tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera December 1, 2018 5:00am-6:01am +03
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israeli parents feel they are very worried for their teenagers and this is why this conflict and this is your patient this is the reason for the conflict has to end and let's do it very seriously because when we are right there hatred just exactly both sides you are how are you let me take this let me sorry mr booty let me just ask out another question here you go to hawaii let's talk for a moment about specifically what kind of effect this is having on palestinian children not just the children who've been imprisoned but also the children who who might want to come out and demonstrate what kind of an impact is all of this having on them. i'd just like to correct something that was said earlier that this is palestinian teenagers it's also palestinian children under the age of twelve so it's not just palestinian teenagers but it's also very young children now the effect that this entire regime has on them is a very traumatic one and it's a psychologically damaging one you know effects for decades on but of course mr
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oppenheimer would say that it's not that bad it's not that bad for him as an israeli man sitting in tel aviv but it is incredibly bad for the palestinian people who have now been facing seven decades of oppression so it's quite amusing to me but certainly not surprising that someone in his position would say that it's not that. now it's really teenagers on the other hand eighteen year olds. do when they are citizens and really it's not a job or in a nut in an israeli army scuse me. i think the situation is incredibly bad and i think it's i don't think you know if you really believe it's really teenagers in the west bank who are heavily armed and who are crossing a palestinian population i mean i think that is a real comparison that has to be made not to go back to in terms of what kind of effect this has on palestinian children there are children in the west bank and in gaza who are suffering an incredible amount. as long lasting effects of trauma
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post-traumatic stress and of course when they see that their friends are purpose and sisters being arrested it's a very horrific and abnormal circumstance and i think this has to be repeated and highlighted the loss of palestinians what we have to live for it is not normal it's incredibly normal and it's a continuous structural violence that affects all of us whether we live in the west bank gaza. or in exile because of a bit of both we only have one minute left and i ask you to please make your remarks short but i know you want to jump into the please go ahead i just cannot equate to between an israel you to me were teenagers soldiers equipped with military equipment shooting palestinians and palestinian young people who have been individual cases maybe of people who might turn to violence but the vast majority are injured and killed without engaging in any form of violence just because the
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occupied by the they are killed by the israeli. soldiers you cannot equate between an army and civilian population as a medical doctor i have treated many young palestinians many children who lost their limbs who lose their arms lost their hands who lost their future because they were shot and killed by an occupying army in the occupation and apartheid and there will be peace for everybody all right we have run out of time so we are going to have to leave it there thanks so much to all our guests yariv oppenheimer. and most of apparently. and thank you too for watching you can see the program again any time by visiting our website al-jazeera dot com and for further discussion go to our facebook page that's facebook dot com forward slash a.j. inside story you can also join the conversation on twitter our handle is at inside story for me the whole team here for now.
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descend on al-jazeera. from hospitality to hostility war hotels tells dramatic stories about high cons of complex and last resort shelters in divided cities an exclusive interview with nobel peace prize laureates now dennis mccoy get an ad try special antarctic sanctuary follows greenpeace as they campaign to create the largest protected area on. an annual convention that gives a platform to
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a global dialogue on critical challenges facing our world a new two part documentary that reveals the shocking realities of the global trade december on al-jazeera. when old age back it can feel like the end. but the sun it's a new beginning and what at some point in life you realize you started to go backwards al-jazeera was inspirational stories every time. as long as she's healthy she can produce and do something like. a new lease of life on al-jazeera. al-jazeera is asked where ever you are.
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hello i'm don jordan in doha with the top stories here on al-jazeera the g. twenty summit of the world's top economies is underway in argentina it's supposed to be mainly about trade and climate change but the oakwood presence of saudi arabia's crown prince has a shot of the event after the killing of the journalist. to reports from one of. the world's most powerful leaders gathered. argentina's president. greeted each one of them. we have the obligation to show the world the global challenges of global solutions work climate change we can't resolve them alone there are several issues overshadowing the event like the presence of saudi crown prince mohammed bin
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salomon and his suspected role in the killing of a saudi journalist. then there's the trade issue not only the ongoing commercial standoff between the united states and china but also the signing of a revised commercial agreement to replace nafta mexico and canada have so far been resistant to donald trump's protectionist measures but there was some progress as i said the task isn't done there is more hard work ahead to build resilient strong economies that support families everywhere in canada make no mistake we will stand up for our workers and fight for their families and their communities. and donald it's all the more reason why we need to keep working to remove the tariffs on steel and aluminum between our countries the summit is a historic event for argentina and a chance for president. who is struggling with double digit inflation and recession
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donald trump promised the investment argentina so desperately needs we've known each other alone while we talked about lots of good things for argentina for the united states including trade including military surges and other things but we have a lot to offer a little bit of that same five percent is. finding consensus on issues like climate change trade and migration is the summit biggest challenge especially when some of its members like donald trump are skeptical about many of the issues being discussed for many that make it more difficult for a big breakthrough that will benefit g. twenty nations in general and the rest of the world i just see that when i say it is ukraine's president has been russian men between the ages of sixteen and sixty from entering the country from month the government in kiev is also impose martial law in the number of provinces for thirty days after russia sees three ukrainian ships and twenty four sailors during a naval confrontation on sunday the u.s.
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says it's cutting the number of troops to the mexican border from five thousand six hundred to about four thousand over the trumpet ministration says it now plans to extend their deployment until january many asylum seekers are still living in tents while others are in shelters made from rubbish banks and of quake hit parts of the u.s. state of alaska damaging buildings and roads in the city of anchorage there were no reports of deaths or injuries president trump tweeted that no expense to be spared and helping repair the damage. the rudy has issued arrest warrants for its former president and other officials for years now the african union's representative in mali is accused of being involved in the nine hundred ninety three assassination of show undervalue burundi's first elected leader italy's foreign minister some of the egyptian ambassador to demand justice for those behind the murder of italian student julia regaining it follows prosecutors in rome announcing plans to investigate members of egypt's secret service the cambridge graduate student
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disappeared in january twenty sixth seen his body was found the following month with signs of torture in the desert outside cairo and a british students facing trial in egypt after taking a photograph of a military helicopter nineteen year old muhammad fathy hossam was detained in arrival at alexandra airport last week on the marriott international hotel chain says it's been the victim of a major data breach involving at starwood reservation database the hack may have affected five hundred million accounts marriott says it's been happening since twenty fourteen the data breach could be one of the biggest on record exposing in some cases credit cards passport numbers and dates but those were the headlines three years continues here on al-jazeera after al-jazeera correspondent state you.
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when. my name is got them saying. i work a disease or making documentary films. ever since i was a little boy in my small village in india my dream was to make bollywood films so five years ago i decided i was finally going to do it. and there was one which was closest to my heart of my one village and its dance hall mission.
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every day after work weekends holidays and worse been working on the script now is the chance i get i travelled from doha to bombay to get my car school and. losses not that. it has to be other than. the. first you just how do you think. you started working in the past you are. getting that i got a good actor as good as all those are done so now we have at least for the second the stays. where we are finalise. things odd but it became the thought of the zionists came with a costume yet it was too much just a little bit you know and she's. still
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a little he's aged. but it's all the way. from here on the next plan we have apart from the crew meeting each other in between we're going for the look test and after that acting work so for the need characters. around it will block in one thousand nine hundred nine. i landed in bombay and i didn't know anybody here and i didn't know where to go. people in my village used to talk about general beach and. that's the only place i knew. so i took it an impeachable beach and i spin my post made here.
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my father had given address of. in a small church this is very some of my villagers knew. it was invited to go with more than they would know if people living in there. every morning i'll get up and go to a studio. that was not easy to come. i didn't have any experience i didn't have much exposure that i learnt anything from a small institut invented for and came here. so it took almost three months. to find a job. very soon i started getting good offers and all. i started with t.v. and then moving to. some big problems like being fired. took me
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to see my dream was always to become a filmmaker but. i wanted to do a proper preparation for last ten years i've been doing documentary films a number of feel very confident to the future. that. we just didn't look best believe me and. see the lead actress and lead actor. this story is extremely close to my heart because i come down to which used to be a very small town and now becoming a really big down so it relates to the idea of the film and then i read the script i was sort. of you defending you know.
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the perfect role and then say i don't think it is so i spoke just a short time a job out of. exactly this is the cardio deal i needed to be on his way of being what in fact is in that mental was not that much to tell you what he thought condy and on. all those characters in my film. i know them personally and for meat was important to cost actors who need to be famous as well as have very similar experiences so defeating natalie into the got to. talk to them look we did. since we've each got a we did once in. some will and we did a very intimate scene just to check both the lead actors how comfortable they are
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with each other and that was great in fact they were meeting for stan but both of the show hopeful crystal there in the same view did one scene with. within five minutes with the characters. and did amazing. delivery. this is our last meeting from here on with just meat on the c. b. i think i'm going to. be. but i was. going to have. come out. and used to be
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a small village. it ended up becoming. the largest city of this and. if you see these factories this used to be or this it in some of them on. almost twenty four say when the smoke coming out. very hard. because of this pollution in the factories. this is to be our sport this was us to name all of this you know there's none. thanks to this piece and. i had access to. the best cinema from it on the world. the land here is very rich. full of natural resources i mean. and unfortunately that has
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been the biggest. shock and. almost. the entire state is dug up. very constantly get moved from their own place. some of. it's very connected as well. almost the same thing is happening there in the name of freedom in the name of development in the name of technology how slowly and slowly we destroy ourselves.
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yeah man. dressed as women is the bottom part of the place to. use and there. are loads of them i didn't think in the attic or yeah i felt a little bit of the no. doubt knew of it but look at your four boys and no. wife no little. when i came to this business first time these are heard not existing it's a year and a half i'm talking about so that's why we had selected this village. in the other
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part of the bill is there is no none of these things were happening and now that most of our locations are here. and we're showing a village just equipped. into the world and saw we have to do some hard these things to do it would. make every other bollywood films my full music also divided into parse by an interval in the first part of the phone the villages in one of us completely cut off from the rest of the want and in second part when avoid that he says to the pitch. first i'm going to make him nobody was speaking to us it took all of steven put it down when you realize that deep in the speech in the.
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morning. there. anyhow they're going to. let you hear. what the market about. how you think i love you how do you know how what. you've been reading is. just well. if i have to work so hard for us more they will quit smoking if you do. i'm going to. watch this not just some light. but. at the back of.
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it. so this is exactly the kind of deal is a group in which was completely cut off from the rest of the world we had a sort of economy which was i see older than about a system where everybody did everything for everyone so entire community will assemble for the dems and they break for lunch and dinner but then government raised development received money raised all that. in my story are that there's. i mean this is exactly the same story you have to write which was already there. i think government has got the news of us working here because the only reason i sleep with this bill is because
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it would no more than if you had come there was no electricity no pool that there really are no you are it has wood has been electricity has gone through almost now we are playing a cheating game with government. we don't want development brushwood and they don't want us to shoot not developed villages. if you do everything. you have and we came here ricky ray. is gone almost the script is playing exactly the script is being out here. so i'm heading towards my parents' place the village. where i grew up. and in the last twenty to twenty five years i've been away from this village but
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perhaps from outside i could. really give the difference while people are richer they have about money but something went missing in the process. that's why it hurts. when i see changing and when i see people not talking and i see. it's growing into a more or less individualistic society. and i think that was the result i started writing and i ended up writing a vision about. this school. that should be the. best manner. so this very good tree has huge significance in my life. this was out of school in
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fact. used to sit there and. i finished my family education here right in the city. this is the place where first i was of. this is where the magic started. seeing. the change in look at the person in the those moments and i'll go and acting like him for next six months. the nearest cinema hall from here was in his early work which is almost fifty kilometers away from here and. i'll burn my school i'll do everything i don't walk there was no. bus would move and i think to go there so i would walk fifty kilometers almost a day to watch a film and then. come back here and the only thing i wanted to become in my life was filmmaker for the last ten years i've been making documentary films but my villagers won't consider me
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a filmmaker because my documentary doesn't flee in the nearest cinema which is still could be going to be just that's also one of the reasons why i want to make a feature film scan plea in the nearest city where i can dig my villagers and show them. look. the dream which had a started twenty five years ago. is here. to go to. see. thank you.
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general very to go in with the if. you. so ninety year old. the up here the much highly charged. of the bill and hardly. was. done non-con not be not going to. give. me the exam give the kids ages i could leave he was cool you want to be chick of the year like to put it on but i got the. one i like i suggest it was for everyone in the can slip of the name of this clinic now you. came back the whole. time clearly you got a mama didn't i will my i'm going to let it out of gaga cannier now god be the
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limpid you know i kinda think you know what i want to hide out in a gig and i was so gentle with the book of the. big dog on the how to go granny does some dog on the of the ground well arguably got up wasn't going to go easily go well i mean it would be happening because. this would lead to see didn't want to leave this was. sudden give me a tissue which were getting bigger they can you see when i said. this is very close to what it was little things had a cement footing has come there was muslim including the biggest thing which hurts me is this war because i used to run from you for the and. not because that belongs to my end of the income and both of these and have decided to keep the war so they
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don't buy. this used to be my to. this me this has cheated it's got to complete. this is mr d. . in a school. that he winding back thirty years this place was completely different job in a few ways everything was and. it was one of the. most self-reliant village. it had its own economy. everything got produced here people were happy there was no delusion here. everybody celebrated if you're history so that is some very fundamental question we need to ask ourselves and that's what this can. just put sort of to india side by side for people to see and decide. which was good
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a local exhibit i thought but i don't get. others to do what i believe it is a good investment you ask your nose let it. eat you up ok you. know you've practiced for but i'm here. to see if it i go. with you very much with that question and i'll. if i like you. all the crew members and entire cast is here today. i took them to all the locations and said everybody now knows. where basically they belong this is a good deed told us to interact with each other our.
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sure because looking in everything there will be a lot of inconvenience but you need to just raise your right people and it will get sorted immediately for sure every evening will have a production meeting and then it would ease we'll discuss together this work hard. to make a beautiful one back up. over one hundred years ago britain and france made a secret deal to divide the middle east between them now we can draw him in the second episode we explore the lasting effects of this agreement if there is a original set because it's at those borders were drawn without consulting the people who have to live with it. sykes p.
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