with more of the day's doesn't want to stay with us.
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one of the really special things that working for al jazeera is that even as a camera woman i get to have so much empathy and contribution to a story a feel we cover this region better than anyone else would be for us as you know it's very challenging live but it is but the good because you have a lot of people that are divided on political issues we are we the people we live to tell the real stories does us mend it is to deliver in-depth generalism we don't feel inferior to the audience across the globe. investigating a murder by the indonesian military in one thousand nine hundred ninety nine al-jazeera correspondent step bos'n takes us on a personal journey back to east timor recalling memories which impacted deeply on her chosen career the life and the lives of others now and then the two decades
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russia seizes three ukrainian ships off crimea's coast. hello welcome to al-jazeera live from doha i'm martin denis also coming up. i'm asking trees in may to listen to water parliamentarian's or say. a warning from a key partner for britain's prime minister just hours after signing a break to deal with the e.u. . mexico will deport hundreds of asylum seekers who it says use violence to try to cross the u.s. border. and a final between two fears for the rivals in argentina his perspective on the game the day after an attack on the bucket junior's team boss. ukraine's president says he'll call on parliament to declare martial law after
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russian coast guard vessels fired at and impounded three of its naval vessels in the black sea russia says the boat strayed into its territorial waters near crimea a region of ukraine an expiring in two hundred fourteen moscow admits taking possession of the ukrainian boats touring the incident an emergency meeting of the un security council being called for later on monday by russia one of five permanent members yes collation in the hostility comes after russia used a tanker ship to block vessels traveling through the kurds straight between crimea and the russian mainland several ukrainians were injured rory chalons has more from moscow. well even during the height of fighting in eastern ukraine and the annexation of crimea in two thousand and fourteen the ukrainian government was wary of imposing martial law or box in announcements from petro poroshenko the ukrainian
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president on sunday evening it looks as if we might soon get just that we can listen now to what he had to say about the possibility of martial law. martial law is introduced in order to strengthen ukraine's defense capabilities amid increasing aggression and according to international law duty called act of aggression by the russian federation martial law does not mean our refusal to resolve the issue of liberating ukrainian territory by political and diplomatic means we have intentions to keep at hearing to all international obligations including the minsk agreement so what would this mean in practicality well. the one thing that the ukrainian president has said is that this does not mean an immediate mobilization in ukraine botts he does think that this will be the cause for calling
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up a primary reserve pool to be trains the martial law if it's an act it would last for sixty days initially and that it wouldn't affects according to petro poroshenko the situation in donbass east of ukraine if martial law is an act it says the president will not conduct offensive operations now the trigger for this has been the recent flare up of tensions in the sea at hours of which is a pocket of water to the north east of the black sea you have ukraine which is the northern coast of the as of c. you have russia which is the eastern coast and crimea which is the western coast to the south there is the current straits which russia very recently has built a bridge over linking the russian mainland with crimea now basically that gives the russians a way of choking off access to the ass of sea which they have just done by placing a tanker underneath the bridge now the russians say that ukrainian naval vessels
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have trespass into russian territorial waters and therefore that was the trigger for them to open fire on ukrainian warships the ukrainians say that six of their personnel were injured three of their vessels are now in russian hands and a situation which had been brewing and getting more and more tense for months now has flared up into open hostilities but we've been speaking to task could see who's a ukraine expert in the department of political science at the national university of convey of academy how serious does he think the situation is. well it's very significant in the sense to remember that for the last four or five years russia has been denying its military involvement in eastern ukraine of course nobody in
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the west believed russia but russia is always so good this is a civil war between russia and ukraine speakers and that russia is not present well this is this takes the conflict into a sort of a weight problem this sort of hybrid war into a more open a rino where russia is clearly seen from video hutus that's available to anybody who wants to see it as an open aggressor. and in that sense it brings the conflict into a different domain as it were. there's no longer and he pretends of hiding what russia is up to now mexico will deport some of the five hundred asylum seekers who it says tried to violently end illegally cross the u.s. border on sunday. more than five thousand of them are camped in the mexican border city of tijuana hoping to gain asylum in america they protested after president trump threatened to hold them in mexico until individual cases
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ahead by u.s. courts u.s. border agents responded by temporarily closing a major border crossing into southern california and tear gassing those trying to cross a ever present jordan has more from washington d.c. . after about six hours on sunday the u.s. customs and border patrol opened the international crossing at sana c throw in california that's the major crossing in california between that state and baja california in northern mexico the border had been closed because about five hundred migrants from central america apparently tried to greet each part of the fence between mexico and the united states and at that point borders patrol officers started firing tear gas at the crowd to push them away from the border it's not clear whether the mexican government is going to launch a protest with washington over the firing of the tear gas into mexican territory
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but officials from the interior ministry did say late on sunday that the people responsible for trying to breach the wall would be deported to their home countries there are some eighty five two hundred people from central america currently in northern mexico right now trying to reach the united states in order to ask for asylum most of them say that they are fleeing violence and they fear for the safety of themselves and of their relatives which is why they've trucked across mexico and are hoping that they can file an asylum application with the u.s. officials as guaranteed under international law meantime the u.s. and mexico are still in a standoff as it were a belt the process of these people getting the chance to apply for asylum the president donald trump of the u.s. doesn't want any of these people to come on to u.s. soil in order to file their applications he wants them to stay in mexico until they have actually had their process their applications processed mexico for its part
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says that it is not entered into any such agreement with the united states because that would contravene international law mexico also says that it's having a very difficult time providing food shelter and. emergency health care for the migrants especially at a time when the government itself is about to go into a new presidency on december first this is a situation that even though the borders have now been reopened does not mean that the conflict between the u.s. and mexico over the so-called migrant caravan will and any time soon e.u. leaders have approved a final agreement for britain's exit from the block the deal may be sealed in brussels but british prime minister tories may still has a major battle to get it through her own palm and joanna hall reports now from brussels. it took european union members just half an hour to endorse the
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negotiated brigs the text and they did so unanimously a momentous step on the road to bring. the mood was resolute this is the best possible. the best of possible for europe this is the only course. in slices somber and poignant godless of how it will all. one think a certain we will remain friends until the end of days. and one day long. how it all ends depends now on whether the deal is indorsed by the united kingdom itself in the 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 boat delivers in a way that protects jobs and livelihoods. and all united kingdom and as i've said
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before i believe our best days lie ahead of us for the prime minister the hard work is just beginning. leaders view brigs 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 the deal in the coming weeks what then may he was repeatedly asked if she would 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
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towards an exit without a deal or is louder and louder voices suggest a second referendum on whether to breaks it at all don't hold al-jazeera brussels the leader of. pay a poem which to reason may's government relies has again said it will reject the. as i've said we're not voting for this and i understand that there are many others across the commons and will not be voting for it either so what i'm calling for is a better days i'm asking trees in may to listen to what her apartment areas are saying and to listen to what those of us who are supporting our government in terms of common sense but i agree mother saying because remember that confidence and supply agreement was to be about shared priorities in terms of. certainly for us this is not something we could sign up to a football match between two fish rivals in argentina has been postponed for a second time.
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