tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera December 5, 2018 1:00pm-2:01pm +03
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operation agreement then on december twelfth michael cohen the fixer and former lawyer for president trump will also be sentenced and president trump has recently said that he is a weak person and he said he should serve his complete sentence that is completely different than what the president says about paul in a ford we will see in the coming days how the president responds to international credit agencies have don british rating by one notch six weeks after the nation plunge into a political crisis on tuesday supreme court judges began hearing a petition that challenges the president's decision to dissolve parliament last month by the palace are seen as plan to call a snap election won't be allowed to go ahead until the court delivers a judgment. about pharmacists in myanmar as northeastern china states say coal mining in the area is ruining their livelihoods and the environment recent changes have allowed major overseas investment in the coal industry in the area bordering china and laos rob mcbride has all reports mines like this one
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a largely closed off to the outside world and have to be filled discreetly. but the people living near them say there is no escaping the pollution they cause to their farmland and waterways saya farms just a couple of fields that he says are now ruined. since the company started to mine for coal i've lost the water for my farm my land is covered with coal dust and i can't grow any crops all around this area in million miles east in shan state is evidence of mining operations recent changes in regulations mean foreign companies can now invest in medium and large scale mining the government has defended its increasing use of coal to meet the country's electricity needs despite objections from environmental groups. and civil society groups who have been educating people on their legal rights say the relative stability in me in ma could lead to
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a mining boom. at first we thought it's a great idea for development in our community but in fact it's not good it's getting worse and destroying us. given the state's proximity to china many investors are chinese but companies from japan and australia are also interested and there are fears about a lack of regulation of environmental and safety standards in this remote part of the country. this underground fire at one mine was filmed by a monk who does not want to reveal his identity for his own safety. we don't expect the government to fix this because the problem comes from the government they're cooperating with military and foreign investors. we're very concerned for our safety because we are in a small local and we're fighting against people who have a lot of money and our opening up to the outside world has been a boost for people in other parts of me and ma but for many in this area the
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existence of coal under their fields and outside investment is proving a tough. combination rob mcbride i'll just zero. really get him fully back to bo with the headlines on al-jazeera is somebody else chief prosecutor's office has filed an application for arrest warrants to be issued for two senior saudi officials over the killing of jamal prosecutors strongly suspect former deputy intelligence chief. court advise a solid oak a tiny were involved in planning the murder in october meanwhile a senior senators in the united states have called for action against saudi arabia's crown prince over demolishor g.'s matter they gave their assessment after a briefing from the cia director gina haskell i have zero question in my mind that the crown prince n.b.s. ordered the killing monitored the killing knew exactly what was happening planted
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in advance if he was in front of a jury you would be convicted in thirty minutes guilty. so. the question is what we do about that. now the news yemen's who the rebels have arrived in sweden for un back talks and a conflict internationally recognized the many government is also taking part. the talks are supported by saudi arabia and the u.a.e. rather the government is supported by saudi arabia and the u.a.e. and the delegation has set off from riyadh earlier efforts to bring the two sides together broke down in september members of the healthy delegation spoke to the media before flying to sweden on argument of fact yeah me too all issues can be negotiated we did not restrict the negotiation to specific areas however in order to build mutual trust there will be several documents documents are captives of the economy humanitarian work to build confidence for the peace talks thereby to
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produce a comprehensive overall political solution to the yemen crisis the u.s. special counsel has recommended no jail time for president donald thomas former national security advisor michael flynn saying his corporators substantially with the russian investigation for december two thousand and seventeen to nine to the f.b.i. about his contacts with russia and ukraine's president petro poroshenko has scheduled a meeting next week to create an independent church for shanker has been pushing for the establishment of a ukrainian orthodox church that will be three free of russian control russia is strongly against the mold you have set with headlines on al-jazeera coming up next it's radicalize youth never again stay with us. in nepal poverty leaves children vulnerable and at risk but sometimes those who say they can help cause the most harm one of many shines a light on predators in the aid industry. on al-jazeera.
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i know it again but just try to get the ball to stay quiet and can get the i know he killed the building i'm kind. of on. going there. but. you know i. think another few weeks it doesn't hurt to. everyone's. writers got. a movement going. great there was a point in the to me when i was hiding among my friends that. i told myself if i don't make it out that i had to save all that's a say in this video. and believe will be catastrophic day in broward county history
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not just one voice for this cause you know we're here as family we're here as friends. if you stand with us by saying we need to pass common sense gun legislation you have chosen and none of the millions of people marching in this country today will stop until they see those against us out of office because we sure use law. since the time that i came out here. it has been six minutes and twenty seconds the shooter has ceased shooting and will soon abandon his rifle blend in with the students as they escape and walk free for an hour before a rest fight for your lives before it's someone else's cha.
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cha i the. one i want to freshman year i didn't want to be. why that and how many friends and it wasn't until the last year freshman year that i felt at home that i felt like i actually had friends and mean it was because i picked up my camera and i brought it to school i decided to make of like that there you know it's good you tube today we're going to be doing a q. and a i axed you guys to ask me questions and. let me research now i realize that my camera was my comfort zone it was a place for me to lay on my worries and preoccupations and just like go of everything that's when i realized that to me blogging is
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a way of taking care of myself. this past month i saw i saw a dead body you know i went to multiple funerals and i just had to learn how to deal with that sadness it's been rough i don't like to show my wishes on camera especially i don't. it's been rough but we we don't we students are getting through it we're strong because filmmaking has this power to just influence other people i decided to video ways project called stories untold so stories untold reposed different videos and we mainly cover people that have experience gun violence and we've had the opportunity to travel across the country and meet so many different people this is christy she's a color months survivor this is omar though god he was a first responder at the polls shooting i was involved in one of the worse part of
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the us tragedies that occur you know right before your nando cause massacre. is for those people courage bodies where you can probably drive. or a lot of us suffer trauma that we want to express but we just don't have the outlet to to go. if you had a teacher with who was adept at firearms they could very well end the attack very quickly so we'll be doing the background checks will be doing a lot of different things but we'll certainly be looking at ideas like that. we've got to make sure we have an increased law enforcement presence on in all of our schools every school so my repos would have a significant long presence in every school our top of that as our school and schools that are larger would have a bigger law enforcement presence. when
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i was in elementary school or middle school i remember school was a school it's a place where i can walk around where i can feel at home where i can just be me i guess now a school starting to feel more like a prison there's so many security guards so many policemen in. the united states has been at least for the last fifty or sixty years like lobel power and a leading global power so it has to have a particular kind of brand of of conflict management and this is it it's it's militarized but i'd never accept that argument about militarization as simply the reason to explain why americans like done so much i think there's also a relationship to not ever having to explain oneself i think that's a part of american culture. but it's also really
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a part of american identity which is never to apologize. she could walk what she's lazing. i goof ball. but. i raised two girls and single dad and i watched it with my own to our kids grow up to. you know it's hard enough now with what's going on in. my opinion democrats have been all for guns for many many years trying to do something about guns but it's in our d.n.a. and in american they can't get it out it's impossible it's like a bad it's a stage a lot of bad stain but it's like a stain it's never going to go away we're always going to have no. thank you thank
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. it was. someone let them write. sentences as she teaches them already we did train every year at least five or six teachers carry guns i want to carry with you make. me sit in war you know you have anybody to tell. exactly what they're. telling us is down the street from my school and now we have one fire drill every month same with code red every month in code yellow every month once you go on code red you turn off the lights bring down
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the shade and you go high like to where like if they look in the window they can't see you like one of the walls but we had one on call back on valentine's day and then i texted my sister saying i'm on code red and she's like yeah there's a shooting at douglas and that's when i told my friends and they started freaking out because their siblings got there it's very close and they're very touchy when it comes to that subject of guns because i say you know i support them but they have to be used the right way you can't you can't use them to threaten somebody with or bring them to school to show your friends you know it's not it's not it's not a toy there's so many veterans that are coming back that you know that are very down or guards they become police officers give them a job just because it was served our country and here i've been a part of his body blown off or shot off and particular something he'd be
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a perfect candidate sitting in that school inside there in the give them a gun. and he will stop a threat before they have good parents in the p.t.s.d. you know. after what they've done to jenna that stuff covers a lot of areas and now they have to pay attention to ten. that's also police officers go through that then everybody so there's there's ways to to to keep an eye on these people i feel and i'm sure if they if they let a police officer carry a firearm. they could let somebody go in there a lot of more police officers or ex-military.
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after a traumatic event and we know that one thing that facilitates healthy coping is children feeling like they're safe and so you know i think that the idea is well meaning but on the flip side it may also inadvertently send a message that school actually isn't safe. i think for children who've experienced trauma that could be a big trigger for that and be more stressful than it's necessary. i didn't know that i had p.t.s.d. and so one of the fire drills and this physics fire drill was i think the fourth one and it has been the wall that was in the same classroom scene see that i was in on february fourteenth and it brought me back completely hearing my teacher's voice
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having the friend that i was stuck with in the office right next to me made me think should i get up and walk around know what like what do i do i was in shock i started sweating cold i started breathing heavy and i couldn't control my my nerves that's when i realized that. that's when i realized you know like i'm not ok and to take care of myself to. i have a lot of guts more than i like to tell a lot of people you know sometimes that's how i'm forty sometimes i'm sixty i don't let them know exactly how many i've got i could have arguments but i let them know that i have a good amount i enjoy bringing my neighbors my neighbors children my neighbors wives and husbands out to the range so they can see and get more comfortable for five years i have seventy a little girl since she was about seven years old i would take it to the range and
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we've been learning about guns and she will have progressed from small bullets now she has her own they are fifteen she has her own shotguns she has her own pistols twenty two's is what she joys these are guns that are in the safe so we can have fun we can enjoy. guns are very important in the united states they are central to how americans think about conflict it's the way they think about mediating conflict in their popular culture and their everyday life and their respect for authority they are like what we might call fetish objects they're something that people find attractive as a way to substitute for actually trying to deal with conflict and more interpersonal ways.
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guns are important to me because i want to be able to protect myself protect my family everybody that i love that's my god given right it's written down it's you know these are my rights and i want to be able to use them is my. back. and i'm. part of that empire it's my favorite gun issue because like i just love how. i really don't like a big recoil my gun so fact that the barrel so mom makes to require a lot of this move there for me to shoot and it's fun going to go in the child's room. nude launched from because. i think mind as a very educated mirror i do support like values and everything that he says i appreciate the truth and that's why he gives me ron uncut splint no.
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so the bullet a made these bullets. mahmoud's my grandmother well show ready to go struggle of like this. when it's like a few weeks ago we had like a lockdown in my school and we didn't know what was going on we're stuck in a closet for like an hour and a half by text my dad was like look we're on a code red i don't know what's happening and you know from that point all you can do is really like hide in the corner i got a text from my daughter there's a lot done in the school they're saying that somebody is running around shooting i want to go run to my car go come to my house grab my rifles grab my ammo grab my
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vest grab my helmet and go hit the school i mean i may not be running around the campus with a gun but i want to throw guns to the teachers a say go get my kid get up or should i'm coming with your cover let's go there was a discussion going around a couple months right after the storm and douglas shooting happened that teachers should be able to be armed and that idea was. it was i wish i liked the idea personally but there's a lot of teachers like i said that have these democratic my sits there like no i don't want to have a gun and then these kids are like the teachers to show us and it's like that is such an idiotic mindset. i think the reality of gun violence and the reality of these high security schools
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is something that poor kids in more violent communities have been living with for a long time and it's now that it's heading out into other neighborhoods that we're starting to talk about it more but it's something that's been a reality for lots of our kids for quite some time. miami guard and as some people refer to it murder garden it's a beautiful area as you can see like a lot of trees a lot of just a lot of shootings so a friend died a few family members been affected and it just continues just now from us so that continues as all of our people go by this continues to happen with no intention. has to be outside almost every day if i may have home we just go is everybody wanted to play football basketball want to do so not a lot of young kids really go outside it unless it's the weekend of bond weekend
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and pretty much the same for i guess. who here is experienced in violence or police brutality or i have somebody in your family. and you have been a victim oh by the way my husband was shot in the head random drive by just the. and i think there's a lot in his head but he's doing fine now but a couple years ago it was really like a traumatic experience for him. so how do you guys know what you say it was a drag they did with tarik now he was in that entire year he was playing basketball at the park it was just a random like spray shooting so out now let's talk about if your best friend had a gun and i was walking down trees you know up and out in the open a pos i'm here with this gun so let's say you have jeremiah and joe by would you
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feel more comfortable trying to jump on not to use a gun and i will not example i would try to convince to rome ward and community first because i could lose my life and i don't want nobody how do you feel about being outside how do you feel about going to the parks tell me a little bit of your views and how you feel about just being in the community i don't usually like big life because mostly in parts you feel like you're going to be see play no one's going to do anything but you always have to like be aware of your surroundings absolutely so you don't let what's going on stop you from living your best life. ok anybody else how you feel as the officer i don't need to go outside because i know there's a vast. right around seven states i would say i'm a spammer to anybody else.
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thank you. in my neighborhood in and people i hang around with most needy always try to make money positive you go what if something goes wrong happen and they could fall off the wrong track get into road drugs in america you can see at a lot of drugs even in inner city schools we don't worry about was going to happen mostly we have insiders and maybe a fight outside of the school that's what we look to as an oh ok now i got to survive. right now there's a lot starting point so in the future is going to. be something i want to do entrepreneurship so this is a stepping stone to like. any words younger guy in their way to be i try to be a role model to them so they can be role models and they get older to meet other people so that know no more of us. had to go get a shot or have
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a good in this horrific trauma of being alone to be in a free to do what they want to be. everything. they want. after the shooting all of us students came together because we wanted change but i think we all realize that politics are slower. than we imagined but we're trying to as much as possible or so are we just heard in the senate in congress or just in the government and sometimes we're in tallahassee florida at the moment of the house of representatives capitol building and we are fighting for it which is to be because we don't want to see a new dispute to get heard. for a long time i think that you have not been able to effect change in the united
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states and when and where they have tried they have been forwarded by adult culture by market oriented culture i and i think until you see a transition of power between the generations it will be very difficult for young people to affect much change. i've tried to be careful with what i say sometimes and i know that there's a lot of people that probably won't like me and that there's are going to be haters they point out that our shooting was as fake as the sandy hoax and the only dubbed bodies you have it's just a lot of stupid comments that i really personally don't pay attention to there's comments here that are calling me out for being a crisis i there and these are companies that i honestly don't pay attention to and
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good care less they could express their opinion anywhere they want to i am just going to keep moving forward and posting my content because that's what matters and that's what brings me happiness my life completely changed i feel like i became an adult and that i realized what life was like how cruel everything truly is and that the intentions of some people are just beyond my imagination i learned what it's like to lose seventeen people i learned what it's like to go to their funerals and just that sadness that no one can take away either and what it's like to tell your mom i love you what you thought what was going to be the last time and despite the trauma we lived on february fourteenth there are a lot of good things that came afterwards and to this day i say that and the seventeen angels i passed away that they are looking over us because they truly are
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blessed my life and the lives of many others and we aren't that a catering. for them and to them because they they are the reason why we are pushing forward and why we are motivated to keep on with. anti fascist anti establishment and pro violence despite the recent official disbanding of its militarized wing a basque separatist movement is found alive and well on the terraces of a stadia. a place where political revolutionaries share a platform an ideology with violent hooligans. and read all death on al-jazeera. business updates brought to you by qatar airways going places together.
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this is al jazeera. hello and welcome i'm peter wu watching the news live from our headquarters here in doha coming up in the next sixty minutes. chief prosecutor requests arrest warrants for two of saudi arabia's crown prince whose closest aides for their role in the murder of jamal khashoggi plus. to get the parties to this conflict to come to one place for consultation has not been easy. hopes of ending the war in yemen a long awaited talks are set to begin in sweden. more protests are planned in
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france despite the delay of a controversial plan to raise taxes on diesel. also ahead farewell to george h.w. bush america prepares to its forty first president to rest. istanbul's chiefs prosecutor's office has filed an application for arrest warrants for two of the saudi crown prince his former top aides over the killing of jamal khashoggi prosecutors say they strongly suspect the former deputy intelligence chief. and royal court advisor tunney were involved in the planning of the journalist in october officials say the move to you arrest warrants reflects the view that the saudi authorities won't take formal action against the two men
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turkey's also called for the extradition of all the suspects that saudi arabia is holding vassal comes a day after u.s. senators were briefed by the head of the cia about the case we'll have more on their reaction in a moment but first let's look at what we know now about tani and. sagal qahtani is a law school graduate who's held several positions in the saudi royal court he was one of the crown prince mohammed.
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