tv newsgrid Al Jazeera December 3, 2018 6:00pm-7:01pm +03
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i was i know. it's coming and. we're here to go in front of the judge and find out which way things are going to go. particularly about you. i always feel good about another one i wouldn't be here . when i have these facts i really or your team did to. your reaction to what happened and the key thing here is and the thing that the judge is going to be deciding in this application is whether or not what the city did was wrong for the people who are still there obviously the hope is that they're still going to continue to be there but they don't understand what stress
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that's jodi and me these are the two that are left. oh he lost her child said well cop in the morning a baby was dead. six months ago and i could try if i was an artist i could draw you a picture when i seen that money you never know you never. you never know stays with you you learn to live with it but you never forget. one day fifty two am. so give me a call that. there are all. ready
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and. i'm going to come already. other than the one. thing you know. when you fell today were you dizzy busy dizzy. i don't know where i was sad all right. this one yeah. yeah. and i'm oh yeah and i think that's because i was when i called for personal law i think a lot of thirty hours. i don't want to be in some hole.
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when i was gone in the hospital when i come home i went and lay down on the bed and she lay down beside me some more ma'am and i look here she's right here like in my notes. laying on the bed like in my notes you're glad to. know. so you're going to fill me in on everything that happened down at the courthouse. just heard on the radio here that the judge orders of respect. so i know. i was planning on retiring here and spending the rest of my years here. but any
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time you have anything to do in this city you know them to your grave up if they want that last. week i think i. think. it's cost me and my life to be an outspoken. but i think somebody's being treated wrong i speak up. it's just the way i am. it's like one guy told me one time i like a good like him once in a while i said why. he said he was the one i quit.
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business updates brought to you by qatar airways going places together the story of one of the most successful p.r. campaigns in the u.s. . study after study has demonstrated perspectives american media coverage what part of this case you get through your thick head as hamas a terrorist organization the only thing that you're going to say is what we want and if you don't say it when i go what you speak it would be very hard for her ordinary americans to know that they're being deceived the occupation of the american mind on al-jazeera. this is al jazeera.
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i'm adrian for that and this is the live from doha coming up in the next sixty minutes the state of little has decided to withdraw its membership. of petroleum exporting countries. qatar leaves the opec oil cartel behind to boost its position as the world's number one exporter of liquefied natural gas. the urgency of global warming world leaders from two hundred nations meet in poland on the pressure to take decisive action. new evidence suggests it may have been more than newspaper articles by the journalist that angered the saudi government. and kiev makes plans to build up its military after russia's seizure of three ukrainian ships. and i'm foreign. born including football's ballon d'or award is
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due to be announced later but after dominating it for a decade or naldo. this year take a look at the main nominee. says that it's withdrawing from opec next month to expand its position as the world's number one export of liquefied natural gas casaus energy affairs minister says leaving the oil exporting organization will boost ambitious plans for natural gas production opec's fifteen members account for about forty percent. of world oil production catalog government ministers say the decision comes down to good business petroleum plans to increase output of liquefied natural gas from seventy seven million tons a year to one hundred ten billion dollars already the world number one l n g's
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exporter with thirty percent of the total and shares the world's largest no natural gas reserve the north filled with iran cuts i would also be the first gulf country to leave opec which is there as a solid reports. the world's largest supplier of liquefied natural gas is leaving the biggest oil conglomerate after being an opec member for more than fifty years cutter says strategic change is needed for its long term ambitions to produce more natural gas the state of qatar has decided to withdraw its membership from the organization of petroleum exporting countries of pic effective january twenty nine thousand this decision was communicated to operate this morning i would like to reaffirm purpose pride in its international standing at the forefront of the natural gas producers and the biggest energy producer in the world. better announced the decision as the oil producing club of nations is due to meet on thursday in vienna opec's expected to cut oil output amid falling oil prices but
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there is one of opec smallest oil producers its main commodity is natural gas with the world's third largest reserves tensions between catherine opec's largest producer saudi arabia suddenly increased when the saudis imposed a land sea and air blockade on got there seventeen months ago by three government ministers say leaving opec is not politically motivated i don't want to politicize it i'm a very practical engineer i've been running kewpie for a long time the way i do business is really practical so we look at work you know where is the value and. you know i like to focus on efficiencies always and i think it's inefficient to focus on something that's not your core business and something this is not going to benefit you long term so for me to put effort and resources and time in in an organization where i'm a very small player and doesn't have don't have. you know seen what happens in that
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organization. does not work it's not been a great year for opec its largest members such as saudi arabia ramped up production while others have carried out cuts as relations between saudi arabia and russia have improved iran iraq and venezuela have found it difficult to abide by wider opec decisions but it isn't the first country to leave opec but it's the first from the middle east raising questions about whether others are about to follow some of a job in their. life that was a serious shot at palace outside the world trade center in downtown we had the energy minister there saying that this isn't a political decision that's not necessarily how casaus gulf neighbors and fellow opec members will see a shot. no i think a lot of people won't. this is a political decision and i put that to him in the press conference saying that you could have pulled out of opec and so ramped up gas production you can do both at
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the same time. so you've heard from some of the package there that he see i'm a businessman and i see this inefficiency to continue and he was quite defiant that he didn't want it to be a mystical decision. what are we to make about the timing of this this announcement. that they see that they had been thinking about for the last few months i mean keep in mind the blockade from saudi arabia three others were imposed during last year they said that they had been thinking about of the last few months and that they decided that the see in twenty nine thousand they didn't want to be a part of our here and coming up on december the sixth they said they didn't want to go into kind of false pretenses be involved in discussions sign off on budgets when they knew very well that they did want to play a part in it next year and the. relationships with other member states so they say
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that they were being transparent by announcing this morning. they will still be attending attending. on thursday and snorting as well they say that this isn't the oil but they still will be even though they're not in or pick this still going to be developing the fields and they will actually be making a push and continuing to valid oil fields and other countries where they see more potential with money for the country in places like brazil. many thanks. u.s. president donald trump has requested pakistan's help with peace talks in afghanistan trunk road to the pakistani prime minister imran khan seeking his cooperation to help bring the taliban to talks last week i've got to stop this president outlined a road map for peace with the armed groups but warned that a deal could take five years to implement live now it was one of the. last months on twitter president trump was highly critical of pakistan what are we
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to make then of his letter to the pakistan prime minister. that interesting. much beyond the. warden was. spreaded in iran of course saying that the us was not understanding what nation the us thing that bugged on going doing anything at all and relations between the two time lol but this morning imran khan was talking to. reporters and he basically said earlier today. requesting full. peace talks and trying to bring the i want all the bond to the negotiating table imran khan of god said that pakistan would do whatever to sports abroad in order to achieve peace in afghanistan and to find and that
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seventeen year old conflict how much influence does pakistan have over the taliban there are all of the taliban operating both in afghanistan and in pakistan. where as voters progress on it's going so and if you look at that situation recently the taliban they agreed to go to mosque all sorts dogs and also have been holding talks with the americans. still has some leverage over the dollar bond but you're absolutely right right now today winning the war in afghanistan they have most of their kitty under their control and dad still drawing the foreign forces of one it's gone through and it's going to be interesting to see whether they really listen to. august and of course saying that they will do whatever. they have said all along that the negotiations and one is done have to be of one owned and of on
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lead to moment i think. in islam about. the world bank says that it's doubling funding to two hundred billion dollars to help poor countries prepare for climate change the announcement comes as leaders gather in poland for un led talks known as the conference of the parties aimed at tackling global warming leaders and other goods from nearly two hundred nations including the un secretary general antonio good to have two weeks to agree on the details of the twenty fifteen paris climate of course we are in trouble we are in deep trouble with climate change climate changes are coming faster than we. and we might sketch up sooner rather than lead to be forty two years too late. for many people regions even countries this is already
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a matter of life or death and this meeting is the most important gathering on climate change since the berries agreement was signed it's if these are true overstates the urgency of our situation let's hear now from our environment correspondent nick clark 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 glass is all means your strikes have done but when did this manmade change begin well is down your luck now reports the answer may lie beneath a small body of water just outside toronto. protected by strict conservation laws crawford lake is relatively pristine it's deep low in
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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 how to curb some of the things we're doing to this planet. earth scientists who
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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 all 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 artist 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 or change mitigate some of the impacts we've had it'll be at least two years before
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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. is the c.e.o. of the global sense of for adaptation he joins us now live from the hague in the netherlands good to have you with us and would it be a fair assessment to say that the debate surrounding climate change now has moved on from what's causing it and why but how billions of people around the world and businesses too can kind of depths and adapt quickly to ensure that communities are as resilient as possible to climate change. thank you daniel i think that's a fair assessment indeed that we are moving from commitments to action it's also fair to say that action particularly on adaptation should be increased dramatically
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last week the privilege of being in ethiopia in the northern parts in mccalla there you can see on the ground how farmers are struggling with a changing climate they're also to ones who are at the forefront of implementing solutions having said that we need much more dramatic action on adaptation at scale and at speed so even if we meet the targets set by the that the paris climate agreement we're still going to need to make sure people can adapt climate change isn't going to go away indeed i mean we have seen a very recently the release of the i.p.c.c. report the scientific body of the united nations which implicated what are the implications of a one point five warmer world vision of the a two degree warmer world well in fact these changes are dramatic agricultural productivity will drop from three percent to seven percent this has huge
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implications on the global economy but more importantly it has used implications on the livelihoods of people such as those in mccalla it isn't restrained to michaela alone the same applies for people in miami in mumbai in melbourne people need to adapt to a changing climate and i need to do it rapidly what about this world bank initiative doubling funding to some two hundred billion dollars to help poor countries prepare for climate change that sounds a lot of money but is it enough. i think it's a very good step from the world bank to increase its funding for finance the interesting dynamic of this particular commitment is that it increases the pool of money for adaptation to matches the mitigation commitment for the first time in history we now see that fifty billion u.s. dollars is made available for adaptation is that enough no it's not is it
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a good start it is all the countries all the private sectors all the international organizations are now being challenge to also increases funding for climate adaptation and i think that's a very important progression on what we were before good to talk to somebody thanks dude patrick quinn in the hague thank you with the news from out zero plenty more to come including a u.n. envoy helps to negotiate the transfer of injured fighters from yemen to oman. u.s. president trump says he struck a deal with china on car tariffs. and it support liverpool got a late win against the city rivals everton but the manager's reaction could land him in trouble for all back to tell you more a little later. fifty wounded who think fighters are being allowed to leave yemen to get treatment in the
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move being seen as a goodwill gesture ahead of peace talks later this month the saudi u.a.e. coalition which is fighting the cooties agreed to the medivac after a request from the un's special envoy to yemen griffiths. these were flights you must pass on the united nations plane they'll be escorted by three yemeni doctors and one from the u.n. so good. story is a resident of the gulf it's national form he says the evacuation is a welcome development. we know that this push which is spearheaded by a u.n. envoy has been going on for at least a couple weeks. and house hosted a u.n. envoy who has shuttled between washington mosque at riyadh and sama to try to get this peace set off before peace talk assume so the fact that we're even discussing this issue which previously was off limits is in itself
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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 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 they arrested a peace process will be in good tracks but that's the first challenge if and when the peace talks take place. here is a least newly released private messages from jamal khashoggi have revealed possible
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motives for his murder and how he described the saudi crown prince as a beast c.n.n. has seen exchanges between her and omar abdel aziz a saudi dissident based in canada they discussed creating an online movement to document human rights abuses in saudi arabia and to hold leaders to account in one of four hundred messages sent a year before his murder showed she described the saudi crown prince mohammed bin solomon as a base to a devolve all in his path the montreal based dissident lizzie's has filed a lawsuit alleging that saudi agents used israeli spy ware to hack into his messages with. al-jazeera as andy gallagher reports 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
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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 the cause but the 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 flip side 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
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had been hacked jamal khashoggi reply was very telling it simply said god help us. he is a saudi dissident and heads the movement for islamic reform and arabia he joins us now live via skype from london good to have you with us what you make of this assessment than that there are no more possible motives for the murder of the show she that had been planning this online movement to hold the kingdom to account. it's it's not a problem in cause it's the straw which broke the camel's back. anger and dictation and. goodness so for a. man to. either catch or could not or kill he was even before these messages. and actually that has been a correspondence between bin selman and the pilot and his brother of. him even
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before these messages and. you were speaking to his acquaintances a lot about being encouraged to go back to the country my own arrangements all been so none but these messages which were probably hacked and seen by the saudi agents using this spy word oh well probably. the motives for all this brutal treatment all of one hundred thirty you say the messages were probably hacked it wasn't about a show g.'s phone itself that had been hacked but the person to whom he was speaking to and what are the implications of that the fact that they gleaned information about jamal hashad she's. movements if you like from somebody else's technology. well and it depends on if you mean the implications on on the persons who are probably a target of this hacking it's
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a big implication i mean we are all targeted by these spy words and we all the opposition figures of our targeted are we would never entertain any purpose he would have for our selves or the people who are dealing with we are taking our precautions and to know i'm not aware of anybody being harmed inside the country because our. communication but still we're sticking a major precautions are worth checking or more vials under and that applies to all my colleagues in opposition so if this is true there is success in hacking our telephones of communication or more by our. sets then. this is international crime which has to be dealt by. the countries which are which are supposed to. to respect human rights under respect international law that has to be interference from the from europe or
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