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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  November 26, 2018 9:00pm-10:01pm +03

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with countries wishing to end french or british colonial rule. in one thousand and five the german cause or threw his support behind morocco's bid for independence and to underscore that position the kaiser made a state visit to morocco that year. germany lost eight million citizens to world war two and faced the post-war years with a severe manpower shortage. to rebuild germany needed men and negotiated guest worker agreements with countries across southern europe and by the mid one nine hundred sixty s. morocco and to new zealand. shift sabri a german of tunis in descent. had been a spiritual guide to many arabs who came from north africa since the one nine hundred sixty s. . but that. is. the statement from
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them. little. stereo well i'm your. mother. i was c.s.a. way over to mr sharon janet could be a. how many. people better than me what i like when i actually had to. body the. last almost a month and we had already having this but. what i can. if you have it be led when we. have been led to have that's when i'll be at. home. we year. old woman.
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i thought coffee been especially the congeal of the initial fear. the going to have. and how. it was small local tunisian and then. he wouldn't. name a. guest by it was intent on straight but it's the classic. one should. have to be an indian zip to yon to see that and dutch front. naima in and took one out of. the issue of large scale immigration to germany has become a national discussion. even in the country's vast museums. well at
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home in the gardens there's torsional you know we here at the exhibition multicultural country from the creation we have in germany a very emotional discussion about the creation. since the beginning germany was a country of immigration and here we want to show the creations from the fifty's up to now when he see a little bit how people were coming how they would see fit and what was the view from the german side on these guest workers who were coming. over in the sixty's germany had the same to cream in a cream and with with my rocor and two museum right with turkey so that came already as well and from tunisia as well but basically from the local guest workers it passed a little bit a notice. me train with them and you know it was some whole invisible but is
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interesting for me also to see how the people tried and i'm damon try to do to invoke themselves in that political movement some to ask for that rights and. that is what we wanted to show here as well that the migrants were in tier like then it's not something that you only can talk about but that you have and wants to you know so we show on this side we showed we have here an opposition that has won the voice of the my quince and here as well the wards of. the discussion in the german society with all the fears and. prejudice and already in the in the in the eighty's the ship is full and here we have a sense that it's fascinating. character to chose the current dorm the cathedral in cologne surrounded by minarets so representing the fear of a completely overwhelming that. movement in germany and that is from ninety eighty
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six. despite islamophobia dating back decades the overall attitude towards foreigners in germany's is still inclusive in de mass indium yet stiffish thing and mustn't have the sheens in on this for fairly here and the rest he gave in how to stimulate their stock kept that to shine and it also would a game like that. though it's a bit zero tax cuts here. in two thousand and fifteen frank walter steinmeier germany's foreign minister explained to government critics that with a shrinking workforce and an aging population the german economy needed the manpower refugees could provide.
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german trains are a lifeline in my search for fellow arabs across this vast country. and maddi allaire we came to cologne to study sociology in one thousand nine hundred two he's an activist trying to stop deportations of young arabs and the aftermath of the cologne new year's eve events close to twenty have already been deported and two arrested. there that will do a money at about. the what the world nibbling at the bat. well wolf the.
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mossad. yeah. the. queen. and how he. let the i think there is we have done. what the cable done in. mattie's words reflect my own belief that our exile may be rooted in our nation's lack of democratic rights and responsibilities. in the small town of koblenz just outside cologne a syrian refugee couple have settled in the countryside. i want to know how they are doing out there in the german woods. and also the. said.
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in the weekend firstly. you see the. houses. in the exact are somehow. so my you spend several months in an apartment in cologne and hated that. imagine a kennedy about her for. a for anything. any markdown feeling among. the tech million mom knows i'm a minute hasn't been diminished my asshole and. how does she ever get some money back. as it is just a yup. i'm not going here saudi you submissive was the one with the real hannah and you had gotten lucky. abdullah and so may have differing views on
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raising their daughter and the possibility of returning to syria one can affect could be a promise and a minty lottery although most of them. be admissable to simulate most to his muslim one in kenya that must have a message to it that's what i'm about. right. now are you right. dr gaby viber is a german physician and one of the founders of cafe palestina a cultural organization promoting arab and palestinian issues in the southern city of hi book when she found out about my newspaper she invited me to come and meet
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members of the arab community there including her own family. i'm glad gaby speaks very good english because for me doing an interview in german is still very difficult. so you see we have all different kinds of things people from the region they are selling their products and. you know they work in the field steering that we can this is the ok show for them to to come and sell also to make some profit and people love to come here because the atmosphere is very special. you know i think of it palestine we have been let's say there were times where we have been between five and ten women who are doing a lot of things in six years we did more than one to one hundred twenty events and here is the. hands.
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on. the side of. this is the army at the. gabby introduces me to a german palestinian i'm going to gyptian friend over coffee in the sky book market cafe. the mystery of what happened to germany's earlier our community is about to unravel before my eyes. i mean how dad was born in germany to a palestinian father and a german colombian mother and in the comfort of god beaver's garden he explains his relationship with his are a parrot it's the nice thing about it is that my father was able to transmit through music his love and his appreciation to his own culture so it was really
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always been living the arabic culture in a very emotionally attached and with the food and with my this nice combination of sharing community food music art. that was basically you know i'm able to feel like an arab feel like yourself american or feel like a european like a german of course my name sometimes they would make a little bit fun because it's like me asylum mia salami you know the salami you know the example kids would say something about but i was laughing at it too i mean i made the best of his multi ethnic heritage his experience gives me hope get his daughter marry mark you like is also another half german half arab child of an earlier arab immigrants like never and that's in german you know you know. just. dish but. in this especially assamese.
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mission you don't fit into a film a sewer palestinians are. published you know. and you also. saw mine leave. some except sash they are so as our goal is to go to work. for me. have i let mine a foreign and i'm just fine i was often a he. owned up me of rising food but i shouted titian stunt of the eye and said to me that's. my palestinian. i'm like i mean maybe i'm faced considerable prejudiced at school. but i wish nominal museum conduct has been on all cylinders and i wasn't just made here and it's been this
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into again to come next it's mine if i'm needed here. on my mama's it's not so how's a soviet dispiriting endorsement is. assets money on a storage shed so money. is spent at. the hundred. the difficulties might be i'm faced growing up here gave me pause for thought. i'm beginning to realize that the journey of germany's our ups as a times been a painful one. how was it for you it was difficult i think it started at that time already this picture of. people who are not.
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being fanatics like today also. what made it difficult for me was the environment and fear of my parents and trying to manipulate and influence me and at a certain time to kick me out of the house. and. it was very heavy want to go to children they have a name i think. first and last which was also a big problem for my parents they wanted them to be have to german last name at least and they asked me all the time why do you choose arabic names they have names they live in germany. they should consider being germans it makes it not easy for them as well sometimes in school or even if they apply for jobs and so. they can have a disadvantage of course with names. came
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to germany in one nine hundred eighty to train as a psychotherapist his motives father and gabby's ex-husband. you saw the miners or money on a money out there yet when i lived. in the match from which the amount of money said you'd been. i'm of the rock that i had. a lot of money and force on. the beaches did a kid in marriage and connected ness more than me. and i asked him how he perceives the identity of his children a sort of. in the kind of your dorm a small money you have the power. money
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you've got but. when all ages back it can feel like the end. but. it's a new beginning you might have them at some point in life you realize you started to go backwards al-jazeera was inspirational stories every time and. as long as she's healthy she can produce and do something like. a new lease of life on al-jazeera. the latest news as it breaks an army of volunteers has come together to help with the influx of tens of thousands of evacuees with detailed coverage but now president of the detective says there's not much that can be done the south china sea is now we find ourselves. from around the world challenges into aid sector in chad are
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reaching families through return for many are now back in the villages they fled when the worst are. over a hundred years ago britain and france made a secret deal to divide the middle east between them now we can draw them in the second episode we explore the last thing the affects of this agreement that there is a of original sin to sikes because it's at those borders were drawn with consulting the people who have to live with the. psych speak. in the sun. this is al jazeera i'm doubting with a check on your world headlines turkish police investigating the murder of. or searching to vote was one hundred kilometers outside of istanbul the remains of the
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saudi journalist haven't been found since he was killed inside the saudi consulates last month mohamed is in istanbul. this search today is a bit bigger. operation today they are searching those two villas and they are different from the village they searched about a month ago right after the crime so today they have brought drones and they have brought sniffer dogs and they have drained away in one of the two villages to find out if the body has been dumped or parts of it have been dumped inside that well so it's a large operation today and the poverty the turkish security off oddities have indications or new clues that may be a part a pos of that body have been dumped there but we're not sure they have not because . while staying in turkey a military helicopter has crashed in istanbul killing four soldiers on board it came down in a residential area on the asian side of the city. the british academic jailed for
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life for spying in the united arab emirates has been released matthew had just received a presidential pardon as part of the u.a.e. is national day celebrations his arrest while researching the u.a.e. security strategy threatened relations with britain britain's foreign secretary said his conviction shouldn't have happened. the truth is that we should never got to hear and we are deeply perplexed as to how it happened but we also want to recognize that the crown prince of united arab emirates crown prince moment and the foreign minister abdullah bin so i have been working very very hard to try and resolve this situation they do recognize the importance of the strategic relationship between the u.k. and the u.a.e. they have reflected on that importance in the decision that they have made today
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nato says it will hold emergency talks later today with ukraine over the crimea naval standoff the russian navy has reopened a shipping channel in the black sea where ukrainian sailors were shot and taken prisoner and the u.n. security council has called an emergency meeting later today those are the headlines it's back to the new germans taxed on al-jazeera and then it's the news hour see if. the story of gabby salim and mariam has made me more curious. i want to know if other arab german families have faced similar pressures and challenges. them in. the line of work. or. if you have been sighting of. all of your. website. yesterday lala b. is a friend of him and he came to germany as a business student from syria nearly six decades ago. and. jani therapy it
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is slimy of the one of the months to have the young muslim all of his posts. run on american thought so no bloody hell do i feel blessed by a. little more i ask about how he raised his children that worked on. all their four hundred mostly when i was young we've been little thought was that the really maybe are for can have a bit too. do a flock. to mark his fiftieth year in germany yes a lot to be both a four thousand euro advertisement in local newspapers thanking germany for welcoming him five decades earlier and for granting him citizenship i miss out on the shore and on a so visuals of money
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a government. sometimes i feel each one of the half a million arabs who came to germany before us has had a different experience and no just different feelings towards their adopted homeland. since the exodus from syria and iraq in particular the arab population in germany has tripled. it's very difficult for us to go back to our countries because our people there they haven't been this this long way with us in the monsoon was born to egyptian and lebanese parents and came here after marrying a german forty five years ago she grew up speaking french and the shy to express herself an arabic always kept the contact with with my culture with my people so they feel very it is and always said they say immediately i'm german but my mother comes from is that they're very proud of it my goal was always to see the good show
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the good side of the arab so that i accept that the music the literature the good my now there was be thirty two we have so many nice things so why only show those those ugly things hindes believes the hijab does not belong in germany although i'm not pious i disagree with her my mother is muslim and when i saw my mother sleeping for example in my place and i have friend and my place and they see her his job somehow like when. i cover her because this is how she wants to be it's her right to be as she liked in egypt you would see one woman dressed with jeunes and the next sister with the hijab i don't go thank you very in that country they do what they want it's here which is why because the eye of the other the eye of the other scare me i say that we're stuck putting us they would say see how they're
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like this and that's not cool i don't like this and i don't want them to look at this this like. i cannot teach the people how to be smart if they want to put all of us in one focus and once through time it's their proppants not mine i'm different everyone is different she wants to go to be with you were talking about the men just said you know the man hole like this or so think you know those difficult call and for this. and those papers but don't think me. on my way to the train station i find that my taxi driver is iraq he. has lived in germany for thirty years he reluctantly agrees to an interview but only if we don't show his face it's not up to me to form an opinion and i'll take that one does seem to be still limiting my
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mom peaceful intentions. i don't see any connection and diesel deal. with the dolphins and the twelfth yet unlike other cunt games with a lung a senate seat and no one i can stand outside. and it can be a lot of black and a million fine young men. and a state level to be and no one son who acts out of need. and so what about insanity or bad guys and i'll again say you know i don't think that it's. wrong that when i do most of the payout on that side. for going to fit i can log on. to that the son of man and. germany now has over one point five million arabs living in it sixteen federal
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states that's close to two percent of their population not a lot but enough to. you notice. the older generation of immigrants appear to have assimilated. their children for the most part also assimilate but those who haven't are suffering. many germans seem to be on the fence about how they feel about this . it's a indignity nine. air and i have a feeling that's and i will for bush to move us and that's in the moment as monday mentioned it's anscombe or that the public. transit. is lama should be able to in the me run once i've known zip and it's just a speed reader the size dimension. of the took it in fits and has mostly does most montra stay in one done proceed at last into santas spicy years and a slimy sea of all nations in islam and those on here decided to try to do that
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again on its own the turkish. that awfully goes this is snitched stealing their faith or. even my sins. until you niggers are going in fights. mostly. white on the litigant and it's only. from this community a lot of folks of which the low d. . students admitted early go on and i even their collective didn't intend on the presidency then to get off to bone. germany's most prominent citizens of our heritage works for one of germany's largest t.v. networks born here to iraq and physicians don't you. is a national celebrity and was voted germany's journalist of the year in two thousand and sixteen. as he said if underfund da bought us for to live eason too much he asked to meet me got zones for our guns divide in
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a family five different enough and present it and if that that much about him or even the mighty might my beamish on the management of finding fucked up my boat with us down much as it climbed just voiced or about us my mind would have found that it was of cornish and there was a as a host gunderson us one but we had to see him on the scope often by this as not really a mess about uncertain vasta were no i mean if one owns it had to him course on guns and kind of this community home so should cite did this community all my contacts. set if bynum's i deem it in focus been able to successfully mention a mirror on a mine up as a warning and i'm i'm a hotel hm that's rough i omitting it so extreme that fires don't you're made headlines when she responded to racist hate mail by correcting the german grammar in the letter and posting it on facebook as
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a kind of the insides of them so obvious in the entire time harbor a scintillation of must never be allowed to go on but owned up by the man answered the most and i visit the worst sign in the mass destruction bang and just make some . sort unless by money biased like this in the net spare. my human for the two or one voted off i'm on viewed. through this goodbye to office. probably not really spite it's been even type it's been it's been of all if it's just blue does to fleece. tom. donia lives in a multicultural neighborhood with many established arab citizens most of whom have built successful lives but now many germans associate them with the new refugees
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and jetstar to flourish for us. undercooked oxy vavle. disc they did it or not. yeah under guns even the shims on them and vic it safe by being able to make about zones for shift to happen i know of woodcuts ago fifteen of the fifth thing a mom owns a miss cup what i look. at it on the top and yet gets to it is a disco cup put us home given the mint so torn us absolutely divides in the thoughts on come on us is not too early for us we think wow the stuff me. the old immigrant turning against the new refugees. donya is right it shouldn't be happening but it is.
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i've come to dresden in the former east germany for a meeting with anti-racist activists. it's my first time in this part of the country i expected the grey side city but found something very different dresden was a center of german culture. germany's revolutionary priest martin luther came from this part of germany he was the founder of protestantism which began as a protest movement for social equality. my refugee solidarity meeting is in the technical school of the university of dresden. and what is the first arabic and newspaper in germany it's for the arabic speakers here the newcomers and settled also but we have a lot of followers on facebook well you have fifty thousand people and how fast.
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there is no r.c. place right now for us i mean we are a group of syrian and arabs so we don't speak unfortunately these activists are well intentioned but dealing with arab refugees is as new to them as dealing with german activists is for me on one side there was one of these stupid questions which came up always in the newspapers begin to discussions how much money does a refugee get already a refugee refrigerate gets more money. than hartsfield. did a good person hurts for receivers our welfare recipients to give their claims that the german government spends more money on a refugee than on a poor german. the fact is refugees and hertz for recipients both get four hundred
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euros per person per month. he stood looking over the next sixty six can't move you can. say the city says the good news that they all got it. it's monday night in dresden near the beautiful square showcasing the cultural glory of germany's pos each week that he does the growing right wing movement claims a spot to protest against the government of i'm going to merkel who they regard as the principal enabler for the islam is a ship of germany. to get us supporters are renowned for their hatred of the press and the police
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presence is partly to protect the journalists. but heins your claim was willing to explain what was going on and why is it the it's money how do i get because it's good shop with a good long just years shop or both were tearing it up see i knew bill wolfie he qualified has shown me it's a bunch of the out stars who are you you need to go on as is saw the assumed past and you can see because. police different pov tied to flourish in the damir called sin divided on me and i was covered under as for being that sword as i thought i was going to use of leave the on for good tour as in so noisy phonology percent was the mission mentioned on and far does these unmentioned nish in on so-called tool so in t.v.n.z. of a does moving feel a mention of years and as is the job done. you mention dizzy here but is
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the bacon is even born gustavus not so does sin can it be a nazi disease got some olive grove was a dog and. joyce did i'm fucked us once again is in charge of plots and. does your own so it is a shot in schism that he cut his young. daughter jots on busy indeed night somebody conned here. he. was a god. you needn't even be able to but mention feedin in the eye nonetheless protest them last night and then also since you can plug in happening is that you can design finishing time in on the six boys and for me thing.
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almost half the people in this berlin neighborhood are middle east and. it's been this way for decades so lucked out or city concerned about what the witness. will learn mottos it out of this ordeal so others here are a coward lot of those are certainly guesses you want to build on the ground are going to focus on. where you use a story how it was in life that has. nothing. came to germany to look for work via italy where his family lives he says muslims face discrimination across europe almost like a muslim and. it was the end as is usually.
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because underpins our rule was sure you were looking into one of the two others are wondering. who is the head of the could. i go to a newly opened syrian restaurant to see how hard it is for newcomers to find work. on everest the evidence of the bottom of the on the floor instead of looking out of the out of the right look out toward. the middle of how to have the love of a mother something like i'm to thank my lawn with enough. of the love the world for me while my sons in the. someone had to but because i wanted it and not let me go home i was at that moment the cloud that was all or nothing nothing at all going to differ about telling the story of one of the populace not listening to this call listening to your floor you will have most likely. it's
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municipal election season in berlin and all the major parties except the right wing a.f.d. have come to there's a two in a mosque annoy her and to woo arab voters. i think monday when you hear kids you will i'm going to think it is a game i think i didn't do it in thirty two and almost zero. chance he would just. say if he. wants michigan east of. east nothing. to eat you do stupid things when the young. if you didn't think it was easy. you could use it.
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a lot of mana dob. be mad. but most of them fell into a bet. that at the dorm where. they said then i thought cough into the office. and this with out of it of about. seven the assumption. let me. into a bit of business but you know home it this kid in most of what i know your cuomo say feed the intelligent poet in with you. but i don't wish to see this. be. politicized to the cuffed in holland in funk ice you need to learn to read in denmark. all seem. to be going and going to meet him and simitis was him once a new one that. has so many despots see it then got until he should be honest and
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kind in dutch and alice move your pussy and could enjoy a shunt. for folks who hadn't. this is one of germany's famous welcome politics. held in berlin as a way to get germans and refugees together. the merkel government was seeing they needed manpower for the work force were also aware of their humanitarian responsibilities something reflected in the actions of many ordinary german citizens. and i seen a commitment at the end of the other line is they envision there not enough in demand that if this is not just enlightening and that what this some call for to come but i'm too hot head for a handful of them or not the current waning. if it did it will be
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at a hearing that you have something. to eat and have to give up something he she is told by a band that it is not a singing. eat. eat. eat. eat eat. eat. eat. my trip across germany has been an emotional roller coaster. meeting early arab immigrants who have found their peace as well as those still searching to balance their multiple identities. i met germans who have welcomed us. all those who fear us. and those who study us. and perhaps by
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coincidence i wrap up my journey at the german celebration of their own history. of germany is full of surprises. i i i.
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feel that. it is here from this musician that i learned how arabs and germans have been linked for over a thousand years. when see this position of magic points you can play with the other one yeah that's comedian yeah nothing on this scale this. all been about but this man. with nothing but often doesn't get something a little piece of music if you go. to one club now that's come out and saucers on one foot forty cure hinson top of ford in this city oh not invulnerable to have music transferred to earthly good. like you took food like you know and yes thursday will fly do you think lloyd student. o'steen or not also not too good of you to look schmuck to just diviners and come off the guns instrumental.
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i'm left cautiously optimistic that one day germans will see arabs as a positive thread in the fabric of german society. and that we new immigrants will find more than a refuge. but for those of us who wish to remain. surely you will one day become a home. through tranquil arabian can you. find in on canned fruits and if any should go until. we got the usual shall was
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a cross sea amazon basin heavy downpours that across a good possible for sale i was with the western side of the country added super and also in ecuador want to choose showers towards of a plate but the majority of the status they are going to cost more than possible option taina so forget pots of. tools want to satirise a little further north would since two year ago i was power while aussie fauna dry warm sunshine coming through into the thirty's their innocence yet twenty five celsius for want to says beginning up to thirty degrees in santiago in the showers continue on the base if the north a few showers to into the western side of the caribbean but by and large it's clear blue skies always the walls of tropical sunshine set fast for the most part the base on the shallows driven in those easterly way in the c.s.t. winds bring the showers into nicaragua costa rica pushing up towards panama while possible to the off chance to jamaica by choose day but i think for the most part is that you fine and dry dry weather making its way back into the us central posset
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least over the next couple of huge swathes of cloud it we have had as a conditions around the midwest that's now making its way for a switch with a mix of snow and ice is some snow say for the pacific northwest. the weather sponsored by race. getting to the heart of the matter how can you be a refugee after a while it borders between five safe countries facing new realities that's from the very beginning of the ballet school providing context housing is not just about four walls and a roof hear their story and talk to al-jazeera day one of a new era in television news. leadership and this encampment that we're in today it didn't exist three weeks ago now there's at least twenty thousand or hinder refugees who live here. i got to commend you all all i'm hearing is good journalism
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business first of all it has resigned. after all a lot of cover ups. some form of closure we saw the syrian army flag. in the city as well as posters of syrian president bashar assad record. way from the front line but. that it must have happened now. al-jazeera.
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you're watching the news hour live from the headquarters in doha. coming up in the next sixty minutes a search is underway at two of the lines outside istanbul as part of the investigation into the murder of saudi journalist john madden. international outcry after russia seizes three ukrainian boats near crimea the u.n. security council will meet to discuss the incident. the top court in the maldives councils the jail sentence of former president mohamed nasheed. and a british academic who'd been sentenced to life in prison in the u.a.e. for spying is a free man. and scored the second leg of south america's cup alliterative dora's final is delayed again and violence and confusion again between argentinian rivals but the juniors and river plate.
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hello turkish police investigating the murder of john zero searching to villa as one hundred kilometers outside istanbul the remains of the saudi journalist haven't been found since he was killed inside the saudi consulates in istanbul last last month tony berkeley is joining us live from yallow where that search is taking place tony what are you seeing and what's going on behind you. or dream we're in a place called yellow over near the town of yellow which is about one hundred kilometers south of istanbul as a large villa behind me which is owned by a saudi national we're told in the forty strong search team has been here since ten o'clock monday morning they are scouring the village there searching the grounds and looking for clues now we are told that this is coming from phone records from the saudi consulate in istanbul around the time that mr karzai was killed there's
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a record of a phone call made to this villa to a businessman no details of what was said but the turkish authorities are saying it's come from a saudi national in the consulate called left turn it colman soft money abu hussein turkish media reporting that he's a left tenant colonel in the saudi defense force who has links with the saudi crown prince mohammed bin cell man there's no details as i said about that but they've been looking painstakingly around the villa today they've had friends it seems they've also had the fire brigade here draining two wells well in the back of this villa behind me also an adjacent neighboring villa as you know there are two theories about what happened to mr saudi's body either he was killed dismembered and his body dissolved in acid in the consulate or his body was dismembered and taken away in black suitcases which were purchased by saudi concert officials on the morning of the killing and then left the country under diplomatic privilege so the big question mark the turkish authorities want to find out what happened to
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that but if this does not yield any new information any signals any any evidence whatsoever it's hard to see where the investigation goes from here but still all fingers point towards saudi arabia and the turkish authorities a bit concerned that still despite their request they're getting no cooperation in this investigation the saudis are holding a number of people they say five are facing the death penalty yet there are no concrete bits of information coming to the turkish authorities and that's what they're asking for again today so. tony could the possibility then of finding. these remains that really provide critical information about how he was killed because so far the turks in the saudis do agree that he was killed in the consulate in istanbul by saudi agents but they have disagreed on the events leading up to his death and how it eventually happens. yes it would do it would give good clues depending on what is remaining but if you think about the meticulous planning
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that's gone into this murder and this disposal of the body to think that nearly eight weeks after the killing you're going to find some significant clues is a bit of a stretch but nevertheless you know things can be stranger so they are looking in trying to get this information i mean ultimately they want to find out where his body was to get closure for the family but also to give these clues as you say but the most important factor for the turkish authorities is that if what the saudis say is correct that the saudi crown prince mohammed bin someone was not responsible for this this meticulously planned murder was ordered by someone they want to know who the still that question looming in the air and the saudis so far refusing to answer it all right tony brett lee thank you for that update now speaking of the saudi arabian crown prince he's due in egypt as part of his first foreign tour since the murder of. mohammed bin sandman met the king about rain on sunday and journalists intimacy oh are demonstrating against bin sandman's plan to arrive along choose day activists there have started legal challenges to stop his visit
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because of their revulsion they say across all of this killing well the man said to lead a key intelligence committee in the u.s. congress has accused president donald trump of dishonesty over his response to the murder of. adam schiff says trump's links to saudi arabia need to be investigated allan fessor reports from washington d.c. . the us president received his intelligence report into the killing of jamal khashoggi and he's rejected the idea it firmly says the saudi crown prince ordered your permission maybe. maybe he did donald trump says he's standing by saudi arabia a country he believes will help with his action against iran and could help sell the middle east peace deal to the palestinians he's also talked about the arms sales agreed with saudi arabia as important to the u.s. economy even though numerous sources dispute the value in terms of dollars in the. but the man who will lead the house of representatives intelligence committee in january immigrant adam shift says he's seen intelligence reports too and the answer
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is more definitive the 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 but it's not just democrats are piling pressure on the white house trump our live republican senator mike lee says there are bones to be congressional hearings into u.s. links with saudi arabia look i don't know why he's siding with the saudis but i think there are things we can do to change our relationship with the saudis notwithstanding whatever his personal motivations might be donald trump me will come face to face with the saudi crown prince we heads to the g. twenty meeting of leading industrialized countries in argentina later this week despite widespread international condemnation of the killing of the washington post writer one leading saudi royal says other leaders know they have to do business
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with mohammed bin soman whether the leaders. in that summit will warmly. who would become prince or not i think all of them recognize that the kingdom has a country. and the crown prince. are people that they have to deal with congressional leaders seem united on the conclusion reached by u.s. intelligence services that crown prince mohammed bin soundman was responsible for the operation that killed jamal khashoggi senators will receive another classified briefing on tuesday that mean well increased pressure on donald trump not just to use stronger words but to back that up with action alan fischer al-jazeera washington. nato and the un security council are planning separates emergency meetings to discuss what ukraine calls an act of aggression by the russian navy in the black sea so the current strait is an important shipping channel close to the
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disputed region of crimea and next by russian troops four years ago and on sunday a ukrainian navy tugboat was rammed several sailors were shot at and more than twenty were taken prisoner or russia has impounded three navy vessels saying they entered its territorial waters without permission that's this spite a treaty which guarantees freedom of navigation the russian navy also use the tanker to block traffic through the straits it was placed under recently open bridge connecting crimea and russia for the european union and ukraine condemned its construction for threatening to impede access to the area and ships use the current straight to supply the ukrainian industrial city of mariupol its near the region where russian forces have been fighting the ukrainian army for the past four years or at chalons is joining us from moscow now that international reaction is coming into this incident tell us what the russians are saying and bring us up to
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speed with the latest. well the russian perspective on all of this is that essentially it's a big cynical premeditated provocation from ukraine now there are various reasons that the russians are suggesting that the ukrainian government might have done all this they say that it might be to bring down more sanctions on russia they say it might be to shake things up politically domestically inside ukraine and give better poroshenko more power in the country they point out that is poll figures are pretty low and there's a presidential election coming up in march at the end of march of two thousand and nineteen. and all of this feeds into the kremlin narrative that it had nothing to do with russia russia was just protecting its territorial waters and and its
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interests you know things quiet has to be said in the current strait now. it's been on blocked so civil shipping can get through and the boat the ships that russia seized from the ukrainian navy are currently sitting in the harbor of curch which is in russian controlled crimea that things are quiet down somewhat militarily doesn't mean the things aren't so pretty hot politically and diplomatically and russia and ukraine at the moment is trying to work out how much international the support it has in this side of the conflict and really were actually just hearing that ukraine's president has now signed a decree to introduce martial law from monday for two months so the ball though now isn't parliament's courts. yes. petro poroshenko recommended this as the prudent course of action yesterday when he
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convenes his military cabinet and from what we understand he has just posted on the presidential websites what this martial law would be he was going to put it in front of the ukrainian parliament to basically get their ratification for it that hasn't happened yet but yes the ukrainian president would like martial law imposed defectively this would have the the you know that the impact of it would be to suspend normal political life it gives. extra powers to the leadership it means that elections cannot be held while martial law is emplace it means that there can't be any political rallies there are controls over the media and that sort of thing so basically gives the governments under military context more control over the country in russia of course they're pointing to this is one of the reasons why the whole affair kicked off in the first first place saying the
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