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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  December 2, 2018 1:00pm-2:01pm +03

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my job is is to break it all down and we help the view understand and make sense of it. this is al jazeera. everyone on. this is the news hour from al-jazeera. who's known calls just defies that security forces that attack shops. buildings set on fire fronts consider is a state of emergency after rising fuel costs triggered the worst rioting in he is also in the news a trade truce is the u.s. and china agreed to hold back on new towers for ninety days to give time for
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negotiations. to once again overshadows the saudi crown prince's diplomatic engagements with some opposition groups denouncing mohamed bin salman's visit to mark time. i'm joining us cope with the sport see on tape while they keep his w.b.c. heavyweight title after his fight with tyson piri ends in a draw will have all the reaction coming up in the next hour or. so the french government is considering imposing a state of emergency following a third weekend of nationwide protests over rising fuel prices it was on saturday the demonstrators wearing their yellow vests turned the french capital pretty much into a battleground with torched buildings were vandalized more than four hundred people arrested and at least one hundred thirty others injured there now at the point of actually demanding the resignation of president emmanuel macron who's having to
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race back from the g. twenty summit in argentina to hold an emergency meeting with his cabinet the anger over him across policies is also spilled into french overseas territories particularly the indian ocean island of re-union demonstrators there are angry with a lack of jobs and a rising cost of living so we have got. in rio and you know we've also got david schaper in paris we'll talk to them both in a moment starting with david's report from paris. the yellow vest rebellion once more brought the streets of central paris to a standstill balticon a tear gas and stun grenades were used by the riot police to try and disperse a protest as in a series of running confrontations. this time it was the arc to triumph that was the focus for some of the fiercest clashes the iconic symbol of france occupied and defying the country's civil wars. we had
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the arab spring and now we are getting their european winter. as the day drew on the violence in the surrounding avenues so police vehicles and cars being torched and even buildings at a light it was meant to have been a peaceful protest a small minority carried out the attacks the rest were demanding the resignation of president macro yellow first it. will continue not on into the night but into next week once again that actually become a real threat politically to president might cause administration from a platform in argentina though he had a defiant message for them open goes no calls just defies that security forces that attack shops public on private buildings settle fire but s three s are journalists threatened or that the end of the trail of sally at. the protests were even will
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violent than last week's demonstrations there were more arrests and war injuries as seems to tell chance of reconciliation any time soon sunday morning now in paris and here is david chase a live david what's expected today of a more protests expected. we've just heard from the say that there will be this emergency session of senior ministers the president the prime minister and the interior minister will be holding a special meeting to discuss exactly what measures they should take in the off the mosques of some of the worst scenes we've seen in paris for a decade or more and that is speculation that a state of emergency. state of emergency might actually be declared but really it's a state of emergency for president as ministration there is more than seventy five percent support for the so-called yellow vests rebellion and his figures his
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popularity in the latest polls up a low thirty percent that's a huge chasm if anything it's his emergency that has to be addressed here but it also must be said that after spending more than sixteen hours with the demonstrators over the course of the day yesterday that there was a clear difference between the best rebellion itself which was a peaceful one inside the seans elisei and the one outside the trail and that was very much the extreme left the extreme right and the angry amec here so usually if you come into these protests in paris they were the ones that were causing these arson attacks damaging property and trying to intimidate and chase journalists from the scene so you must separate the two. not just polls with you for a second i want to go back to some live pictures we've been looking at while you were talking the french interior minister is actually at the right now having
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a look you can see the graffiti on the walls there apparently before he heads to that emergency meeting maybe we can talk a little bit more about the politics of it all david because menu mccrone as we said trying to get back from argentina as soon as possible how serious is the threat to his his leadership. as saying it is a threat to him i said to me most of the protesters the ones who weren't involved in the violence was saying they want his resignation because his reforms his tax hikes on petrol and diesel are affecting the poorest part of the french community those are the ones in the rural communities who desperately need transport they can operate without that and so the costs are falling on them also the poorer communities in france not only in the royal areas but in suburbs right across france and it's always been a movement that is being organized by social media it hasn't got any specific
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leaders very difficult to deal with for the french government they tried the other day to it's open a dialogue keep the door open to them only one person turned up and he turned around and left because they want to lie to film it live and live stream it to the social media so how does the government cope as i say it's their state of emergency rather than the french state of emergency which no doubt they'll be discussing but we'll see in the end what the interior minister says whether there was a mistake in police tactics they used all their reserves of tear gas they had to they had to begin to some other reserves to keep throwing the tear gas and stun grenades and the water cannon at the protesters but this was mainly at the violent section of the crowd as it say that's not the main bulk of the yellow vests protesters they're the ones who are calling for his resignation they're not the ones who are actually doing all of this damage that extraordinary damage the arson
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attacks that we saw all the attacks on journalists the attacks on the police so it must be separated a difficult proposition for the politicians here exactly how are they going to separate the legitimate political demands of the other best movement from what happened from the anik here's an extremist from the left and right last night important distinction to make and thank you for that david chase and live in paris there. as we mentioned the anger has build into french overseas territories places like the indian ocean island of reunion yellow dress protesters there are also demanding president step down we've got some in a minute there for us in the audience capital sundanese from ada. oh is one of the demands being made by the protests and demonstrations in reunion in the last week or two the concern really is the high cost of living and of course the high unemployment levels sixty percent of youth in the reunion islands are
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unemployed in this continues to be a concern for the people here have also taken a cue from what's happening in in mainland france late last week and in the later part of the week the minister for the overseas territories did visit the union to at least try and quell the protests that we're seeing and the protesters a smaller group of them that are gathering had plans and we are expecting to hear again from that minister around what the government is promising and how some of these concerns can be addressed but we're also speaking to someone who has protested who's been part of these that demonstrations in recent weeks were speaking to one of the hydro and when and why have you taken part in these protests . taking part in this is because of. the high cost of living and because really we are just fed up but above those promises of corruption of abuse even
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a recitation of violence so that's why i'm here today. had do you think that these protests would have any result do you think that you would. be heard especially in what's been happening in places like paris do you think it has the momentum to have the government here you i'm not sure they are they're hearing we're still on the street some of those really we believe that they will do something but if they cannot do something wrong why can they do something when in ireland how is it possible. this is the first time that reunion has seen protests of this scale it really is quite unprecedented what is the reaction been like from police what experienced so the pulse of the office is the only the. acted with violence we know who got just protesting like peacefully with the children the women everybody was here peacefully we even did picnic like
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a superstar in so many things together and hearing people hearing what they wanted and they just came and you scratch goes against the use the tear gas is against the women and children this is not the way we are going to sort out things we are fed up of surviving we want to live and we don't want pressure we don't want to be threatened neither because i had pressure on me they were they said that if they see me. protesting again i could be deported or i could be arrested just because i forgot to change my address on my visit but i leave legally here i have a visit like everybody. thing years ten years with that which is valid so i don't see the use of putting pressure on me we're going to leave it there for the moment thanks very much for explaining the protests that you've been participating in people here waiting to hear back from the government around what happens next they said that will determine what they do in the coming days and if these protests
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continue. on the fringe element of are you. we have plenty more ahead for you this news hour top of the agender is the future of our world negotiators from two hundred countries making for the cop conference in poland also changing lives from outer space to russian company has another attempt at sending an organ print to the international space station and in sport the toronto raptors become the first n.b.a. team to win twenty games this season tell you about their latest triumph a little later. the news and has agreed to delay increasing trade tariffs on chinese imports least for the next ninety days the u.s. and chinese presidents met at the g. twenty summit on saturday and said they will use the time to try to resolve their differences the u.s. was planning to boost tariffs on two hundred billion dollars worth of chinese goods
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from next year now china has agreed to buy what's described as a very substantial amount of american farm energy and industrial goods more from china correspondent adrian brown in beijing. well the governments of both china and the united states are putting a positive spin on the outcome of these talks but this is not a deal it is a truce a temporary cease fire because the white house is still warning that if after the ninety day period there is still no agreement between china and the united states on their many trade issues then the united states will impose tariffs on two hundred billion dollars worth of chinese goods that's on top of terrorists that already apply to two hundred fifty billion dollars worth of chinese goods now the chinese foreign minister wang ye has says that he hopes it can be more exchanges and visits between the two sides just before the talks president xi jinping said he was very happy to be meeting president donald trump and the best option for china
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and the united states was cooperation but there remains a fundamental areas of disagreement between these two sides especially in the area of force technology transfer and the fact that the united states says that us companies that want to do business here in china have to enter into fifty fifty joint venture arrangements and then hand over their know how the united states is saying that has to stop there is one area though i think where president xi jinping is unlikely to yield and that concerns his industrial policy known as made in china twenty twenty five this is his aim to make china a world leader in technologies of the future things like artificial intelligence and robotics but the united states is saying that china will do this by heavily subsidizing the companies involved and it says that has to stop president xi jinping has maintained that it won't kill the thread spoke with us now from hong
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kong is the director of the university of hong kong's journalism and media studies center nice to see you case is given the timeline given where a month away from new tariffs coming in place is a truce almost as good as a deal at least in the short term. well you know a cease fire at least should see the global markets reacting everybody likes the idea that the two sides are at least talking to each other i think adrian brown your correspondent beijing had it exactly right this is a truce i would say it's sort of like kicking the can down the road so i think the trump administration which is the aggressor in this trade war just bought itself ninety days to come up with some kind of a deal. i view this more as a win for china than for the u.s. side because the chinese side has been saying consistently that the way to resolve this is through negotiations and so what they've bought is ninety days worth of the goshi ation so the question becomes if after ninety days the two sides are still talking but there is no resolution it might be really tough for the trumpet
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ministration the put tariffs on in the middle of negotiations so you might see as you know another that line extended on china says it will buy some more u.s. products things in the energy sector in the farming sector how much of a concession is that from china. you know it's really interesting i think it's a it's a minor concession on the part of china but it's something that the trumpet ministration can grab onto and say ah ha we've won something if you look at the fine print there what we've been able to see from here there was no. amount involved in that it was just we will take substantially more agricultural products industrial products and energy products without saying what that is and then there was a there was a subtext there that we will take it according to the domestic needs in china so that gives the chinese side a lot of wiggle room they can take as much or as little as they think will appease the trumpet ministration but again the trumpet ministration has a way of taking the small concessions and selling these as big victories keith
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richburg joining us from hong kong thank you so much for that. while the murder of jamal khashoggi has overshadowed much of the g twenty summit where those two leaders met the saudi crown prince mohammed bin salman appeared isolated early on a speculation months about his alleged involvement in the killing but as alan fischer reports they took was quite different. the saudi crown prince has had a busy day too at the g twenty he met one on one with the argentinean president and there was an extended meeting with president putin of russia the man who gave him a high five on friday. turkey's president at the one revealed the case of jamal khashoggi it was raised only once in meetings with all the leaders and it was by the canadians he said the saudi crown prince gave what he described as an unbelievable response i asked him what he meant. good who called the saudi regime first denied it and then tried to distort facts and finally admitted to this murder turkey has adopted
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a very determined attitude which is help disclosed the so sure we have never seen this as a political issue and shall never do so for us this incident was a horrendous act of murder and shall remain so. the canadian prime minister said he also raised when he came face to face with the saudi royal i also. spoke directly to the crown prince to highlight our concerns and our need for better answers on the killing. and also the need for an immediate cease fire and humanitarian aid to go to yemen which is the largest humanitarian catastrophe going on in the world right now and is a subject that we brought up repeatedly in various conversations as the pressure grows in the u.s. to take firm action against saudi arabia a report in a u.s. newspaper the wall street journal claims to seen details of eleven messages the saudi royal sent his closest adviser who oversaw the so-called hit team in istanbul
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the newspaper says this led the cia the america's intelligence agency to conclude mohammed bin someone likely. but america's secretary of state says they still stand by the crime prince i have read every piece of intelligence that is in the possession of the united states government and when it is done when you complete that analysis there is no direct evidence linking him to the murder of the thirty crime prince was never going to be ignored or shunned i think gathering of the world's twenty largest economies their diplomatic niceties to be. the real test will be in weeks to come as countries reexamine their relationship with saudi arabia and the man who is effectively in charge. at the g twenty. one has been solomon's next stop is more attorney where the opposition is denouncing the visit saying the crown prince is damage the interests of muslims
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worldwide it is urging its supporters to condemn the murder of saudi journalist jamal khashoggi but the crown prince of course faced protests during his visit to tunisia last week we have been ever be joining us now from the moreton in capital. how big of the protests expected to be today. hello. soja crown prince mohammed bin said a man visit is scheduled today to mauritania his arrival is expected and like half an hour from this live he will stay for a few hours and he will meet the ten young president mohammed will add glasses and they will probably sign some agreement the mauritanian authorities will come to what they call a very very important guest and they look at saudi arabia as
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a strategy a light but in another way there are many voices that will not welcome been sent man and they called him that he is not a very important guest for him and he is not welcome to visit mauritania the mauritanian forum of democracy and unity which is the representative of. the opposition the body of the opposition published a press release yesterday and let me quote for you what they said so this visit is not welcome because of the positions of mohammed and samantha which harmed the vitello interest of our ads and muslims through coordination with the united states to liquidate the palestinian cause and blood and act on human rights and freedom of expression and they are talking also and saying that he is maybe the
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murder of. the person who said to kill. hush. also we can speak about another initiative this time we are talking about students in mauritania they demonstrate and they said that then send me. is there as a sign off yemen's children and they accuse him off killing the so did you know this general harshly as well as the normalization of diplomatic relations with its trial so we are waiting for the arrival of saudi crown prince we can also talk about many had stags on facebook and twitter which i'm not too welcoming the press went out to be joining us from not shut in mauritania thank you for that it's actually two months now since jamal khashoggi was last seen alive we have to go back to oct second when he entered the saudi consulate in istanbul and was never
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seen again by the next day turkish security sources said they had information that he'd been killed inside the consulate and his body had been dismembered saudi arabia rejected these claims immediately as lives but a week later turkish media published these pictures fifteen members of a saudi team that arrived in istanbul on the same day to show that he disappeared they said the group was at the consulate when the journalists arrived so it is from this point onwards october tenth that the evidence linking not only saudi arabia but the crown prince mohammed bin salman to show g.'s death has been piling up mid october the saudis finally admitted yes he had been killed they said it was accidental turkey insists it was murder and on november tenth it shared recordings from inside the consulate with other countries that is britain france germany the united states and saudi arabia as well five days later riyadh did charge eleven suspects for the killing but to this day the kingdom denies that the crown prince
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was in any way involved our correspondent tony burke the looking back now at how the murder investigation is unfolded so far and the continuing fight for justice by car shows he's family and friends. these days they keep a part found in front of the entrance to the saudi consulate in istanbul to stop prying eyes for the last eight weeks saudi arabia has been unable to stop the world from knowing what happened inside this building on october the second despite the saudi lies and deception the planning and intent family and friends are determined on bringing the man who gave the order for jamal khashoggi murder to justice the fight for justice for the cheese continue and to continue of course at the end until. everybody will be satisfied that justice and now i am ready for it very fortunately now the problem the issue is ensuring intonation sure it's an it's a university sure now the saudis say five an amen part of the fifty man so-called
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hit squad are facing the death penalty in saudi arabia for the murder six others a charge with related offenses although western intelligence agencies believe all the evidence circumstantial and otherwise points to the saudi crown prince mohammed bin salman as the architect of the killing some diplomats believe he has got away with it was executing five. people who are. killed. false will towards they have done and the other. seven or a six remaining six there will be most for religion and they will close the case turkey and the rest of the world is shocked by the barbarity of the murder president recep tayyip erdogan and turkey's government has leaked details of audio recordings from inside the consulate before joining and after the killing
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investigators revealed phone calls made to riyadh with one of the hit squad saying tell the boss the deed is done without stating his name the turks have made it obvious. the boss is mohammed bin sound man but turkey's options are limited by a lack of saudi cooperation and a lack of will from the international community the saudis are using the vienna convention on diplomatic immunity is as reasons not to hand over the suspects to turkey no nor state give her the state for for an investigation so the issue here is this really think it's so different. than will come to an end in turkey but you should make this issue to international level because the nation the investigation. will be a day and that is the only way this case can be investigated fairly and openly but
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turkey's government mindful of its situation regarding human rights and treatment of some of its own citizens is reluctant to call for a u.n. investigation and western governments seem disinterested as could be seen at the g twenty summit in argentina some politicians have short memories and forgiving natures when it comes to trade deals it now seems likely that the real culprit behind this crime is going to get away with it and that the murder of your market shortly will become a paragraph in history in a bloody region and that's a sad indictment not only of saudi arabia but also of the international community which is that by and watched and done nothing tony burke the al-jazeera istanbul. in a few moments a live weather update with mr evans and fox and then ahead lazer reviled by many but via by some how popular ask about reserve members in colombia also iran defends its missile program after the u.s. accuses it of violating un resolutions and another bad day at the office for tiger
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woods at his tone and in the bahamas details coming up with. a little later. from flowing on in winds to an enchanting desert breeze. we have some welcome and much needed rainfall pushing towards cape town over the next twenty four hours will save a little more cloud started to push its way heavier rain has been on the other side of the mozambique channel and indeed in the madagascar we had eighty four millimeters of rain here in twenty four hours the rain will linger here as we go through the next couple days see that east assad madagascar having a pretty wet monday and a pretty wet shoes day treat benign the rain that we have in cape town that will sweep through it'll move across eastern cape clear skies come back in behind the temperatures responding once again to the bright and warm sunshine johannesburg
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gets up to twenty one cells just eighteen in cape town that is well below average so it is on the cool side here it is can be dry was fed with a cloud as we go on through a good part of this week then further north the cloud is thick enough good congo to produce some really heavy rain sixty eight millimeters of rain here and twenty four as you can see the usual showers they continue to do with rain in kenya of course other parts of sudan south sudan we could do with the rain there not too much of that in the full cost over the next few days scattering of useful showers one would hope one of two showers to towards the gulf of guinea a little bit of wet weather to just around the far north of africa is the system swells away here so you could catch few coastal showers just around libya the whole time. more than egypt. the weather sponsored by qatar airways. one old age back and it can feel like the end. but to some it's a new beginning you might have them at some point in life you realize you started
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you're on the news hour here at al-jazeera and these are our top stories the french government may impose a state of emergency following a good weekend of protests over rising fuel prices president emanuel micron's writes back from the g. twenty summit. i'm going to say this the damage after a night riot donald trump's agreed to delay increasing trade tariffs on chinese imports least for the next ninety days the u.s. and chinese presidents met at the g. twenty on saturday and said they would use the time to try to resolve their differences and the saudi crown prince is expected in martone on sunday the opposition is denouncing is that true not saying i'm a been someone has damaged the interests of muslims worldwide it's coach supporters to condemn the murder of journalist jamal khashoggi. representatives from more than
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two hundred countries are gathering in poland right now for the cup twenty four summit in fact these are live pictures coming through from there they are hoping to agree on some policies to address climate change remember the paris agreement was signed back in twenty fifteen it was supposed to hold average temperature increases to less than one and a half to greece celsius however we know the u.s. has since withdrawn from the deal leading to some concerns about its viability of course the world in the meantime is continue to experience more extreme weather events nick clark has more. thousands of scientists politicians and leaders of industry meeting in poland for perhaps the most important climate conference there's ever been the challenge to unite on how to implement the peris agreement of two thousand and fifteen which aims to shift the world away from fossil fuels and to limit the rise in global temperatures to between one and a half degrees celsius and two degrees celsius that agreement is jus to come into
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force in less than two years time in twenty twenty but a report from the united nations shows that the world is completely off track heading instead towards three degrees celsius and that is twice the recommended rate of warming and as this year has proven time is on no one side. you know well currently one degree celsius warmer than pre-industrial times the fingerprints of climate change and its human impact becoming increasingly apparent. and not just in the developing world. the worst wildfires in california history last month led to multiple deaths and extraordinary destruction they had. demonic plants is the only way i can put it it's like our eyes are gone you know our lives everything we have is gone now more and bigger wildfires are predicted around the world as temperatures increase. right now in afghanistan drought is tightening its stranglehold thousands of families have lost everything there are reports of
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children being sold off to pay off debt or buy food. across the world drought will worsen with increasing famine as heat waves strengthen the. living seas have led to more ferocious hurrican cyclons forming over the world's oceans and when they hit land from florida to the philippines the effects are catastrophic especially as rising sea levels mean even more destructive storm surges. ice sheets are retreating ecosystems are under pressure. and all the while greenhouse gas emissions reach record levels at a time when scientists say they need to be radically reducing. these impacts. maybe increase as we go toward one hundred five degrees and further increase for two degrees so what one point five degrees allows us to keep the rate of change at the nub of it makes these intakes more manageable for society as this is
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devastation in the united states comes as a u.s. government report projects losses to the u.s. economy in future decades hundreds of billions of dollars every year one man disagrees i don't believe in hell no i don't believe it believe it or not the science says. this is no time for. failure to act means more disasters and the emergencies and their pollution that could cost the global economy as much as twenty one three million u.s. dollars by twenty fifty. since those euphoric scenes in paris three years ago there's been plenty of backsliding on national promises to reduce c o two emissions there is now a tremendous gap between what's required and what's being done and experts say that path leads to widespread poverty and global insecurity the gap these to close in poland over the next fortnight now the un report warns will pass
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a temperature rise of one of the half degrees celsius within twelve years unless countries slash their emissions by five times their planned amount and that will impact hundreds of millions of people on every continent on the globe exacerbating the risk of drought floods extreme heat and poverty those who know the sun's they say the urgency of this climate conference in poland cannot be overstated. fatal for one who is with us now on skype from the vive in the ukraine is the former national coordinator for the campaign against climate change we are or this will be the third cup conference since paris and we're still talking about paris does this underline how important that agreement was or does it underline that there are no other answers that's almost like brags that it's this deal or nothing apparently. yes i mean. this conference it's not going to come up with anything dramatic it's only the way it's set up it
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might come up with a set of rules if we're lucky for the for the an effective set of rules for the paris agreement but we're limited by the parents' agreement itself the commitments the nations of made and not enough to to. combat climate change and worse than that i mean as as we've seen from your commentary the politics around climate change it's got worse since the climate agreement i mean global politics since then has been defined pretty much by the rise of a right wing populism i mean trump in the u.s. but also narrow in brazil so the real battlefield is not within the talks. about appeal to to act effectively. combat climate change it's really in the political arena outside the talks and it's finding some kind of effective response to the new
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. right wing populism that is hitched its wagon to a greater or lesser degree of climate denialism so we need an affective response to that so then it's not just as easy as circumventing those who don't want to participate i'm always conscious of the fact that yes the united states left the paris agreement but there's still one hundred ninety something countries who aren't . yeah but even if even when the u.s. was involved the trouble is we are so far back of course we need everybody to be involved but we also need a much greater scale of commitment i mean even with everybody involved in twenty fifteen there were climate scientists like james hansen saying the agreement was nowhere near. strong enough to to effectively combat climate change so we need some much more radical change and i think that. i mean the the global political battlefield if you like seems to be characterized by kind of right wing all thought in islam versus liberal democracy but the real struggle is between
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. policies that are going to destroy the planet as a livable space for humanity and policies that have some chance of all of saving and i think that the best chance for liberal progressive forces it's to reinvent their message around a radical green message because we're entering a period of. increasing political volatility and that you know the good part of that it might give us a radically green message because we need you know incrementalism is not going to work we need really big measures at the moment with the increasing visibility of the climate crisis tragically as you report this crime that is going to time give force to a radical green message and that's really what we need for hope thank you for your time and expertise on this topic to appreciate it thank you israeli police say they
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have enough evidence to charge prime minister benjamin netanyahu and his wife with accepting bribes they're accused of fraud and breach of trust in dealings with israel's largest telecoms operator and yahoo though denies any wrongdoing in this and other cases against him they include allegations of accepting gifts from billionaire friends and receiving positive coverage from a newspaper in return for favorable legislation iran isn't saying whether it's test fired a ballistic missile or not but the iranian navy has launched what it says is a new type of radar evading destroyer the u.s. secretary of my pump area this is the missile launch violates a u.n. security council resolution iran says its missile program its defense of though not offensive and it doesn't breach international. in egypt an award winning political activist and blogger is being released from prison and placed on probation instead . was arrested six months ago for broadcasting what was described as quote false
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news about to prominence during the arab spring criticizing president hosni mubarak before he was overthrown campaigned against the torture of prisoners by police. mexico's new president has been sworn in beginning his six year term in office. as the country's first leftist president seventy. one the president. fifty percent of the vote he has promised to end corruption in the violence that has plagued over the past decade but anyone who watches the dramas documentaries on cocaine traffickers will tell you it was in a league of his own it is the twenty fifth anniversary of the death of colombia's godfather many would argue the real life version was much much worse. explains the boss. tell remains infamous for his brutality his generosity is still in
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shock. it was twenty five years ago today when. the world's most notorious drug trafficker was killed in a police shootout. is. the worst terror campaign perpetrated. in the world's most dangerous a quarter century later. it celebrated innovative infrastructure projects trendy restaurants impressed buildings. built with cocaine money and yet despite that transformation only recently started to reflect on this passed. an exhibition at the memory has museum honors the victims and confronts the legacy of the drug wars. it has been so intense and painful for the city and the country now that we see the change we are
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finally able to speak with out of fear and to deal with it but over. a neighborhood where he built houses for the poor proudly showcases his name to. visit his grave on the outskirts of the city this family from mexico saved money for five years to travel to pay him home. he was a good person who also how to do things otherwise he would have been killed earlier he helped many the monocle building where. the band it's another symbol. one does now want to get rid of the mayor announced it will demolish the building next february and turn it into a park to remember victims and bring to an end what he calls a symbol of evil. the memory museum believes this is the right
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strategy. it's a tribute to the victims and all the people that defended legality because the violence and drug trafficking are still here they've changed. but we need to keep working on our culture so that it will always be less present twenty five years after. i have changed but the scars remain visible in the country is still figuring out how to close the door to the past. so head for you on al-jazeera all the sports news. i mean. i. guarantee it's not over until a few things will have all the reaction from the big fights in l.a. that is coming up in a minute. xenophobic
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violent and beating the drum for an ethnic civil war in the heart of europe. infiltrates one of the continent's fastest growing far right organizations. and exposes links to members of the european parliament supported by my reenlist national rugby park. generation hate. the special tupac investigation coming soon on the jersey.
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just while we were taking a break we did see the french president emanuel micron arriving back in paris is actually inspecting some of the damage that had been inflicted on paris this saturday and saturday night the graffiti on the outer tree on for example in the what started as the elevator purchase but it's turned into more of an empty protest in general so that's him back in paris now after the g. twenty in argentina and he will be heading to an emergency cabinet meeting i
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believe in about three to five. now the saying if you don't succeed try and try again has been put into practice by a russian company in space a three d. printer to produce human tissue and organs as you head to the international space station after a disastrous first attempt in october steadfast and that that story from moscow. this is what three d. printing of living tissue looks like bio increase made of living cells are used to print a thyroid gland this russian company was the first to successfully transplant one into a mouse the next step is to do the same for humans so this is like living material over there actually with us quality of the modern six hundred million people suffer from pyro disorders and there's a long waiting list for transplants printing human organs is considered a game changer in health care because it could save many lifes to be able to print
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complex tissues that are more similar to those in human bodies scientists say they need to send a three d. printer to space. in the kids or for space technology we used a so-called formative technology it looks like make a snowball where you make into snowball you make snowball not layer by layer actually but from different sides and that looks like a. true three days into college so that's a different technologies and for this type of technology we need to have a microgravity but the first attempt to send a printer to the international space station failed in october when a so you spacecraft crashed shortly after lounge for that moment when you had to do that one more time. the printer and many hours of work were lost but it's hope there will be another opportunity soon engineers and only one month to build this
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new three d. bio printer after the first one was destroyed in the recent rocket failure of the next flounce should think it could be a breakthrough in printing human organs a revolutionary technique that could save many lives but also raises major ethical questions. for example the potential to create super humans who can renew and even enhance their organs and live to a very old age and safety concerns if organs can be printed by anyone without medical expertise and how to regulate this if it's done in space this is a very interesting question and i think in outer space there is very difficult to to claim jurisdiction or activity in outer space and especially i think these kinds of experimental use they were the claim. research exceptions and so i will say. it's now was still in blue sky and.
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scientists came to whatever it like at the moment a recent study by the european parliament concluded three d. printing techniques face such deep technical and regulatory barriers that they might never happen the russian company is more optimistic because the co-founder predicts that in ten years' time the first printed organs will be successfully transplanted into humans stop fast and al-jazeera moscow. sport boxing and singing all in one yeah but perhaps he should give up the day job i'm not talking while the entire world and tyson fury's heavyweight boxing fight has ended in a controversial draw in a dramatic contest at los angeles staples center the hard hitting wilder twice knocked his opponent to the ground but for most of the twelve round battle fury did appear to have wilder in trouble despite only recently returning to the ring from a thirteen month layoff the judges were split though one giving the into wilder one
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to fury and the other scoring the bout even if it means that while there retains the w.b.c. heavyweight title but a rematch could be on the cards. very happy with the performance on i'm happy with how calm and we live to see another day and do it again for you guys you know the fear is when to fan when this one you know is a hell of a fire to religious determine who's the best in their way division heavily division is just on fire you're right you know. turn off your outlaw ring it's not been any secret what i've been doing out the ring having living like a rock star. but i've had a great thing bottomline because i've got a very low time doing it i'm a fall back from suicide and mental health and depression and anxiety and i wanted more than anything to me to show the wild that it can be don't well you heard there about what harry has been going through boxing rites have a nuke a kopi and
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a craze that despite the droid was a great comeback for the burton. it was a really really great performance by tyson fury just eighteen months ago he was battling depression suicide doing hard drugs for him to come here and to show world class pedigree that just shows how far he's come along a fight like this is exactly what boxing needed especially in the heavyweight division which throughout the klitschko reign had had really seen some dark days a lot of boring fights but you know you have two charismatic fighters like tyson fury and youngs a while there who who really have a strong fan base in addition to the charisma that the vision requires it's long been called the clamor division if this fight was to be held in the u.k. they could have easily drawn seventy eighty even ninety thousand fans as most of the fights in the past have proved to shown up at wembley stadium so if there is to
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be a rematch i wouldn't doubt that it would be held in the u.k. just because it makes business sense and deonte while there in the past has agreed to travel internationally to face fighters so that is something i'm sure he'd be open to as well. kerry didn't seem too disappointed with the door in the end he finished up his news conference with a sing along. thank you yes that was the quote was. my job thank. you. thank you oh thank you very much was a very was five years ago. was there. ever seen anything like it ok well nigeria have won the women's africa cup of nations for ninth time they beat south africa four three in a penalty shootout in ghana meanwhile stars of the future on show in the final of
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the free for under seventeen women's world cup in europe quite spain were up against mexico strike a cloudier pina struck twice in ten minutes a spade held on for two one win is their first title in the history of the tournament. in italy event has extended their lead at the top of city at eleven points they were shot in teener on saturday and strolled away with a three no when the ready go back in time court and judge joe kelly me with the first to return or another at a late penalty to condemn the tuscon side to their first home defeat of the season . steph curry returned to action for the golden state warriors on saturday after a three week injury layoff but he couldn't help them to victory the n.b.a.'s defending champions went down one hundred eleven two hundred two to the troy pistons meanwhile quire lenat score thirty four points to leave the toronto raptors to a one hundred six to ninety five victory over the cleveland cavaliers the raptors are the first team to win twenty games in the n.b.a.
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season and they remain top of the eastern conference. tiger woods is falling further behind as he goes into the final round of the hero well challenge in the bahamas later the tournament host made a poor start to his third round from which he never really recovered he caught it around of seventy two to leave him eleven shots off the pace in lost position tony feed now was the big move up the leaderboard on saturday a five under round of sixty seven taking him into a share of twenty with henrik stenson and john rum. the world cup a field hockey is taking place in india with the hosts on a mission to recapture better days india used to dominate the sports but a fallen on hard times on the field full resupport. hockey in india isn't what it used to be these youngsters in new delhi are hoping to emulate a generation whose playing days are long gone stars who made india dominant and hockey and national sports a rival even cricket india's proud history includes
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a world cup title and eight olympic gold medals but the last of those came all the way back in one thousand nine hundred eighty. rocket elect him. i play hockey because it is our national game i want to promote because it standard has gone down i play our game because i am inspired from a downton made and our generals are forced and become the legend and i'm inspired from him and that's why i won't go copying him and also want to become good legend like him and hope is our national game to grow if i'll get a big unknown force that will i play hockey. these youngsters hero is john chand who won three elim pick gold in the one nine hundred twenty s. and thirty's considered by many the greatest player of all time the place he followed in his shoes won the world cup in one nine hundred seventy five and are now spectators at the tournament being hosted by india in the state of edition hoping they can inspire a return to last glory forty three years on. if you look at the way indian hockey
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has been. i mean despite recent efforts for the moment it's been in decline for a number of years for many reasons i mean if you look at the rain for compared with cricket record was there it went exactly as they were and where hockey was at the same period and now. that the different trajectory of the sport of pick and record has gone through literally what is a multi billion dollar sport at the same time you know hockey either stagnated or worn down of course in the last few years they're going at them for their way when they have won before and. what was some reason that there's been no sustained effort to keep it at that level the world's best are here competing for the title in the country that used to be the definitive hockey nation india may need to wait far beyond this world cup before they can relive those former glories paul reese al-jazeera. and that is i guess full for now it is that come on thank you judge on
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our back with more in the next news hour thirteen hundred hours g.m.t. up next to rain up with the latest news. when old age back it can feel like the end. but the sun it's a new beginning you must tell him at some point in life you realize you started to go backwards algis are wild tales inspirational stories every time and so as long as he's healthy she can produce and do something new. and new lease of life on
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al-jazeera. come up it's a daunting climb to one of the holiest sites in due time tiger's nest ball astri seems to defy gravity every few cities is expected to complete the pilgrimage to ensure peace and happiness when it became a democracy in two thousand and eight the time put happiness at the center of all political policy inspiring the un to pass a resolution urging other nations to follow betimes example but how do you measure it many brits unease happiness is what we ensure it's if that is quantifiable of advice simply turning its pursuit into policy time has done what no other country has. short. stories generate thousands of headlines with different angles from different perspectives cara fanny's fact help and a highly dangerous one of the major issues before fall is the institution president
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trump cannot stop talking about the news separate from the facts of the misinformation from the. price of b.b.c.'s reporting free to leave the listening post on. justifies that security forces are attacked shops pillaged public or private buildings set on fire. fronts considers imposing a state of emergency after rising fuel costs triggered the worst rioting in years. you're watching al-jazeera lie from a headquarters and. also a heads a trade truce the u.s. and china agreed to hold back on new tariffs for ninety days to give time for.

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