tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera December 1, 2018 7:00am-7:34am +03
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lots of good things for argentina to the united states including trade including military purges other things but we have a lot to talk a little bit all times a day eighty five percent is. finding consensus on issues like climate change trade and migration at the summit biggest challenge especially when some of its members like donald trump are skeptical about many of the issues being discussed by many that make it more difficult for a big breakthrough that will benefit g. twenty nations in general and the rest of the world but how will i just see that when i say it is well the weeks leading up to this year's g twenty were full of anticipation all centered around the one name mohamed bin salma the saudi crown prince surprised many by attending this year's summit as world leaders continue to pressure him of the murder of saudi journalists. and fishes more than but as iris. there are diplomatic protocols so the saudi crown prince was welcome to the g twenty but his diary won't be as full as normal the saudi foreign ministry quickly
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tweeting no pictures of mohammed bin salman talking to other world leaders keen to show he's not been isolated or ignored the french president had a brief exchange at one point complaining in english that the crown prince doesn't listen to him i will listen of course you to fly. his team says he raised the war in yemen and the murder of jamal khashoggi and he urged international experts to be part of the investigation into the journalist murder then there was the traditional picture of the leaders the so-called family four to the crown prince looked awkward as he took up a stance on the far right of the picture next to him was the head of state but the president of an international development bank he shook hands on the far left the turkish president that was not done by accident this still picture the closest the two men have come since the journalist murder donald trump has been talking with other sodium fish oils but away from the. an exchange with the current prince
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a friendly meeting said the saudis a quick greeting insisted the president. the crown prince got one warm welcome and undiplomatic high five from russian president vladimir putin a man keen to capitalize on any fracture in u.s. soda relations it may have been a gamble by saudi crown prince to come here given the come international outrage over the murder of jamal khashoggi he's not been frozen no like some predicted but the greetings by one notable exception have been business like the meetings short and to the point his economic strength seemingly more important that has come diplomatic difficulties among the protesters on the streets of eunice that is who is angry to see the saudi crown prince being welcomed by other world leaders. this young man has just committed an act of transnational state terrorism that he looked at us and they're going to punish him and it's terrible what's happening to
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the people of yemen in the hands of this plug dish to massage mystic an unspeakable dictatorship of saudi arabia it's even more shameful that our country welcomes my husband's online. many g. twenty gatherings instantly forgettable this will be remembered more for who was there than what was discussed and world leaders will always have this picture to remind. alan fischer al-jazeera at the g twenty and. well hussein askari is a professor at george washington university he says mama been sound man took a necessary risk by attending the g. twenty summit. the photo ops that you will see is anyone with any sense will try to avoid him except maybe mr putin as we have seen and so i think he's taking a big risk you're right but i think he had very very difficult choice if he didn't come it would be almost another admission of his so he had no choice but to come i think that where he has his biggest problem is of course we ve you countries that
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they have already expressed that this satisfaction in no uncertain terms he obviously has that direct conflict with that of out of turkey and he has to avoid them and so you have a large group of countries because if you take the e.u. their representation at the g. twenty with also the president of the european commission you have a lot of them and so he has to be in one corner that's the only way he can avoid. ukraine has banned russian men between the ages of sixteen and sixty from entering the country from month president petro poroshenko says the ban will help stop the formation of what he described as private armies which he says are working alongside rebels in border areas under simmons reports from kharkiv. this is the latest message sent from ukraine to russia via social media a minute you video packed with action thrilled said to be taking place nearly as scene intended to show off the cranes defensive capabilities your brother had
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around so of your our joint forces operation is full of air defense weapons that are able to stop the aerial aggression of the russian federation. and as the live fire exercises were playing out on the world wide web president petro poroshenko decided to ban all russian mail policy holders aged between sixteen and sixty from coming in or going out of ukraine. just outside hockey hero one of the main board oppose any seven hundred russians normally enter leave the country every day. now the numbers are going down drastically with all the disruption that goes with it. brought me ukrainian he was supposed to be meeting my brother a russian national and his family they didn't let him in only the women. that man like many others have been involved in an important event
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a wedding border guards told people it was a funeral or a humanitarian emergency they'd have free passage. president poroshenko says the main purpose of the action is to prevent the russian military from the hiring private companies to. through the border to form pro russian squads to cause trouble. shortly after taking offensive action against russian nationals putting out this military video message. passive line on twitter. he told ukrainians there will be no mobilization of young people to fight or any restrictions on human rights as long as russia doesn't invade our territory and drew simmons al-jazeera. ukraine for russia's foreign ministry says they'll avoid mirroring ukraine's travel ban. talking about retaliation is just terrifying because if anyone tries to retaliate to what's happening in kiev now it
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could lead to a crazy situation if we're talking about this on a national scale then quite simply it could lead to a meltdown. has struck the u.s. state of alaska leaving widespread damage so far no casualties have been reported but aftershocks are still affecting the region. this is the moment a major earthquake struck alaska's largest city in one anchorage courthouse staff took cover beneath their desks as building shook the magnitude seven quake left highways buckled buildings damaged and thousands without power. you see the ground is cracked the windows are shattered out and we peeked inside and though it looks like part of the ceiling came down too so far no casualties have been reported but the damage is widespread and officials have recorded at least forty aftershocks the good news at this point in time is we have not been made aware serious injury or
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casualty be on the property casualty. but again we are just hours after a very significant earthquake the aftershocks are still continuing alaska is no stranger to worth quakes the most powerful quake in u.s. history hit anchorage in one thousand nine hundred sixty four measuring a magnitude of nine point two visuals are now assessing the damage with the state's governor making a disaster declaration as the cleanup continues and the gallica al-jazeera. coming on al-jazeera including preparing for protests why they're boarding up shop center moving potential projectiles on the streets of paris. awareness of aids one city in south africa is doing to try to cut the rate of infections and support african football champions cameroon district of the right to host next year's cup of nations poor behavior that story a little bit later. now
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the new u.n. human rights chief has told al-jazeera it's time for the u.n. to investigate the death of saudi. michel says there should be an international inquiry into his murder she was speaking to our diplomatic editor james bays as part of our talk to our just. the program for almost two months after jamal khashoggi was murdered and dismembered in the saudi consulate in istanbul the saudi and turkish investigations remain separate and seem to be going nowhere saudi arabia is refusing to hand over the suspects its arrested and it hasn't given the turkish authorities any idea of the whereabouts of the journalist body now in an interview for talk to al-jazeera the new high commissioner for human rights michel brusha lay says the time has come for an international investigation with bodies is it time for the u.n. to set up an investigation i think it is time i mean i don't have that in my might
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monday i'll be the secretary general to do that well where i think they're looking at which are the best ways of doing it but i think they should be an international diary and because we cannot do criminal investigation you need you need to be sure with all the mechanism that can that can do that i have asked the un secretary general to look for the best mechanism to go and. partly u.n. secretary general antonio good terrorists currently at the g twenty summit is sticking to his position that he won't act until he gets a referral from one of the un's major bodies the security council general assembly or human rights council and from one of the countries of the un we do need a legal mandate from a legislative body or and of course also a request or at least a request from from a member state that has not that has not come and just to be clear those conditions
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and requirements you've made those two requirements those are legal conditions or are they just things that the secretary general things he thinks he needs as political cover in case the saudi subjects sometimes had to give the u.n. it's hard to. separate the two it's the secretary general's positions and it remains it's worth recalling in twenty sixteen the previous secretary general put saudi arabia on a blacklist of countries that target children in conflict zones when the saudis threatened to pull their humanitarian funding to the u.n. the secretary general took them off the list the u.n. won't confirm whether it's received in the new threats from saudi arabia james bays out zero of the united nations and you can watch the full interview with michelle bashfully on talk to al-jazeera on saturday at four thirty g.m.t. . that is prosecutors that issued arrest warrants for eighteen saudi citizens
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inspect that of involvement in the murder of journalists. all are understood to be in saudi arabia turkish media says there's been no response to previous extradition requests to riyadh a soldier was murdered in the saudi consulate in istanbul on october the second sparking global outrage. the u.s. says it will cut the number of troops at the mexico border from five thousand six hundred to around four thousand but it plans to extend the deployment of those left until january on the other side of the border mexican authorities have been moving asylum seekers from an overcrowded shelter in tijuana to a nearby events hole but heavy rain is hampering efforts to ensure everyone has enough food and shelter bodies are castro has more from one of the camps in tijuana . u.s. helicopters have been buzzing the border between san diego and here to want to mexico even as the u.s. military says it is lowering the number of troops deployed to the border though
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it's tending their deployment until late january this is all happening as the central american asylum seekers who have been camped on this baseball field for more than two weeks are now packing up after two days of rain that turned these conditions unsanitary with outdoor bathrooms and people bathing exposed to the elements unable to keep their children dry the federal government of mexico has now opened an event center about fifteen minutes from here and is working to convince the last of these asylum seekers to board buses to go to that covered shelter that has not been an easy task though there are many here who are refusing to leave despite the conditions they say that because the u.s. border wall is so close their goal within sight that is the vision that drove them to walk more than a mile from their homes in central america to skate violence and poverty the vast majority of these seekers say they denounce the attempts to cross the border
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illegally they say they will wait even if it does take months or even more than a year to file their asylum claim with the u.s. authorities that waits is because the u.s. is accepting fewer than one hundred asylum claims a day leading to that day after day of struggling to get to the next for these a central american asylum seekers' mexico's. takes over as president on december first he took fifty three percent of the vote thirty percent more than his nearest challenger but the leftist puppet is just a polarizing figure in the country gentleman. whose new president well boy alone you could swear you will look. but daughter known by his initials as still polarizes mexico left his savior to some danger to democracy for others. coulter's nicknamed him love as
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a trusting him to come good on his election promises cut down corruption inequality in crime. cut to pick the country's most populous municipality has its fair share of the mold in the local market we found people desperate for a new stop service he wanted them to let fear if that's changed at the security because crime has shot up with off the most of people a lot of golf be great you know with a customer toward is a textbook i'm a low voter male young and university educated but his obrador was always said he puts the poor first but his appeal widen this election and those are good for him to look at with just i believe what people are looking for is peace security employment and petrol prices that don't go up that's what i want to. pose persistent problems among others the finally give mamelodi opportunity he's looking for in his third attempt at the presidency this is what he's taking on why he
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supports is the so desperate to change more than forty percent of the population is poor the murder rate is the worst on record and the current ruling administration has left a trail of corruption scandals you know i was one of them low says he can change all that because despite being a career politician he says he challenges the system. precisely what worries many here in point of known for its conservatism leatherwork and now being the only state that didn't vote for the new president that. every change is uncertain especially for a party that practically just march this year and is full of those who deserted the party. some worried that amla. a populist who says who govern by example gov a power to him so rob the reliable makes clothes ready we can stick to shoes he's already used a referendum to cancel a thirteen billion dollar airport it was organized by his own party the only about
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one percent of the electorate voted. it doesn't look good that he's doing that when he's not even president yet how many millions got lost their. spooked business sector are asking the same questions but even the skeptics we talked to joined with lopez obrador phones in hoping despite. the new man comes good john homered. makes crew city burundi has issued arrest warrants for its former president here and other officials but you're is now the african union's representative in mali is accused of being involved in the one nine hundred ninety three assassination of undying burundi's first elected hutu leader the murder led to years of civil war between the hutu and tutsi ethnic groups countries in southern africa have made progress in fighting hiv and aids but still have the highest rates of the disease and it's estimated that despite better treatments and
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education almost ten million young people in africa will be infected by twenty fifty for me a minute reports now from cape town. on the thirtieth anniversary of world aids day this small church to raise awareness of the disease while people here are celebrating a decline in new infections they say it's not enough government statistics show that about seven point five million south africans a living with hiv that's one of the highest rates in the world everyone should be able to know there's a bus it's their health including bags. in the last year more than one million people in cape town have tested for hiv that's the highest level of testing ever for the city in that period of government is working to mean that by twenty points each night say the same to the south african living with a side note that states and a receiving statement but it also wants to see it haven't done so in the way that
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it would like that among young women who want it. while the number of young women with hiv has declined by twenty six percent compared to men women are three times more likely to be infected the government is rolling out a treatment called pre-exposure prophylaxis were quick to help curb the spread of hiv it's a way for people who don't have the disease but who are at substantial risk of getting it to prevent infection by taking a cold every day the small ball unit makes trips twice a week to the denuded suburb of cape town to give up the medication staff see about twenty people a week while she has been negative this patient does not want to be identified because she's afraid of being stigmatized.
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