tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera December 3, 2018 1:00pm-2:01pm +03
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to fire that thing i had to houma and turn thirty five at the little ditty here and be lowered till quote of the. north ten. of us me a film ed that is here with ernie in or out. be doing me n. . yet to help. me die young kuno and you will hear from them is better model. has it into father mother tongue language as being your office in language in schools. is a legitimate demand and it could be expressed in the society so i don't see any legitimate and logical. demand for any kind of autonomy even if it was theirs it is going to be pick a case demands and we are not in place to debate or no good shit that kind of
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autonomy with on the be how all or towards. the ultimate legacy of the psychs pekoe agreement was to establish the rights of outside powers and interests to intervene and influence the politics of the middle east. the sense of instability and constant conflict it has engendered seems even more complex to address now than it was one hundred years ago. the lights are on. but there's nowhere to hide do you think we're going to see some kind of scene change in the u.s. relationship with saudi arabia i haven't said it's a right wing conspiracy or anybody's conspiracy of frogs own al-jazeera.
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had i was about two or three days between bites of right in the levant at the moment also got nothing much happening in iran apart from the showers it looked likely in the caspian sea we have got incoming from the eastern med the next developing system so cloud first of all probably nothing more than that stretching from northern saudis through iraq and towards to run temperatures in the low twenty's if you're lucky and then the rain comes in so it'll probably rain on tuesday from lebanon right up to syrian sun and to the sheraton is fossilised as northern saudi east the sun is still it's quite was limited and he should be quieter the arabian peninsula as well it certainly looks as it will be the full cost yet again brings the grain is in and shot to seems quite likely from medina knows what'll be sunstone and they stretch of into jordan such that there is quite warm actually twenty eight there has pretty good figures same is true of abu dhabi there we have seen significant rain recently in madagascar one or two potentially heavy showers have been threatening in zimbabwe and this rain just scraping through
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the western cape through cape town itself and nothing much to it it's still quite warm in in botswana up to thirty six once again in the capital bass fishing i was right to say there are still a rarity. day one of a new era in television news we badly need at this moment leadership and values this encampment that we're in today it didn't exist three weeks ago now there's at least twenty thousand or hinder refugees who live here on al-jazeera i got to come in you're all i'm hearing is good journalism present some stuff but as reside ah. there's. laughed off old allies the attempts of cover ups and the high water diplomacy jamal khashoggi his loved ones want some form of closure he saw the syrian army flag hoisted high in the city as well as posters of
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syrian president bashar assad to skate park or the. movement's a good cinema salsa planted about a hundred meters away from a square on the front line but some. at the bar does happen ballad quickly exactly . when h. beckons it can feel like the end. but the song 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 no not so but as long as she's healthy she can produce and do something the few times a new lease of life on al-jazeera.
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katter has just announced it's withdrawing from opec to help increase its natural gas production. watching al jazeera live from our headquarters here in doha also coming up today a potential breakthrough in the war in yemen as injured rebels are allowed to leave the country ahead of un backed talks. private messages reveal that journalists feel about the saudi crown prince. so we cannot leave. having. a very bold and strong and clear road map also ahead leaders from almost two hundred countries arrived in poland
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under pressure to do more to tackle climate change. ok let's get more for you on that developing story this hour cattle in the last hour saying it's pulling out of opec effective next month january the first the decision comes just days before a crucial meeting of member nations of opec that's the organization of petroleum exporting countries that shuttled for december the sixth the announcement was made in the last hour here in doha we have a correspondent at the world trade center here in the country capital doha we'll get just as soon as we can with that evolving story more on that for you just as soon as we can. in a gesture of goodwill the same to building confidence ahead of yemen's forthcoming peace talks the show will soon in sweden fifty injured who fights as will be allowed to leave the country on monday for treatment in oman the u.n.
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envoy martin griffiths made the request which was confirmed by the saudi u.a.e. coalition the wounded who for years will be flown to muskets on a u.n. plane will be a school trip by three yemeni doctors and a u.n. doctor. is a nonresident fellow at the gulf international forum he says the evacuation is a welcome development we know that this push which is spearheaded by the u.n. envoy has been going on for at least a couple weeks or mom has hosted a u.n. envoy who has shuttle between washington mosque at riyadh and saw not to try to get this peace set up before peace talk assume so the fact that we're even discussing this issue which previously was off limits is in itself a diplomatic victory we should always have cautious optimism because i think that the first results that we would we would have to look at is whether or not these peace talks take place and whether or not they will be aboard at the last minute
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that's the first aspect the second aspect is if they do indeed take place we will expect some sort of resolution between the who thesis and the united nations and the saudis over whether the u.n. will take over to management of the port there who died to help bring in humanitarian supplies into yemen so that is if that is achieved than the rest of the peace process will be in good tracks but that's the first challenge if and when the peace talks take place ok let's go back to that developing story cats are saying in the last hour or so it is withdrawing from opec life now is the world trade center here in doha correspondent charlotte bellis charlotte why now do we think. well that's if it would have been a withdrawal from january twenty ninth. just happened in the last. say it has nothing to do with the i. say that i've been thinking about it for
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a few months now and the same surely that if you want to withdraw from pick for twenty nineteen they had to do it before. the same but the sixth and i said we want to be transparent we didn't want to go to this meeting and based around the members so we decided to make the decision now that we're not in this meeting and the six approving budgets for next. hour and change is naturally to be involved makes you be constrained by opec guidelines when it comes to how much liquid gas they can actually produce because on the twitter feed i notice they're saying they want to go from seventy seven million tons to one hundred ten million tons of the profit margin is going to go up by at least twenty five or thirty percent. correct posting my. story and. he say that he's always been a gas man this is even a member of cars in a jiffy as is
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a gas man and i think one of the political reasons behind this withdrawal. is it is it constraining you or your ability to develop gas and he said essentially we are a small player in pay and i'm a businessman it's an efficient for me to focus on things that. strength my strength is gas so that's why we've made this decision to pull out. obviously important that kind of our pick is essentially managed by saudi arabia and saudi arabia and qatar have been involved in the. last year but within the context of business arrangements in this region the reality is the kind of saw does do business with certain countries that all the certain countries are not happy about so people will perceive this inevitably will not charlotte's through the prism of the blockade of kaesong driven of course by the saudis. i think that what we have to say in the qatari trying very hard to make
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sure that people. have suspected that this is simply a business decision i think we do not want to politicize. the minister of state energy faith is still going to go to our pick. and participate in the making of the scene but the sixth he said you know really we just we just want to pivot towards gas we don't have much potential. we don't have much growth he said this does not mean though that they are getting out of oil they are still going to continue to develop oil fields and that they're going to focus more on developing oil fields in places like brazil where they say more growth potential as opposed to cars and that they're just going to boost like you said. from seventy seven to one hundred ten million tons and which is a huge growth for the end. and then in a few months time they going to announce some major international partnerships to
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help them get to that one hundred ten million tons and that will essentially help them and of on the world stage strengthen various international relationships that is there with that breaking story solid thanks very much we'll talk to later. newly released private messages from the journalist are revealing a candid account of his take on the saudi crown prince c.n.n. has gained access to exchanges between the saudi journalists and the montreal based activist the pair had planned an online movement that would hold the saudi state to account in one of four hundred whatsapp messages sent a year before his murder showed she called mohammed bin salma a beast who would devour all in his path shoji and omar abdul aziz talked to plans to form an electronic army to engage young saudis back home and to debug state
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propaganda the digital offensive was dubbed the cyber beans they discussed creating a portal to document human rights abuses in saudi arabia to a disease that's filed a lawsuit alleging that saudi arabia use spyware from an israeli software company the n.s.o. group to help hack into its communications with jamal khashoggi and agalloch it has more now from washington. well what these hundreds of messages reveal is that jamal khashoggi was so concerned with what was going on in saudi arabia that he wanted to take more action than just writing in the newspapers here in the u.s. his plan was to arm a so-called electronic army with sim card sim cards that will be provided to young saudi arabians who would then be allowed to post on social media and that would be untraceable he'd already pledged five thousand dollars to counterparts in canada and plan to give about twenty five thousand more dollars to that cause but the
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canadian counterpart when he discovered that is what messages were actually being hacked or had been hacked using israeli military grade spy where everything changed for that dissident in canada he was contacted by saudi arabian officials and given a piece of advice by jamal khashoggi that he says potentially save his life he told the dissident in canada do not meet these people anywhere but in a public place on the flipside of that the canadian dissident now believes that he may well be responsible for two market shock she's death because he thinks the saudi arabian government got hold of these four hundred messages which go way beyond newspaper articles for the saudi arabians this could well have crossed a red line and he now feels extremely guilty for what happened in october in istanbul to jamal khashoggi when he revealed that he had he thought the messages had been hacked jamal khashoggi reply was very telling it simply said god help us the turkish president has repeated his demands that serbia arabia reveal the
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whereabouts of these body richard burton was as you look for international involvement to pursue justice if necessary he says he would have confronted the prince with all the evidence if you've had a chance. well the saudi crown prince has landed in algeria in an effort to boost ties between the two countries but many people are angry about his visit to north africa saying he's trying to whitewash his image following the death of jamal khashoggi a number of prominent algerians signed a statement against his visit mohammed bin samana arrived from the military and capital in the chart where as president sparked protests he has one last stop in jordan before he returns home matheson reports now from amman. jordanians say they know about the controversies surrounding the saudi crown prince thanks to jordan's media they know that mohammed bin some months tour of arab allies prompted adulation in the united arab emirates protesters fury into musea and awkwardness among some world leaders in argentina at the g twenty summit but many jordanians
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don't seem to know he will be visiting their capital city amman most of jordan this newspapers t.v. networks and its radio stations support the government jordanians to find it pretty hard to find any mention of the crown prince's visit to jordan in the last few days not surprising because saudi arabia for decades has been making big investments in jordan's economy but so have other countries jordan feels that it has to tread a very fine diplomatic life they think that saudi arabia probably is the only country in the arab world that gives money and aid should go down and they don't want to jeopardize that and put this and interests so this is probably the only reason for jordan to receive him in this way but at the same time they don't really publicize this visit as when the conference of the united arab emirates came to do it and it was a kind of festival but here it's like almost unnoticed some believe the crown
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prince wants to take over custodianship of muslim holy sites in jerusalem a role with a lot of global influence that's currently carried out by jordan's world family and earlier this year saudi arabia reduce the funding it's been giving to jordan but jordan struggling economy needs saudi investment despite saudis economic influence there are jordanians who object to the crown prince's visit many don't want to speak openly in case their government identifies them. i think the goal of his visitors to improve his image by gathering alliances i think saudi arabia is blackmailing the jordanians because jordan needs saudi money but i think this is making jordanians on the government very angry. the grand prince's tour is being regarded as an effort to bolster support for the saudi version of events in istanbul of the murder of journalist. and the saudi and amorality led coalition's war in yemen jordan has firmly declared itself
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a saudi ally but the official response to bin solomon's arrival appears subdued rob matheson al-jazeera amman jordan. plenty more still to come here on al-jazeera including we'll talk to the former u.n. secretary general ban ki moon as world leaders gather in poland try to tackle climate change. hello the deep cold has been in eastern europe for two weeks now underneath this massey is there but it was down towards the black sea coast is being pushed out of the way slowly but certainly by this massive cloud of us the latest the atlantic front is pro windy and wet weather is still going to keep doing so freezing rain followed by star in germany czech republic this is position we get for monday
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warsaw is above freezing by the kiev two and this cloud and probably of a fog on the ground with the rain kept back in germany a bit of snow also for austria that's nice bifrost as well but to the west it's just too warm for the very top of the alps maybe but it's not about we're talking about rain again and fourteen in paris and the same in london windy wet and mild this is where the grinds to a house a book rest is still at zero this will be really quite a cloudy and foggy mess i suspect the sun is probably outfit a science in remain here and probably in greece in the cold still exists in right now this all suggests of course that something's happening in the central eastern med it is nothing like as vicious i have to say the wind is nothing like a strong be back in the eastern med circulating around cyprus sudden turkey eventually moving into the levant and then the next tranche of rain seems likely says come tuesday.
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xenophobe violent and beating the drum for an ethnic civil war in the heart of europe. al-jazeera infiltrates one of the continent's past describing far right organizations and exposes links to members of the european parliament and marine appends national party generation the hate. part of a special two part investigation on al jazeera. welcome if you're just joining us you're watching al-jazeera live from our
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headquarters here in doha let's recap our top stories for you so far this hour cats are has just announced it's withdrawing from opec at the beginning of the year january first asses the decision reflects the country's desire to increase natural gas production from seventy seven million tons a year to one hundred ten million tons a year. the coalition in yemen has confirmed it with fifty wounded who fighters to leave the country on monday treatment in a month's capital muskets the u.n. envoy martin griffiths asked the evacuation as a gesture of goodwill before peace talks will take place in the swedish capital stock comp later this month hundreds of private messages sent between jamal khashoggi under saudi dissidents in canada show the journalist was planning an online movement that would have hold held the kingdom to account called mohammed bin. a beast who would devour quotes all in his path. let's get more on that developing story for you cats are one of the world's biggest
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if not the biggest producers of liquefied gas is to leave opec let's talk now to moustapha elbaz a gun he's an international oil economist he joins us on the line from london cats are saying we're a small player but if your production is going to increase dramatically and quite quickly by seventy percent because that's what we're talking about you're becoming a bigger player. yes that's right they envisage that they will increase their production and specially when producing i mean regionally the largest producer after iran that's me and definitively they will be one of the larger players in the gas market so it will be really i mean attractive for this decision how will this be perceived by casaus neighbors differently it's not only i think clinic. it's
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a political position especially the relation with the other gulf countries is not that good the last eighteen months so definitely it will be affecting the decisions of those countries to spatial awareness we are now waiting for the. meeting in vienna. this week so it will be really. a shock to the other members of the arctic this time of. what we are seeing the market suffering the from very low prices. does have in existence already business relationships with other countries around the arabian around the persian gulf how will they react to this because they have to kind of go with the flow on this surely if they're already tied into those business dealings with minute i mean let us wait and see because it actually it will be different
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from one one side to the other from one company to from one country to the other but. most important thing is to wait and see what the reaction will be and what the market will how the market would plan to lake this decision on this move. on the guy's market so it will as we all your market. outside the region most often there is a perception that cats are like other countries in the region its oil and gas but is this in effect doha signaling to other produces outside of this region it's just to go over that one more one more time they are clearly saying they perhaps look the future for us is not oriel the future for us is gas it's clear i mean discoveries too early because you know you are the only market stationary be the big guys market now we're not we have in your producers in other parts of the world
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so did critically it by crime you couldn't. get. a grip but it's true here the market grew trying to do with this issue and that correctly you mention in your question ok we have to leave our conversation there mustapha gun there in london thank you so much u.s. president donald trump saying china has agreed to reduce tariffs on american cars now he made the announcement on twitter two days after meeting the chinese president xi jinping has the two leaders agreed to a ninety day hold on the escalating trade war and said they will use the time to try to resolve their differences the u.s. was planning to boost taxes on two hundred billion dollars worth of chinese goods in january it's now delayed that plan the existing tyrus will stay in effect. with the latest from beijing. well so far there's been no official response from china's
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leaders to that tweet from president donald trump suggesting the china's leaders have now agreed to cut tariffs on u.s. car imports by some forty percent if that is true then it does represent another sign of this trade to spew deescalating china's version of what happened in that diplomatic dinner in one of saris is though very different from the white house version the chinese statement actually makes no reference to the ninety day truce and the fact that more tariffs could be imposed on china if there is no agreement also the chinese statement makes no reference to china agreeing to buy more agricultural goods from the united states and also no mention of china agreeing to begin talks on the issue of forced technology transfers certainly analysts say that any pause is good for president xi jinping if it leads to more talking because they say china's strategy is to simply play for more time in this dispute china's media
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is certainly portraying the diplomatic dinner importer saris as a triumph for president xi jinping saying that it was president donald trump who had asked for this meeting the inference there being that president from was more desperate for this meeting than president xi jinping was here in china the stock market in shanghai made a good recovery on monday morning up by more than two percent that's the first time that has happened in many months also china's currency also much stronger against the u.s. dollar on monday so the currency and the markets reacting positively to the outcome of that meeting in argentina even though we still know so few details about what really was agreed. presidents emanuel mccraw has ordered the french prime ministers who arranged talks with political leaders and yellow vest demonstrators to try to avoid more fuel tanks protests more than one hundred people were injured during
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a third successive saturday of protests in the french capital paris they cheated is that. as soon as his plane touched down twenty summit in argentina present a manual went directly to inspect the damage at the ark to trail afterwards he walked over to greet police and firefighters who were on the front lines of the writing for so many hours on lookers shouted macro resigned. well the problem is micro loves the poor fool the buses the bankers he loves the rich people. come and talk to the people stopped talking about the violence and said with tears then it was the lease a palace for an emergency cabinet session on the crisis a spokesman said reintroducing the state of emergency from earlier this year was not discussed the president called on his prime minister edward felipe to invite
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party members in parliament and representatives of the demonstrators for talks. the real damage was caused by what's being described by police as a handful of extremists determined to confront them and cause as much trouble as they could yellow vests rebellion is of course not just confined to the streets of paris one hundred thirty six thousand demonstrators turned out across the whole of france and there was a fatality early on sunday morning outside the southern city of when a white van drove into the back of a heavy goods vehicle that was blocked at a yellow vests roadblock it was then hit by another car coming up behind the revolt against president policies and proposed fuel tax rises is not going away polls show protests as have the support of more than seventy percent of the french people support for the president is languishing below thirty percent david chaytor
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al-jazeera paris. the world bank says it's doubling its funding for poorer countries to deal with climate change to two hundred billion dollars you know comes as leaders gather in poland for un talks aimed at tackling global warming delegates from nearly two hundred nations of two weeks to agree on details of the twenty fifteen paris climate accord as the crucial climate talks proceed in poland most scientists now agree that we've entered a new segment of geological time the anthropocene where human impact is the most significant force in nature in the way greenhouse gases urban sprawl consumerism and technology are altering the planet just as big glasses or meets your strikes have done but when did this manmade change begin well as daniel lak now reports the answer may lie beneath the small body of water just outside toronto.
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protected by strict conservation laws crawford lake is relatively pristine it's deep low in oxygen waters produce sediments that can be accurately dated year by year like the rings of a tree these scientists are gathering and freezing centuries old layers of mud and material to try to find out when the anthropocene began this is an annual natural archive of all of the impact on the lake so it preserves chemical biological physical things on an annual basis on a reliable annual basis this is the mouth part of a fly back at the lab professor mccarthy examines mud layers looking for fossilized plants and animals other researchers find radioactivity from nuclear bomb tests six decades ago plastic particles and other changes that can only have been introduced by humans the work that's going on here at crawford lake is more than just science it's also about focusing the minds of governments policy makers and the public on
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how to curb some of the things we're doing to this planet. earth scientists who specialize in dating geological time are watching closely and finding compelling proof that we are in the early years of the anthropocene what's important here are the critical feedback mechanisms that kick in the earth really operating as a system and saying that's it i can't cope with this anymore and then it then starts to respond. at this toronto art gallery the evidence of human impact on display is in startling imagery of mining farming industry and urbanization it's art aimed at forcing us to think about how much impact we've already had through pollution climate change and population growth i think the artists ultimately want us to think about how we've built what we've built and how we can build something different how we can build perhaps perhaps solve the problem our change mitigate
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some of the impacts we've had it'll be at least two years before a final decision on the start of the anthropocene and this small body of water near canada's largest city will a played a crucial part in determining the march of geological time and what might be done about human impact on the planet daniel lak al jazeera crawford lake near toronto. well bank human is the former secretary general of the u.n. and is now the co-chair of the global commission on adaptation he told al jazeera is more important than ever before to try to deal with the effects of climate change. i urge that we need to do much much more much more and faster in implementing this this is already a three years we do not have time the climate change is happening much much faster than one may expect the most recent report by i.p.c.c. intergovernmental panel on climate change has made it clear that we must make sure
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that the global temperature rise should it contain the below one point five degrees celsius this is a very important announcement which we have to do i sincerely hope that a cut twenty four in ca to reach a point and i will make much much more detailed action oriented programs we have already a wasted three years and when all this is some countries like the united states be drawing from paris climate women it has given lot of tenney just to our political will but at the same time i am very much encouraged that the values of what some other countries are skeptical about this we are moving on particularly in the united states even there is a ground of strengthening support from the mayors and governors and the businesses societies and also civil societies there is no way this is unstoppable
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