tv The Nobel Interview Al Jazeera December 10, 2018 7:00pm-8:01pm +03
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no deal it's been kind of a very kind of negative option itself to try to steer people towards her deal even if they do so very reluctantly what this decision means is it's a bit of a game changer it means that those who still have the hope of britain staying in the european union can do so it means those who might want brics it but maybe not the one that theresa may is delivering and want more time to get that new deal whether it be some who want to kind of a stronger leave to the rights of treats them a a whether the those who want to even softer type of bricks it to to her left can now think about such possibilities this isn't quite her deal or no deal there's now this third option that could change a lot of minds in parliament tomorrow absolutely anything and there's a crucial twenty four hour period now isn't five six hours across one gentleman saying until this vote and parliament tomorrow given that many people i'd say most people are saying that that that it passes empowerments was highly unlikely what
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then happens next. well i think if the very likely situation is happens that she loses i think that it's very difficult to see her continuing on her government was found only a week or two ago to be in contempt of parliament for refusing to or trying to refuse to share parliament the legal advice that it had on bricks it's if it were able unable to kind of keep parliament's confidence in winning the big boat on the signature piece of legislation the signature things she's been trying to do for the last two years you couldn't get that through and it was a government a contempt i find it very difficult to see what else she might be able to do as prime minister we'd really have a bit of a crisis on our hands and i think in parliament remains divided as to not quite sure what plan it would want to proceed with and i think it becomes very likely
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that we look at props that referendum probably believe the cone of the quickest thing that parliament could do or a new general election ok i mean before all that is then not a possibility that she could go back to the e.u. lean against say maybe get some tweaks put it some paula meant some votes again perhaps in january and get it through that way. i strongly think that that won't be a possibility the was been spending two years ago is haitians with britain right now on this deal it's made very clear that this is the the final offer and i don't think it's in their interests to try to give extra concessions to make things easier rosy or poor for britain exiting painfully i think it's any use interest that this is seen as a real problem as is probably a mistake and so that would discourage other e.u. members from even contemplating breaking off themselves and so far that strategy
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seems to work remember the prime minister in britain has been said it all along has been sending out her foreign secretaries to the different capital cities in the you trying to win kind of support at the back door to get some kind of deal but none she's not been able to break the you has not been able to divide and conquer them they've been pretty unified and that strategy hasn't worked out too well and so i just don't see the use interest that of course also those who say the referendum should not be played again and again that's exactly what would be happening if we continually had these debates over whether we've got the right deal or not so i think that we won't see that happen ok tom but it's going to take a photo thanks for joining us there from down. much more still to come here on the program after four weekends of protests in france present on your marks unions and business leaders before addressing the nation. and we speak to the commander of ukraine's navy whose twenty four crew members are still detained by russia. class
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after a long buildup argentine football fans take to the streets of one of the areas to celebrate their stories champions joe we'll have that story. france's president emmanuel markram will address the nation after holding talks to try to resolve the so-called yellow vest movement cabinet ministers are also joining the talks in paris alongside union and trade leaders been largely silent following the fourth week of protests across france the demonstrations were initially of a fuel tax hikes but they've now become an anti government mass movement calling for macron to resign but more of an update on that cain joins us now from. elisei apologise door a person who has been talking to an all day the actual people who've been out on
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the streets protesting. well that is a very good question isn't it laura that he's been speaking to or is speaking to trade unions to for unionists to representatives of local organizations business leaders that sort of thing but are they really representative of the sorts of people who were out on the streets of paris and other cities in france over the weekend it's unlikely that that many of the yellow vest movements who are on the streets or in the palace behind me right now and that's the problem that the president faces that his personal approval ratings are extremely extremely low twenty four percent in other words more than three quarters of the population disapprove of the way that he is handling france and when the government of france so he's meeting these people can he make concessions to them what can he say to them that will put hate them bear in mind that on friday he met a delegation of mayors of french cities and they told him candidly mr president
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most of these people protesting want your head on a spike so clearly that's not going to happen not even metaphorically is it going to happen question can be what more can the president say to the people here in the u.s. or in the palace and indeed this evening when he addresses the nation on television what can he say that will really lance the boil of this movement we wait to see absolutely embarrassing as well just to hear the tone of his address when somebody has been criticized for being far too arrogant about this whole his whole uprisings where one could call it that. that i think is still a him me where instead to just tear about what sort of tone president back on also needs to strike later when he addresses the nation. yes i can hear you there was a bit of
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a gap in the audio or apologies to our viewers for that yes well the question is what do they want to hear clearly that's not going to be a resignation from the president they've already heard his government say a moratorium for six months on fuel price hikes there's speculation about certain tax rises that won't happen that sort of thing but is that really likely to be enough to bear in mind also that today separately to the meetings taking place here and that speech from the president the political opposition to mr macro in parliament is going to put down a motion of no confidence in his government has to be a forty eight hour cooling period as it were before the vote takes place it's very unlikely that macros government will lose that vote they have an absolute majority in parliament that movement could become national republican on the move is pretty sure of its numbers in parliament so each he commands a majority in parliament but absolutely not amongst the wider society amongst the
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public so that's his problem he has to as it were square the circle of talking to people here talking to his to his country this evening knowing that there's a growing movement against him one of the headlines over the weekend was a play on the words of his party's name that we could become much the republic on the move well the photos of petrol bombs and fires in the streets of paris with the phrase the hope would be off like in the republic in flames those sorts of headlines are the ones he wants to do away with the question will be what can he do one final thought here is when unrest has happened on this scale in france before it's not the president who's paid for it with his job it's the prime minister who's paid for it with his job is mr macro prepared to do away with it through a few deep the current prime minister find somebody else from within his own movement who can command a majority in parliament and try to find measures which will pacify people lots of questions and so far not so many answers almost certainly be keeping an eye on that
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speech that he gives to the nation and bring it to viewers as and when it happens dominic thanks very much. well leaders at a u.n. conference in morocco have adopted a pact aimed at improving cooperation on migration but fear of governments joins than had previously worked on the proposal a number of countries refuse to support his into his trailer and the united states today more than eighty percent of the world's migrants move between countries in a safe and orderly fashion but and regulated migration as a terrible human costs of the lives lost on any lives journey is across the oceans and rivers and the cost in lives ruined the hands of smugglers and script was in lawyers and other daters more than sixty thousand migrants ever died on the move since the year thousands and these is a source of collective shame. as. he's joining us from marrakesh
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and that's what just has a significant this pact is. well i mean from a united nations perspective this is quite significant step forward is going to send a positive signal that the international community is willing to maintain the framework that could pave the way for smooth movement for migrants all over the well that would give them. access to health education and also the right to resettle aghast the backdrop of well those wishes laws in violence and instability but laura as you rightly said it also comes against the backdrop of a trend now with the rise of the populist far right movements worldwide willing to put an end to this pact saying that if violates national sovereignty of the country joining them or to talk about this is from the international organization of migration you know thank you very much indeed for joining us how significant is
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this for you thanks very much for having me on it's really significant because this is the first time in the history of the united nations in the history of international collaboration that countries have sat down together and have agreed unanimously an overwhelming majority that migration is something that needs to be discussed it needs to be dealt with in collaboration so while there are certainly those on the one side of the spectrum who are against it and those on the other who think it's it's the way forward what we have here is a middle ground where you can have rational discussion well if you go back to two thousand and sixteen within the new york declaration for my migrants and refugees the feeling that time was a sentiment was basically building bridges with the world the has changed trump is now in power his think i want to build the wall italians have pulled out the hungary and many countries are pulling out of this deal i mean why would you think this is really a significant step forward certainly so some countries have decided to opt out of this process but the overwhelming majority have not and i think what we need what
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countries have recognize is that migration is as old as human history but it needs to be managed the notion that a lot of people can show up in your borders and come on in. it's not right i mean no country in the world not one country will allow that to happen so how do you manage that at the same time people need to leave sometimes because they are fleeing violence fleeing climate change they say they need a better life and better prospects for their children how do we deal with that by managing it which can about seventy million people forced out of their homes we're talking about twenty four million refugees and half of that number is below the age of eighteen is there a sentiment dance in the near future the chances for some of the countries up it would reconsider that and how concerned are you if many european countries is having white wing governments in power and deciding to pull out from this in the near future i think the color of the particular color our political stripe of government is immaterial at the end of the day states have real issues to deal with
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in some countries there's a demographic cliff they do not have enough young people to work in their factories in their offices and to build a future for their country how are they going to do that without migration unless they wish to fail and no country wishes to fail so they need to manage that process and i think what this compact does it allows that to happen in an organized and coordinated way so even though this pushback at the moment even those enthusiasm on the other side clearly people cannot go across borders without passports unless they have a right to rest to refugees so it needs to be and more organized process thank you very much in mr. you know it's i mean. i asked the secretary general on turn your terrorist while ago about how confident his he against a backdrop for the decisions made by the u.s. and other countries and he said to me you have to understand that my mother was a migrant and that millions of people like me come from backgrounds of migrants and refugees and it's this sentiment he hopes will continue to build up in the near
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future to make it a reality to make it easy for millions of people stranded now in refugee camps in sub-saharan africa on the border between turkey and syria in different parts of the world giving them hope. many thanks for joining us there from the conference and mark casual support for the migrant deal in europe particularly is crumbling and nowhere is that more evidence and austria reports from vienna. in vienna and across central europe the traditional christmas markets are well underway the symbolic of a christian heritage in a sense of european cultural identity twenty sixteen the european nations led the campaign for a global solution to the migration crisis but a string of populist election victories since then means the u. n. compact which emerged from that crisis is being disowned by its architects first to go was hungary. we see that pact coming into the field of national
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sovereignty certainly trying to make migration a human right which if you take a closer look is opening pandora's box that's a perspective though that the united nations insists is just plain wrong the un says that the compact is not legally binding and does not create any new human rights furthermore it says national sovereignty over migration is a specific protected in the document so long as it complies with international law it's caviar just like that which have been pounced upon by europe's new nationalists with austria leading the way. research is point to a new generation of politicians across europe who understand that migration can sway elections it seems that migration is one of the only remaining topics where somehow nation states are seeing how they can make
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a point this is always one of control and sovereignty and certainly it's also related to more and more polarized public. after austria followed hungary more fell like dominoes slovakia italy bog area czech republic poland and switzerland of all either withdrawn or suspended their participation why because according to one academic by starting from a pro migration stance the un compact underestimated and ignored the concerns of individual citizens there are no kind of conditions with the limits of migration right this kind it completely ignores the potential cultural aspects which i think i increasingly important for most europeans and i think what we see in in most countries is right it's not about the economic side the people a voice about migration i think it's kind of the fear of loss of cultural identity the numbers of refugees entering europe has dropped sharply since the height of the migrant crisis in twenty fifteen but the challenge of how to address future crises
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remains n.g.o.s a warning that nationalism cannot solve global problems not signing conflict means not participating in the solution being not barb in the solution of the google challenge and if we want to. challenge seriously then they have to be part of the global community christmas is a season of goodwill where families gather and exchange gifts in europe's increasingly nationalistic political landscape their charity begins and ends at home all bran and i'll just vienna. stuff is it surely with the weather and them and the two initiatives put forth by the un to help end the war in yemen. plus turnaround in tanzania but it won't cost critics question the president's media tactics. and john rood holiday puts in a hard day's work to give new orleans victory in the n.b.a.
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a job it was a large animal inspired. by the springtime flowers of a mountain lake. the first snowfall on the winter story. hello there give it a couple of days and i'll think we'll see the birth of two tropical cyclones the first one is a bit of a cheat really because it already has been a tropical cyclone but it's kind of disbanded a little bit and it's this area of cloud here that's already hit the eastern parts of queensland gave us an awful lot of heavy rain three hundred forty nine millimeters of what weather there that is easily enough to give us some flooding and now it's tracking its way towards the west so look at the satellite picture then you can see that broad of cloud here it is gradually meandering a little bit and heading its way towards the west it's in a big area of messy area of clouds and it's within that that i think will see the storm really form so it won't see it pops back over into the gulf of carpentaria i
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think that's when we'll see things develop probably not choose day it'll probably be wednesday before it actually is classed as a tropical cyclone and then it's going to stay dangerously close to the coastline there and so we are likely to see some flooding from the system so we have to keep a close eye on that over the next few days to see exactly where it goes the other system we're watching very closely is to the east of sri lanka again a whole mass of cloud here but within that we are now seeing some kind of rotation and we're seeing a storm begin to develop that looks like it's going to be running its way north woods now for the time being it looks like it should stay away from sri lanka but seeing some horrible flooding recently. the weather sponsored by cats owned.
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by senator. my name's from the file. and i think i'm on my phone all day every day on my tablet is never really more than a few feet away the use of the internet elevates dover me just like gambling and just like cocaine goes i will experience my own unusual digital detox i feel like i don't want to harm. you so much. my d.h. to addiction on al-jazeera.
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and again you're watching and sarah has a reminder of our top stories this hour it's been seventy days since. last saw her fiance sally janice jamal khashoggi alive his country's consulate and. an interview with al jazeera has shown she's fiance says she'll fight to ensure everyone is responsible for his death brought to justice. europe's top courses ruled the persons parliament can council breaks it without asking permission from the e.u. members but come as a trace in may is pushing on with departure presenting her divorce agreement to parliament. and leaders from one hundred sixty four countries have agreed to a un pact aimed at improving cooperation on migration pact wants to prevent suffering and chaos for global migration and stop them morocco despite opposition
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and the withdrawal of several countries. as yemen's warring sides sit down and talk for the first time in two years has obtained a un document outlining two initiatives aimed at ending the conflict has been put forward by the un special envoy to yemen martin griffiths who's part of the negotiations in sweden one proposal calls for fighting to come to an end in yemen third largest city tired one of the front lines in the war two hundred thousand civilians of course are in the violence there he wants to revive a two thousand and sixteen peace agreement now the focus is on a day to the rebel controlled seaport where most of yemen's food and medicine come in and then wants to halt all military operations including saudi led airstrikes and for all militia groups to leave adam baron as a visiting fellow at the european council on foreign relations he joins us live from beirut what do you think of these two initiatives that i'm. i
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mean right now it's it's kind of a basis of discussion we've seen this happen multiple times before were martin or previous you want onwards of effectively put forward different proposals for that for the two sides to discuss that being said i think this shows the dual importance of both her data and ties her data as as we've said is yemen's most important port at this point it's the last key port under her control is probably the center of the worst humanitarian crisis within yemen soo manager in crisis it's a city that's been under siege by the with these for for three years now and where they've committed some of the worst worst by the actions of. so in that sense it's not surprising that these two cities would be chosen as as the focus for the u.n. envoy ok so if no actual progress is made within those two cities is it is it progress at least to get all these signs around the table for these proposals to be put to them and for them to discuss them in the same room. oh absolutely i
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think that's one view achievement that we can say has happened from these talks so far is the fact that you now have after the to be honest the rather failure in geneva. u.n. envoy martin griffiths has managed to get all sides present in sweden he's managed to create a rather positive atmosphere and now he has you know the who is i'm the internationally recognized government. on the same table discussing you know two of the most important issues facing facing the conflict this isn't to say that there's light in the tunnel at the end of the tunnel just yet that being said the restarting of a political process particularly after it effectively collapsed after the collapse of the quit talks two years ago that's that's an important step in the right direction but there is a sense of urgency here isn't there i mean we've just been seeing pictures of starving children on screens the whole country is on the brink of famine things need to happen quickly absolutely i mean that's kind of the sad irony is there
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is a huge urgency yemen is the scene of the world's worst humanitarian crisis the conflict in yemen i would say each day this conflict goes on it's another week that it will take to solve that in the sense that each day it gets more and more complicated as we speak that being said. it's hard to imagine any quick solution on the there's no trust between either side you're going to need trust building confidence building measures these kinds of things so unfortunately it's going to be a long road but there is there is indeed a significant amount of urgency. for all parties whether internally or or externally to begin this process on this very long and winding road ok adam barrett many thanks taking time to join us there from barry's at least twenty policemen have been killed in fighting between security forces and members of the taliban in western afghanistan five others were injured in the violence across far and five provinces. i mean is leader is promising an economic revolution after an election
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that consolidated his power. and led mass protests in april which forced out the party that her little funny twenty years my step movement is leading the vote with a huge margin as our enforcer walker reports in the capital. even in a suit and tie nickel passion and acted like the ordinary guy just checking in at his local polling station is the person you're in are you looking for your name on the list a family man my name or your voting as well today with your father. but this is armenia is revolutionary leader on a mission. i can say that we would have preached already general. and it is really free transparent and democratic elections and democracy it's our general to reach and i think we have already reached out
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and. our general. for future peace to strengthen institutionally armenian democracy. and demanded free and fair elections when he began a protest march more than six months ago that march ended twenty years of unpopular one party rule but he then he did a mandate to govern he's promised to end corruption and cronyism lift armenians out of poverty and resolve conflict with armenians neighbors this has been the finishing touch of nicole passion yan's velvet revolution that started with a walk and a mass movement and found its logical conclusion at the ballot box turnout was down from previous elections but so too were reports of cheating the joke has been doing the rounds that people are complaining nobody bribe them this time to get out. vote
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. everything is cool. this election has been legacy liberation i was very happy i was very proud. for the democratic system. things have improved but everything will be clearer after the elections. this is the man who was ousted in the spring. casting his vote for his once all powerful republican party a party now facing annihilation nicko passion yan's my step alliance looks set to take this country into a new era of democracy but the hardest part the liberal on all those promises lies ahead riven first year walk al-jazeera year of that huawei has rejected allegations that it breached u.s. sanctions against iran the chinese telecoms john says it communicated with the u.s. government agencies on a daily basis to obtain guidance it was the arrest of one of its executives men one
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job in canada the detention and extradition process has opened yet another rift between the world's top two economies who are already engaged in a trade war china correspondent has more from beijing. well a lot happening on many different levels in this case right now over the weekend the ambassadors of both canada and the united states were summoned to the foreign ministry for a dressing down by a vice foreign minister who warned of unspecified action if monk is not freed immediately they continue to complain that monks human rights are being violated by this action and there is a growing belief here in china that her arrest her detention was politically motivated because of course her way is a company that is at the heart of president cheating peing strategy to make china a leader in technologies of the future by twenty twenty five the language in state controlled media is going from really purple to crimson the nationalistic global
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times on monday warned that the detention of mung amounted to an act of war by the united states and i think that's going to be the tone of the language in the coming days weeks and months if among remains detained her next a bail hearing is on monday vancouver time her lawyers are likely to argue that she is not a flight risk because she owns two large properties in vancouver and so of course would have somewhere to stay as the legal process continues they also say that she has health problems and is apparently suffering from hypertension. japanese prosecutors have charged two former nisanit executives with financial misconduct or when a san chairman carl us garson and direct sec greg kelly are accused of underreporting their salaries and using company assets for personal benefit to make itself has
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also been indicted for making false statements in an annual reports. the commander of ukraine's navy says he has no doubt that russia was behind the attack on three of his boats. accusing ukraine of being fault but i will. insists his navy acted within international martin no he was speaking to under simmons at ukraine's naval base in odessa. this apple commands a naval force that son of the strain twenty four of his men who set out from a desa port with more of a fortnight ago of being detained by russia. says russia has no right to put them on trial. in the prison not this they have to admit that they took prisoners of war not some criminalize involved in contraband or illegal fishing. genco dismisses moscow's charge of ukrainian provocation
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and if. no one recognizes then accession of crimea and even if we did cross the twelve miles only we're not to fight the f.s.b. border service we're passing according to our agreements through the strait of curch we are sure the tactical decisions were not being taken by the commanders of the russian ships. goes on to say it was clear when russia sees the ukrainian boats the orders were political a claim denied by russia he says the blocking of the strait was due to the accidental grounding of a tanker but was a deliberate act by russia using tugs these are identical system boats of two of the vessels that came under attack. the captain shows the area of penetrated one of the boats being held by russia ukraine's navy says the crew was being targeted rather than the boats engines which would have disabled the vessel. isn't
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optimistic of a quick end to the crisis who wants nato to commit more support to the region. we need to keep parity of power it's not about an open confrontation we need containment. there is a need to cool down the fervor the heat of russia's aggression to stop it it's hardly surprising that ukraine is still calling for nato support when you consider how much the size of its navy was diminished when russia annexed crimea in twenty fourteen ukraine lost a lot of vessels and out of the few battleships that remain this is the only frigate. outgunned and outmanned over by russia of this navy has to be defensive its hopes for a quick release of its captured crews have to lie with the offensive mounted by diplomats and political leaders and drew simmons out zero adesa ukraine.
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thousands presence has brought radical changes to his country since coming to power three years ago they magnify really hasn't changed ways to save money why is the war on corruption and got rid of so-called government ghost workers but a clampdown on other areas from politics to media and even sexual morality is gaining him many critics and fans so i reports from. massoud keep expresses his art through caricature his political messages as subtle but provocative he has drone through three governments but it's this one of president john mark foley that he says worries him the most the platform is more that. we are being followed. because. sometimes when you sound like a clone to. the editor who tells openly what you know before we have to be careful we cannot publish this model fully has been in power for three years in tanzania some call him the bulldozer without knowing you of course has been credited for his
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fight against corruption which has been a problem here for years he has carried on on civil service expenditure and is overseeing major projects like the construction of this really that will link different cities this time it is really. focused to make sure to tanzania and certain the development we want but it is a style is also to change some of the mistakes of that part of the past but critics of the president say he's a dictator last stifle the political space and curtailed freedom of expression and media if he decide on something he does it and go with it all the way but at the same time very autocratic. so you have a way that you don't have a feedback mechanism improve the decisions that are that have been taken and that's why we have a situation when the country everybody is in fear however he does enjoy popularity
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amongst some president john magoo fully has been described as a populist he often says what ordinary people in tanzania want to hear and mostly take this fish market for example it was only evening walk in october stop here talk to the traders about the problems and give the money to build an office cooking area and trading. market trader a miriama shows us where the office is being built. i have been here for over the two years but i have never seen a president most sympathetic to the poor than before he sat with us on a wooden benches i'm release and. the president has proved.
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let's get all the support now and here's john snow or thank you river plate have won a series of rivals book a genius to lift the biggest prize in south american club football that couple about to do as victory came in madrid two weeks after violence in argentina calls the second leg of the match to be cancelled before kickoff and moved to spain full
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race reports by over the plight fans have never been able to celebrate quite like this before victory over their greatest rivals bucket judaism on the biggest stage the brown osiris superclass cow has ever been played on the final of the cup unlimited dora's but the joy here in argentina was called the result that took place thousands of kilometers away in madrid nearly a month after the first like a bucket judy has ground finish to two would point to sirees this second leg was finally held at the bernabéu stadium in the spanish capital dhaka players had been injured by river fans and the attack on that bus that caused the fixture to be moved to europe i it was barca who struck first on the pitch now reopened at that time making it one mill just before half time twenty minutes into the second tough river plate one level i think has praties finish ensuring this long running saga would go into extra time but time was immediately up for baucus will modbury else
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a second yellow card meaning his team would have to play on with ten men. river drives home their advantage one can tad are striking the first of two blows the wood and buckets hopes of a record equalling seven couplet live at the door as trophies gonzalo martinez rubbing salt in the wings after bucket keeper esteban draw to have vacated his goal for a late corner. three one the final score in the second like five three to river plate from both legs on two continents. and just when i thought i got everything i could get life unbelievably gave me the present of another couple liberty dorrance we wanted to celebrate it at the monument all with all the river fans but we couldn't do it we wanted here and we're going to take the cup back to argentina. nothing but hot right for after a match that they believe should have been awarded to them after the violence of two weeks ago forever it's called live at the door as number four on bragging
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rights in a rivalry that will go on and on in one osiris polar east al-jazeera. and partied into the night on the streets a point to cite is after that victory. was that then. four here in the center of one of the site is worth hundreds of people have a rivalry in the fight of the rain to celebrate the victory of the river plate even though in the past few days this is lots of different chants meant to disappointment that this cup is being played in vain in my dream people here say that now it's time to celebrate it's time to leave the past behind and celebrate what they say that historic day this whole area is a surrounded by security forces the government wanted to make sure that this time violence wouldn't take over this would go to march or the celebrations and this also this game has also left questioning about argentine food both food love that
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is being filled with corruption about the bad i would out and the role they play in society the relationship with politicians with security forces questioning also about the clubs and their role in this country the governmental body so nike has said no that they're trying to pass a law through no way cartel the power of god and i don't have that in this country but many skeptical that something like this will happen or improve the situation because in this country food what if in many cases associated with violence well that violence that today so i was talking about rape its head later on in the argentine capital right place we deployed a handful of fans through objects of police who responded with tear gas and rubber bullets from violence was the reason the game has moved away from argentina in what was one of the most embarrassing chapters of the game's history in the country even
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with the much so far away in madrid spanish police weren't taking any chances as he welling's explains. well there was a huge security presence in madrid for this much that's how they were able to assure all calm of all the south american football authorities that i could stage this march fourth place officers on top of the lots of plainclothes officers there were times there were helicopters and a ring of steel to stop argentinian fans getting through without tickets for madrid does he want from spying those would come over from argentina some of them were stopped at the airport and in the end this was an occasion that was tension in the stadium as well of course it went deep and it was a dramatic finish. a very difficult experience this has been rajan city in football it's been spun as a glorious occasion hasn't been that it's been humiliating to have to play the final over ten thousand kilometers or why difficult for faith on that occasion that
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yes eventually provides a couple of its doors champions but will be remembered a lot for the wrong reasons while the home ground is being used for the couple about star israel madrid or away to west and gareth bale finally ended an eight hundred two minute scoring droughts the one zero result as a fourth win for a all in all competitions over in portugal sporting lisbon came from a goal down to be. four one a penalty and then this brilliant long range shot from nani put the mound in front . of his second shortly after the break and after lady abby sealed the win that move sporting to second two points behind the just quarter. the two thousand and fourteen champion san antonio spurs have been struggling to recreate their form of recent seasons in the n.b.a. the spurs had lost four five before sunday's game against the utah jazz they held
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utah to a season record low thirty six points in the first half easing to one hundred ten to ninety seven when still. white down in the lower half of the western homefront side. drew holiday put in a big shift for the new orleans pelicans he scored thirty seven points in a hard fought hundred sixteen to one hundred eight went over to troy pistons now for only losses on the bounce for detroit's in his criticism got their first test victory in australia in ten years they beat the hosts by just thirty one runs in adelaide they lead the four test series and moves to perth on friday fiji's rugby sevens players is still going strong two years after their gold medal at the olympics in rio the pacific islanders were up against the usa on sunday in the final of the cape town sevens in south africa usa a top of the global standings and put up stiff resistance ben pinkel men going over for the americans here but fiji had won all five of their previous matches in cape
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town and one in the mood for change finals who fiji twenty nine united states fifty . and it's all useful for now or later thanks very much indeed and that's it also for this new year's out but don't go anywhere martin that is back in just a couple of minutes was much more on the day's news for you. xenophobia 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
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organizations and exposes links to members of the european parliament and marina pan's national party generation hate. part one of a special two part investigation on al jazeera a recent un report has given renewed in seeds of the fight against climate change over with threats like sea level rise at this year's climate talks in poland and the international community seize the opportunity to take concerted action today with al-jazeera the latest from the front lines of the climate crisis from the conference itself a helper of victims of sexual violence in the democratic republic of congo and a survivor of sexual abuse and trafficking in iraq to this year's recipients of the nobel peace prize will be interviewing nadia murat and dennis mccuaig a right here in oslo c. hall will change about their efforts to heal women victims of sexual violence and
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their quest for justice joining us live for the no doubt interview on al-jazeera. on counting the cost cattle becomes the first country in the middle east to quit opec un climate talks took place this week in a coal mining town passed by french president emanuel microphones policies are so unpopular counting the cost of al-jazeera. the field say of murdered saudi journalist jamal khashoggi speaks to al jazeera about her fight for justice. and there again i'm not in indonesia without jazeera live from doha also coming out
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. europe's top court confirms the u.k. can stop threats it if it wants to without permission from the rest of the e.u. . after four weeks of protests in france president mark kroll neat union and business leaders before addressing the nation. efforts to stop scenes like this a dealt a blow as key countries pull out of a major migration conference. it's been seventy days since has a j jan so her fiance lost saudi journalist jamal khashoggi alive outside his country's consulate in istanbul he was adequate papers for their upcoming marriage but instead walked into a death trap saudi crown prince mohammed bin sound man is accused of ordering his murder in an exclusive interview with al jazeera his fiance says she'll fight to
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ensure everyone who's responsible for his death is brought to justice. and i want to expose the details of this horrific crime identify the perpetrators and put those who carried out the killing on a fee trial including those who ordered the hit so they get the punishment they deserve on behalf of jamal's relatives and loved ones and i say this is i'm one of them we need to know the whereabouts of his body this is a basic human right. to know why. you know. i was convinced he was still alive i never imagined such a crime could happen in a consulate and a simple normal person can never imagine what happened near jamal never committed any crimes and never did wrong in any way and all he did was intercon sillett to get hold of legal papers to get married we were on the right track him a night he wanted to build a new life and as you know he was excelled and he was in so much pain over it so to
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be honest i never imagined the day i'd be in this position to be honest it still hasn't sunk in yes you see me sitting and talking and talking about what happened but a human can't the words fail me let's go live now to istanbul and our correspondent there mohammed val mohammed you're outside the building where this atrocity was committed as we've already said seventy days since she's seen her fiance but we've also been hearing of in the last twenty four hours from some senior saudis. that's right martin the turkish prosecution has filed the request for an arrest warrant that has been handed. foreign ministry called it information that we have handed to the saudis and the first reply that we got or comment was by the saudi foreign minister who bear
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a categorical denial categorical refusal by the saudis to hand over the eighteen suspects on top of. syria and. accused of being the masterminds plotting. the plot to murder them to take a listen to what others were had to say. with regards to their reds we will not hand any of our citizens to turkey even the turkish constitution prohibits the extradition of their own citizens so why should we turkey has not provided us with information that we need on the investigation the legal way. and let's have a look at the ongoing investigation where there are so many unanswered questions. the the turkish. foreign minister by the way the justice minister today has given a statement and he said that everything has been done in the framework of the law
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that requests to extradite the suspects has been done in the framework of the law and he said that preparations technical and otherwise have been completed now if the saudis are not to reply in order to respond in a not cooperating to take the matter to an international court why international cooperation he said we're going to reach results cooperation with the international community over this or other officials in the ministry of justice told earlier today but this taking the fire into an international investigation is only awaiting a political decision by the turkish government so turkey has been doing everything it could to communicate and complete finish all the elements needed judicial and otherwise to make this fire ready and to put pressure on the saudis understand the three approaches that have been tested so far the first approached by a lot of discussions between the saudis and turkish authorities have not yielded results so far because the saudis are not cooperating according to the turkish side
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the second approach is via the united states congress leaders trying to table a resolution to push for. incrimination of mohammed said the crown prince of saudi arabia the man who gave orders to kill. all of this is going on while the turks are trying now and working on the third approach which is to take the file to international an international court. thank you for that mohammed val live in istanbul and in the senate it is preparing to vote on a resolution that would condemn specifically the crown prince for the murder one prominent republican party figure as had some very strong words if it weren't for the united states said be speaking farsi in about a week in saudi arabia their military can't fight it out of a paper bag they give us nine percent of our all imports we need them a lot less than they need a side of this you've got to hook up to our murderous regime of.
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america from iran quite the opposite i think by hooking up with him we heard or ability to govern the region now europe's top courses ruled that britain's parliament is allowed to cancel the breck sit process without referring to the other members of the european union the case was brought by campaign isn't politicians who want to stay inside the european union ruling was made is the british prime minister to resign may or may prepares support have bret's it withdrawal deal to parliament for a vote that most believe she will lose their reports increasing that that vote could in fact be delayed so let's go live now to our correspondent jonah howell who is there outside the houses of parliament so what we do know is that theresa may as called for a meeting of her senior ministers and now the lobby journalists are speculating busily aren't they that she's preparing to announce
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a delay to that meaningful vote is it's now. martin those sorts of speculation were rife throughout the weekend westminster at the moment is absolutely awash with speculation and rumor everything from a delay of the vote to a cataclysmic defeat of theresa may the end of her premiership renegotiation with brussels quite simply nobody knows what is going on the latest we hear is that there are reports that the reason may have gathered around her as we speak her senior aides and that she's put her cabinet ministers on notice to expect a potential conference call an emergency conference call is being called possibly within the next hour or so and so the speculation has ramped up but a decision about whether to pull tuesday evenings vote is imminent as i say nobody has or indeed claims to have special intelligence on this the fact remains that
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there is a large number of our own m.p.'s within the conservative party well over one hundred now who have spoken out publicly against the deal that you struck the dregs of you that you struck with the e.u. that is to be voted upon on tuesday night of course there's opposition from the opposition parties as well it is not so much the fact of a defeat that people are talking about but the scale of that defeat with many voices suggesting that a triple figure defeat the trees of may would be something that she would find very difficult to come back from and continue as prime minister so that decision being moldova now. we're told perhaps a decision is imminent and let's go back to just events just a little while ago maybe an hour and a half ago and that routing coming from the european court of justice which basically said that britain does have the option it has the the option to go unilaterally reverse the process of rexx it and staying within the european union
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how's that routing coming from the c.j. feeding into this frenzy of speculation in westminster. well you know again much like everything to do with threats it these days depending on who you talk to that is either a huge recurse significant decision by the e.c.g. that gives britain the unilateral right to cancel breaks it that it will give impetus to people who who want to see a second referendum on that referendum actually having the meat and teeth to be able to council break the others like government ministers jeremy hunt the foreign minister saying it's a totally relevant because look there is no one in the government that wants to cancel bridges and indeed it is true that we are at this moment in time nowhere near the possibility of a second referendum or a vote on the art who could be in parliament nevertheless the fact of it does perhaps two things on a broad scale it makes it far less likely that this country can walk blindly into
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a no deal breaks it because at the last minute on march the twenty eighth let's say parliament could step in and cancel no deal that's significant it does however allowed to resume aid to say look it's either my deal now or the possibility of no greater fire a second referendum it gives her therefore just that little bit more clout to try and win on side some of the doubting m.p.'s who would otherwise goes against the now jane thank you i suspect we'll be talking to you rather a lot today thank you now across the channel in france's president emmanuel man cries you to address the nation later after holding talks to try to resolve the same called yellow vest movement cabinet ministers have joined the talks in paris alongside union leaders president macro has been largely silent following the fourth week of protests across the country the demonstrations were initially over fuel tax increases but they've now become an anti government movement calling for
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president to resign dominic cain has the latest from paris. monday is a day of meetings and speeches for president mccall he's meeting trade unionists and delegations from local organizations and business leaders trying to get a sense of what they think needs to be done to pacify france the people of frogs this problem is that although he has a majority support in parliament he does not have a majority of support amongst the people is approval ratings are down as low as twenty four percent in other words more than three quarters of people in france disapprove of the way that he is handling the government of france to make things worse for him on monday also the opposition parties who don't have any votes or seats in parliament put down a motion of no confidence which will be voted on on wednesday it's very unlikely that they will win that as i say his movement last week on march has a majority in parliament but clearly it does not command majority.
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