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tv   NEWS LIVE - 30  Al Jazeera  December 2, 2018 7:00pm-7:34pm +03

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a recent u.n. report has given remuda agency to the fight against climate change and released threats like sea level rise at this year's climate talks in poland and the international community seize the opportunity to take concerted action stay with al-jazeera the latest from the front lines of the climate crisis from the conference itself. present day man in my corner holds any emergency cabinet meeting now after the worst civil unrest in france in decades. i'm going to back to this is our just here on live from doha also ahead a call for urgent action in poland where close to two hundred countries are meeting and made warnings about the impact of climate change the high shoji murder
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overshadows a saudi crown prince's diplomatic engagement some position groups an ounce mom had been salmond's visit to mauritania and a trade war ceasefire the u.s. and china agreed to a pause in their bitter trade dispute out the talks of the g. twenty in argentina. i am. thank you for joining us it's a popular rebellion that began three weeks ago spread on social media and has exploded into the worst sunrise for decades in france president demanded my call flew back from the g. twenty summit for an emergency cabinet meeting the cabinet included prime minister filipe who canceled his trip to the global climate change summit in poland early am i call headed to the center of paris to assess the damage from saturday's protests and to thank firefighters and security forces for hours thousands of so-called yellow vests protesters demanded next month proposed rise in fuel taxes dates and
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my call resign some torch cause vandalise shops and painted the odd to tree also with graffiti police arrested at least four hundred people and at least one hundred thirty were injured. has the latest from paris. as soon as his plane touched down from argentina president a man your macro went straight to the scene at the ark to try to inspect the the vandalism in the damage for himself he spoke to veterans that he then went on to speak to the police and the firemen who were forming the front line during those so many hours of rioting and he was greeted on that walk by shouts of bravo from some and by shouts of resign by many others a mixed reaction there before he went back to the lead say to chair the emergency cabinet meeting that finished without any public statement we don't know the result of that meeting there's been no public statement to expect at some stage presence
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michael will actually give some idea to the media and to the people of france what he intends to do but we do know that more of the yellow vests rebellions will take place not only in in paris itself for next weekend but right across the country the one hundred thirty six thousand of them taking to the the streets and forming blockades across the whole of france so this is a movement that is beginning to challenge the government and its policies and it's one that he will have to take very seriously. and thousands of people have been marching in belgium calling for action from governments around the world to reach the goals set out in the paris climate's agreement the rally went past the european commission headquarters it was have as the cup twenty four summits got underway in poland that the u.n. climate chief warned the impact of global warming has never been worse and voice
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from almost two hundred nations on the event to address a problem the paris common agreement signed in twenty fifteen was supposed to hold of average temperature increases to less than one point five degrees celsius but the u.s. has since withdrawn from the deal leading to concerns about its viability and the world has continued to experience more extreme weather events this year here's nick quick more thousands of scientists politicians and leaders of industry meeting in poland perhaps the most important climate conference there's ever been the challenge to unite on how to implement the powers agreements 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 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
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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 plans is the only way i can put it it's like our lives 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 children being sold off to pay off debt and buy food. across the world drought will worsen with increasing famine as heat waves strengthen. the living seas have led to
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more ferocious hurrican xin cyclons forming over the world's oceans and when they hit land from florida to the philippines the effects a 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 reached record levels. at a time when scientists say the 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 number that makes these intakes more manageable for society as this is 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
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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 of the emergencies and their pollution that could cost the global economy as much as twenty one 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 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
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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 and they say the urgency of this climate conference in poland cannot be overstated. it's two months since journalist was murdered in the saudi consulate in istanbul tony burke looks back at how the investigation has unfolded so far and the continuing fight for justice by her family and friends. these days they keep a part van 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
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on bringing the man who gave the order for jamal khashoggi murder to justice the fight for justice for cheese continue and to continue of course at the end until. everybody will be satisfied for 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 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. people who are.
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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 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 you her own citizens or another state for foreign investigation
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so the issue here is is this really think it's so different. mr gibson will come to an end in turkey but you should make this issue to international level because the mission the investigation. will be a date and that is the only way this case can be investigated fairly and openly but 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 seemed 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
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which is that by and watched i'm done nothing tony burke the al-jazeera. and the man in the center of it all the saudi crown prince is in mauritania for a short visits mohamed bin solomon was greeted in the capital by the mauritanian president and a god of honor but similarly to what happened in recent visits to other capitals in solomon's presence in mauritania spock's demonstrations link to his alleged involvement in the murder of. one hour from the animal bend there be in the heart. he had been received by mauritania and president mohamed and they had some talks are the airport and then they went to the palace we don't know until yet if they will held a press conference or not all they will just have a press release their mauritanian arthur it is our very pleased by this visit and very welcomed the crowd but we can hear some other voices that didn't will
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come. and we can notice for example. press releases from. the opposition party is the biggest opposition parties in. mauritania a very published a press release saying that the prince is not welcome at all that he is doing some good things for saudi arabia relating to its images and that he is responsible from killing. still ahead on al-jazeera reviled by many revered by some how pablo escobar is remembered in colombia. a russian company has another attempt at sending and all. the international space station.
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weather looks pretty good across southern china over the next couple of days central parts on the other hand well see some clouds and. pushing up towards shanghai still a little way inland as we go on through monday it will become a good little more organized to choose a single little further south which hong kong stays for a dry twenty years. safety in found some warm sunshine continuing here looking pretty good then what a woman sunshine to in say worst central parts of india and all the marys as well was a chance of more in the way of cloud of rain down into the south tower not to cash in showers as we go on through monday they both easily winds of course just dragging the moist air from the by a bingle down towards a southeastern corner of india similar pitches there for sri lanka standing
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a little further north which as we go on through chews day some of that wetter weather just edging up into on top of that pushed further north we've got some lines of trout coming through so with the possibility of a few spots of rain but essentially it should be dry karachi's dry thirty celsius here so temperatures to across the arabian peninsula basin places the cloud down towards the gulf of aden but i think it should stay dry wanted to know the process saudi fine try woman study here in. once held in one of australia's toughest detention centers now a world renowned surgeon want to win his followers dr moon. as returns to his hometown to give it beauties the hope of walking in here on out is zero. capturing the moment in time snapshots of other nine other stories providing
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a glimpse into someone else's world nice on al-jazeera. welcome back our top stories on al-jazeera at a french president has held an emergency meeting with his cabinet following saturday's nationwide protest the demonstrators want to mannion mccourt to resign over his economic reforms thousands of people have been marching in belgium calling for action on climate change is being held as envoys from almost two hundred nations are gathering at the cop summit in poland they're hoping to agree on ways to stop the planet overheating and the saudi crown prince is in mauritania the opposition there is denouncing the visit it's urged supporters to condemn the
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matter of journalists. now donald trump has agreed to delay increasing trade tariffs on chinese imports at least for the next ninety days the u.s. and chinese president met at the g. twenty summit on saturday and said they'll use the time to try to resolve their differences the u.s. was fighting to boost ties on two hundred billion dollars worth of chinese goods from next year china has agreed to buy what's described as a very substantial amount of american farm energy and industrial goods are china correspondent adrian brown has more reaction from 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
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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 there could 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 and the united states was cooperation but there remains a fundamental areas of disagreement between these two sides especially in the area of forced technology transfer and the fact that the united states says that u.s. 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
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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. israeli police say they have enough evidence to charge prime minister binyamin netanyahu and his wife with accepting bribes they're accused of fraud in breach of trust in dealings with israel's largest telecoms operator and its now denies any wrongdoing in this and two other cases against him police have already recommended indicting it's now over allegations of accepting good strong billionaire friends and receiving positive coverage for a newspaper in return for favorable legislation natasha good name has more from jerusalem. it appears the legal woes are mounting for prime minister benjamin netanyahu in this wide ranging corruption investigation that has plagued him and
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his wife since last year on sunday for the third time police recommended he be indicted in this case it involves an israeli company called basic telecom and police are alleging that prime minister netanyahu doled out regulatory favors in exchange for favorable coverage of him and his wife on a website that the company owns now this is the third corruption related case that israeli police believe netanyahu should be charged in in february police recommended he face indictment over allegedly accepting almost three hundred thousand dollars in bribes from wealthy businessmen and for attempting to solidify positive coverage of him in israel's biggest newspaper by promising to curtail coverage at one of its rivals in response to these allegations netanyahu has released the same statement he has from the onset he says there is no legal basis
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for these police recommendations and nothing will materialize from this investigation it's important to note that these are simply recommendations by the israeli police only the attorney general has the ability to indict and it could take months to do so as i mentioned this investigation has been in the works since last year now despite what appears to be mounting legal woes for netanyahu his popularity here in israel remains high according to public opinion polls the twenty fifth anniversary of the death of one of the world's most notorious gangs says and drugs traffic at. columbia's version of the godfather and a major reason for the united states starting its much publicized war on drugs as that is on the ramp it explains the boss of the main. cartel remains infamous for his brutality but signs of his generosity around. it was twenty five years ago
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today when. the world's most notorious drug trafficker was killed in a police shoot out on the rooftop is death and one of the worst terror campaign server perpetrated. killings were daily events in colombian cities like me the year then the world's most dangerous a quarter century later turn the page on its violent image is celebrated for its innovative infrastructure projects trendy restaurants and prestigious buildings dot the skyline many built with cocaine money and yet despite the transformation this is only recently started to reflect on its past an exhibition at the memory house 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 finally able to speak with out of fear and to deal with it. but over
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. in a neighborhood where he built houses for the poor still proudly showcases his name to. visit these grave on the outskirts of the city this family from mexico saved money for five years to travel to pay him. he was a good person who also how to do things otherwise he would have been killed earlier he helped many the monocle building. the band it's another symbol. 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 strategy.
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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. the first strain saving jewish children from nazi persecution left germany eighty years ago this week in the months before the second world war began england opened its order to around ten thousand children in an operation known as the kinda transform we spoke to one refugee who made that journey my name is harry bring i was born in rwanda on the twenty sixth december nineteenth twenty five i spent exactly twelve
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months to the day the nazi rule of my father's shop was reduced destroyed and after that it was decided that we would need to emigrate and this for that reason i came to england what is now no good as a kid transported. there was a two hundred fifty three hundred children boarding the train with parents who probably knew much more than the children as to if or when they would see their kids again and i was relieved to mention those crying and screaming my big barrios most speak a single word of english refugees who have been given shelter within the hospital for the bridge never forget when a train pulled in. misty morning you're going to liverpool street station and noses of a. book squashed up against the window to see what's going on. you
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i think is the greatest thing regarding could it ever did. sorry that it's not been repeated in other situations my mother was taken for the extermination camp of sobibor everybody arrived in suburb or was to two aisles schools with the best search that prejudice leads to discrimination discrimination leads to genocide which the holocaust was the most severe in history and that is something that needs to stop in my book there's only one races planet it's called the human race. and next wednesday is the date set for the state funeral of george h.w. bush the forty first us president died in texas on friday at the age of ninety four his time at the white house from one thousand nine hundred ninety nine hundred ninety three well as defined by the end of the cold war and the first gulf war his
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body will lie in state in the capitol for public feeling from monday. if at first you don't succeed try and try again that's what one russian companies doing after a failed attempt in october it's sending a three d. printer to space sent us and explains why this is what three d. printing of living tissue looks like by a mix made of living cells are used to put into 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 you know actually with us college is about more than 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 complex tissues that are more similar to those in human bodies scientists say they
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need to send a three d. printer to space. in the keys or for space technology we use 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 regions of knowledge so that's a different technologies and for this type of technology we need to have a microgravity. but the first attempt to send the printer to the international space station failed in october when a so you spacecraft crashed shortly after launch for that moment when you have 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 new three d. by your printer after the first one was destroyed in the recent rocket failure if
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they're not flowers 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 over activity in outer state space and especially asking these kinds of experimenting to use they were to claim. research exceptions and so i was say. it's now was still in blue sky and. scientists came to whatever they like and the moment
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a recent study by the european parliament concluded that 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 step fastened jazeera moscow. now again i'm fully back to bill with the headlines on al-jazeera the french president has held an emergency meeting with his cabinet following saturday's nationwide protest early a monument call assess the damage caused by the violence in paris the protesters want him to resign over his economic reforms did it take to has more from paris. as soon as his plane touched down from argentina president emmanuel macro went straight to the scene of the ark to triumph to inspect the the vandalism in the
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damage for himself he spoke to veterans he then went on to speak to the police and the firemen who were forming the front line during loose so many hours of rioting he was greeted on that walk by shouts of bravo from some by shouts of resigned by many other thousands of people have been marching in belgium calling for action on climate change is being held as envoys from almost two nations are gathering at the cop summit in poland they're hoping to agree on ways to stop the planet's overheating sodger arabia's crown prince has left mauritania after a short visit and is now on his way to algeria the opposition in mauritania denounced a visit to iraq shot saying mohamed bin sound man has damn ac interests of muslims worldwide it urged supporters a condemned the murder of saudi journalist. president has agreed to delay increasing trade tires on chinese imports set lease for the next ninety days the
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u.s. and chinese presidents met at the g. twenty summit on saturday and said they'll use the time to try to resolve their differences israeli police say they have enough evidence to charge prime minister benjamin netanyahu and his wife sour with accepting bribes they're accused of fraud and breach of trust in dealings with israel's largest telecoms operator it's now denies any wrongdoing in this and other corruption cases against him they include allegations of accepting gifts from billionaire friends and receiving positive coverage from a newspaper in return for favorable legislation. and thousands of opposition supporters in georgia have been protesting over the results of wednesday's presidential vote say there was widespread electoral fraud they say it helps the ruling party can. really win the runoff old europe sit with headlines on al-jazeera coming up next year it's one zero one east i hope you do stay with this watching.
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decades of war have left thousands of iraqi amputees desperate to mend their broken bodies. now the chance to use cutting edge robotic for standards is giving them new hope. and steve chow on this episode one on one he's follows one man's incredible journey from refugee to world leading surgeon as he melds humans with robotics to help people walk again.

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