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tv   Beiruts Refugee Artists  Al Jazeera  December 11, 2018 9:00am-10:01am +03

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china apple is fighting the ruling still ahead here on al-jazeera protesters in yemen demand an end to the blockade on a key porsena of while warring sides are far away from political solution. to the exclusive interview with the nobel peace prize laureates honored for shining a light on the use of sexual violence as a weapon of war to stay with us. from the neon lights of asia. to the city that never sleeps. alone get to welcome back to international forecasts we're here across china we are seeing some clouds here along the coastal areas of china up to the north it's a little bit cooler and we did see some snow in the forecast just a few days ago but we are going to be since better conditions to the north it is going to still stay quite cool only into the a single digits of there for the central areas the rain is pushing through shanghai we are going to sing some better conditions over the next few days but it is going
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to start to get a little bit cooler with a high temperature there of only about eight degrees for hong kong better conditions to you as well more sun in your forecast we do think you're going to sing a high there of about nineteen degrees well for the philippines not looking too bad for manila you can see on the satellite image not seen too much clouds at all in the forecast so over the next few days we're going to seeing partly cloudy conditions you maybe thirty degrees there but still quite wet out here towards much of the west anywhere from thailand down here towards singapore we do expect to see rain in your forecast temperatures into the low thirty's really stay like that maybe increase rain showers as we go to the afternoon timeframe and then very quickly over here towards colombo into sri lanka we've been watching just to the east of you the development of possibly a psych low and we're going to be watching that very carefully but you could be seeing some rain showers in your forecast to the north though kolkata it is going to be partly cloudy day twenty seven. there with sponsored by cat time riis.
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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 just growing right organizations and exposes links to members of the european parliament and marina plans national party generation hate. part one a special two part investigation on al jazeera. you're watching officer with. a reminder of our top news stories the british prime minister theresa may has postponed tuesday's part of a tree vote on it expecting defeat e.u.
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leaders will meet on thursday to discuss bricks at the wall no renegotiation. the french president has taken a partial responsibility for the anger that led to the country's worst unrest in decades and. offered concessions to pensioners of the working poor but stopped short of return stating a wealth tax on the rich a key demand of so-called yellow vest protesters. out of executive of chinese telecom giant highway will spend at least one more night in custody after a judge in canada delayed her bail decision they want to stop preaching your sanctions on iraq and faces fraud charges. now thousands of central american migrants can mexico's northern border not giving up hope of seeing your side live in the u.s. there are a climb the border fence and claim political asylum once a rest stop once arrested on the other side to let me those in the border city of tijuana following a family trying to do just that. if anything mexico's northern border
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is a symbol of inequality on one side a world of privileges and on the other stories of people in search of an opportunity. this family from el salvador came first in the early morning to check to situation climbing is not easy. the boys are petrified and one shouts don't hurt my mama oh my papa. was a keep on trying in eyesight of the american border patrol who laugh loudly. as they fade and finally walk off exhausted. this part of the wall was built nearly twenty five years ago during the clinton years it's been fortified by seven administrations since the razor wire was added a few weeks ago. if the heavy presence of the american border patrol is meant to be
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a deterrent it's not working these young men jumped over in a matter of minutes they have nothing to lose for about an hour later another group arrived killing maldonado left us with her twin daughters along the way she became friends with and her three children they're relying on each other to take the leap across the border killing was hesitating at first she told her daughter she was risking so much so they could get an education. but then. it goes very quickly the men first then one child another and yet another it's now the turn of kenyan and. it's too difficult the border patrol has already surrounded those who jumped. right. it's too late for them one of killing daughters sneaks back through the bars she pushes her
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back into the night. it states a desperate gesture by an anguished mother who has little to offer when. i have to go to my children she keeps on repeating as a border guard carries them away the rest of the group is also led the way to tame but now they have the right to claim asylum. yard l. that is in pain and wonders what will happen to her eighteen month old baby when she was still breastfeeding can we ask where did children spend the night i don't know is d.n.c. or. then it slowly sinks in the children are in the us but killin are still in mexico separated by the war they will try again and again this time in search of their children held somewhere in america that has meat. along mexico's jordan border while staying in the area u.s. agents arrested thirty two people during
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a rally in san diego's border with mexico but also in front of guards calling for an end to the detention deportation of asylum seekers around three hundred people including many religious leaders from sunday ago took part and most were arrested for trespassing. now democrats in the u.s. house who have a majority from january are planning a complete review of u.s. policy toward saudi arabia including the trumpet ministrations response to the murder of jamal khashoggi turkey's president has repeated his call for justice saying the case should be tried under international law reza type of the one described saudi arabia's decision not to extradite eighteen suspects for trial in turkey as disappointing chipper time see as more washington d.c. . the house foreign affairs committee will have subpoena power so for example we've been hearing a great deal once again about the text messages between jared cushion and crown prince mohammed bin solomon those messages could well be fair game now or indeed any of the business documents any of the business transactions between members of
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the trump of ministration and the saudis those two can be just a piece members of the administration can be required to testify to congress all of that might be behind closed doors but we should be clear up the closeness between the u.s. and saudi arabia didn't begin with the drop administration president obama pretty much gave the saudis whatever they wanted so what will be interesting and key is whether this really is a top to bottom examination off that relationship whether they will really ask whether it's still in the strategic interest of the u.s. to keep things as they are. yemen's warring sides sit down and talk the first time in two years zero's obtained a un document outlining two initiatives aimed at ending the conflict is simple forward by the un special envoy to yemen botting griffiths who is part of the negotiations in sweden as rhetorical be reports. yemen's rival factions are
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entrenched warning if their demands are not met the u.n. backed talks will fail this man the u.n. special envoy to yemen martin griffiths is trying to stop that happening to that end he's come up with a series of proposals the first calls for fighting to come to an end in yemen's the largest city tie is one of the front lines in the war two hundred thousand civilians are caught up in the violence there the u.n. wants to revive a twenty sixteen peace agreement the other focuses on who day to the rebel controlled sea port where most of yemen's food and medicine comes in the u.n. wants a halt to all military operations including saudi led as strikes and for all militia groups to leaf these are two major. population is arms in every war. i'm hopeful that we can reach agreements on the deescalation drink juice the fighting in both places. i'm hoping that we can we're
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not there yet. while warring sides in the yemen war have been meeting in sweden hundreds of yemenis have been protesting outside the u.n. headquarters in the capital sanaa calling for an end to the blockade which they say is hampering access to vital goods. we're asking the u.n. to lift the blockade asuna rappel and calling for the international community to have some responsibility toward the suffering of the yemeni people because of this blockade and the inhumane practices of the enemy coalition which is blocking access for commercial ships carrying fuel to have day to pull out your blockade is blocking our acts. medicine and food. aid is desperately needed in a country which the u.n. has described as facing the world's worst humanitarian crisis twenty million people don't have enough and the u.n. humanitarian chief says all sides are making it difficult in some cases impossible to get aid to people who need it the central problem is that none of the party are
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pushing the urgent lifesaving needs of the people of yemen high enough up their list of priorities until that changes it seems difficult to imagine how diplomacy can bring this three and a half year long conflict to an end big jury gayton be algis they are now the united nations is called on an armed group occupying libya's biggest oil field to leave libya's national oil company says the shutdown of the the har oil field has led to a production loss of three hundred fifteen thousand barrels a day it's a key security guards are helping a local militia stormed the premises on sunday the area has been in turmoil or since the fall of moammar gadhafi in twenty eleven with multiple are groups vying for control india's reserve bank governor has resigned citing personal reasons urgent patel's announcement follows weeks of disagreements with the government over policy issues was pressured to relax lending rules towards some state run banks the
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government is believed to be unhappy about the reserve banks and willingness to use capital reserves to fund its fiscal debt staying in the regions for lanka's ousted prime minister's threaten to launch what he calls people's power to the streets if he's not reinstated running or we could have a single says thousands of his supporters will rally in the capital colombo next week the country was thrown into political turmoil in october but the president for the service center replaced him with the former leader mahinda rajapaksa sri lanka's supreme court is expected to decide later this week if the dissolution of parliament is indeed the. international election observers have praised armenia for what they've called a fundamentally free and fair vote acting prime minister nicola will form the new government after he won seventy percent of the ballot now a team of young enthusiastic but experienced professionals and drink politics robin forestry walker reporter for the capital of our. armenia is not an easy place for
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a person with a disability i need help because unfortunately this is typical in armenia when oh. ok. oh. yeah the things might be about to change rights campaigner. is a ministerial candidate the nicole passion yearns new government she says armenians have finally chosen politicians who will represent their in presenting things they mean they war and they may be in the same contrie in the same society and in the same situation before the reality of parliament was very different and even sometimes someone there are they need in the same contrary there are lots of journalists lawyers and civil society activists on the my step alliance
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party list but there are all that many people from business backgrounds all seasoned politicians and the average age thirty five. armenians leader nichole passion yan is himself just forty three questions are being asked about whether he and his team have the experience to run armenia if our team isn't strong how. many should do that to organize such a revolution and worked toward thirty. if his team lacks experience they will have plenty of legislative clout winning seventy percent of the popular votes in sunday's election has handed nicole passion in the power to push through major reforms but that comes with a risk nicole pasha on his team has a huge popularity but. seventy percent is dangerous
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for any democracy and let's hope and let's believe they're called question on these theme or will they use this mandate wisely representative government is a good place to start question un has said that given the choice to choose a woman over a man for any cabinet position robin first steelworker al-jazeera that. peace laureates. have called for greater international action to stop social violence being used as weapons of war but as accepted the prize and emotional ceremony in all slow charlie angela reports. sharing a prize and a sense of justice for victims of sexual violence in conflict. and dennis mccuaig received the nobel peace diplomas and medals their speeches urge the international
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community to act when war crimes are committed a call they reiterated during an exclusive interview with al-jazeera after the ceremony i says fidel. group i def been doing to the girls and women kidnapping this female person raping the years see. and two women and the believe and those people believing according to this and saying this is right we see that this is the wrong this act they can possibly turn. knows firsthand the injustice of i still seen here returning to her village in northern iraq she is a survivor of trafficking and rape at the hands of the groups fighters now she's desperate to rescue and resettle her people three hundred thousand or in refugee camps or three thousand new cd women still in slaved she has told her story of sexual violence and torture receiving standing ovations at the european parliament
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in the united nations but she says there's been little action these people live in hope for justice but that hope has an expiry date. shares the million dollar prize money with dennis mccuaig a gynecologist who's treated around fifty thousand rape victims for their injuries they were attacked by fighters during conflict in the democratic republic of congo mcquay has pioneered new surgeries to help the women and we have billeted them with physical psychological. and economic support and now we can have campaigns as we've done with all chemical weapons and biological and nuclear weapons we can reach a level where any person who is involved in a conflict knows the already that if he uses its rape as a weapon of war there is climbable be very will be no country that will accept me. unlike other nobel peace prize winners these laureates have not completed their
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task instead they are in the midst of their struggle to prevent sexual violence in conflict they've called out the international community for what they see as a lack of ambition compared to other areas of civilian protection and they say they don't want to wards they want action charlie rangel al jazeera. for those stories by looking at our web site at al-jazeera dot com we'll continue to follow the events of brick set in the u.k. as the powers progress. you're watching on just their homes the whole robin these are all top news stories the british prime minister to resign may. choose days parliamentary vote on it expecting defeat e.u. leaders will meet on thursday to discuss broke set but for war there will be no renegotiation. it is clear that this house faces
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a much more fundamental question. does this house want to deliver bricks it. was. clear a clear message from the s.n.p. but it was still. does it want to do so through reaching an agreement with the e.u. if the answer is yes and i believe that is the answer with the majority of this house then we all have to ask ourselves whether we are prepared to make a compromise because there will be no enduring and successful brics it without some compromise on both sides of the debate the french president has taken partial responsibility for the anger that's led to the country's worst unrest in decades when well michael offered concessions to pensioners and the working poor but stop
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short of reinstating a wealth tax on the rich a key demand the so-called yellow vest protesters or the top executive of chinese telecom giant har way will spend at least one more night in custody after a judge in canada delayed her bail decision then one joe was accused of breaching u.s. sanctions on iran and faces fraud charges china has threatened canada with serious consequences unless she's released democrats in the u.s. house are planning a complete review of u.s. policy toward saudi arabia including the trumpet ministrations response to the murder of jamal khashoggi turkey's president has repeated his call for justice saying the case should be tried under international law rest of the one described saudi arabia's decision not to extradite eight hundred suspects for trial in turkey as disappointing. and india's reserve bank governor has resigned sizing personal reasons patel's announcement follows weeks of disagreements with the government
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over policies those were the headlines more news in half an hour here on al-jazeera and i believe interview continues after this break.
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it's a crime that destroys the dignity of individuals then ten is upon the fabric of communities a crime that has been carried out for generations with impunity this year as a weapon of war has been forced into the spotlight hello and welcome to the no bones of you i'm james and i'm fully back welcome to this al jazeera special from oslo just a couple of hours ago here in oslo city hall you see the activists. on the congolese dr denis mukwege ordered the twenty eighteen nobel peace prize in recognition for their efforts to end sexual violence in conflicts both have worked tirelessly to defend the rights of survivors work that has come at a deep personal cost they tease in gentlemen please welcome the twenty eighteen nobel peace prize laureate dr denis mukwege gay and niger more rot thank
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. you both and thank you for joining us a great deal applause applause here earlier on during the ceremony that was standing ovations for you too so congratulations if i can start with you know. anyone who's heard your story your ordeal of the last four years it's very hard for most of us to imagine those things that you've been through when you were here today receiving the nobel peace prize who were you thinking of. betty how my dog on there first of all my mother. that was the first thing that came. my mind. i thought about myself and my body.
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the more. i did everything for people not for myself and i think about that prize to have yes that sort of violence that happening and that's to work out and doing and the shame of the di i have shown to everybody it's for humanity so that everybody see what has happened i'm not just saying it for myself it was just for me of course i wouldn't be doing all the work where we are all one people. that thousands of people that up until today have been faced with these difficulties dr mcrae gay you've treated thousands of women over the years at panzi hospital in becoming what does this nobel peace prize mean for those women and for the people of the democratic republic of congo as a whole. in fact i think sexual violence has. always been denied in our society it mustn't be the pick tim it
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falls says the suffering of having been raped there must be quick whistles that through this recognition that we must be able to change to this suffering of the victim. and turn it towards the aggressors under torture is not yet you said that you found the world abandoned your community the one the smallest and most persecuted minorities in the world and they were almost wiped out by i saw in twenty fourteen do you feel that this nobel peace prize will bring back the focus on the plight of your people do you think it can achieve justice for the s.c. these. charges. and here for years. then we see that the rights of easy to people have not been given to them but we have not stopped our efforts. the number of peace prize for you this helping us yes we
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are talking here but up until now three thousand women and girls of the cd of my village of other visions of the villages around my village are still in the hands of isis are sold are raped and we don't know what their situation is and what it's going to be we are doing it tireless work and we hope that very soon we will be able to see justice taking its place don't assume heard no idea tell her story you heard it again today you've heard thousands of similar stories over the years now i know you are a doctor you have to be professional you have to be dispassionate but when you hear these stories inside as a human being does it give you our english or is it just anger. reports i think that even if even if you are a doctor you remain a human being and when you all find yourselves in this humanity that you share
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with the victim of one of the patients in front of you there are sometimes things that will make you angry because. i have difficulties in understanding how an adult can't destroy a child how after having rape somebody which is very serious and then furthermore introduce objects to destroy of the genital organs i think you feel that show in a state of anger because you do not understand how on top of rape somebody can apply this torture now we see you together today two different people different ages different backgrounds from different parts of the world but with a shared message you're together here in all slow i'd like to know have you met before and how did that come about if you have. yes we have.
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made before in two years ago in paris. he was trying to help me and help victims in iraq and he did and. through. the years it is in iraq so you not just nobel laureates your friends. very well it's not just questions coming from ask here on the podium today we've got our audience here in oslo city hall and they've got questions too the first one of those is from milan you are a master's student can you tell us your question please sexualize violence against girls and women has been used as a weapon of war for a long time why do you think this hasn't been brought forth as a big issue on the world stage until now i think that today more women are speaking which is a wonderful thing a need needs to be encouraged and i think that me too breaking silence all these
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movements will help to make the calls go forward and progress precisely on that maggie i you refuse to accept the social codes in many cultures that require women to stay silent and ashamed of the abuses that they've been subjected to why did you decide to speak up no matter how hard why did you decide to be a voice for the thousands of years of the women. after. of course i felt shameful from day one of our until today i still feel shameful about what has happened to me and many other u.c.d. girls after we were somewhere safe such as germany and we wanted to raise our voices because this will continue was all the women but if women and girls don't allow to do that and this is going to be
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a weapon of what if we don't use it today and don't speak up today tomorrow this will continue while we spoke to one of the thousands of victims that you've treated over the years up to mccuaig many eileen was taken by militia men in eastern d.-r. seen two thousand and two she was held for six months and rapes repeatedly she managed to escape and ended up at panzi hospital here's her message to you. was a volatile few really wished to see life and after i was raped i thought it was the end of the world because i was stigmatized i was abandoned by everyone but. i didn't think i could go back living in society or even the bonzi so when i arrived at panzi hospital i was treated don't because i said look didn't give me thanks to dr macwhich i made it and everyone respects me again most you seem to defend me now i am a mother i have six children i have work and i continue to go to school.
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i'm so grateful to you for giving me a new life as we were abandoned by our own communities rejected by our families stigmatized everywhere we went so may god continue to protect you. because you have saved thousands of women including myself and six men. good luck in your fight good luck in your struggle. than. one of the appalling stories but with a very uplifting message at the end thanking you for the work that you're doing there panzi hospital maybe you could tell us a little bit more of what happens after surgery and what you do to try and heal these women at van reintegrate them into a society where rape victims tend to be stigmatized. the
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medical treatment for the victims of sexual violence is a small part in the treatment and the handling of victims of sexual violence when we started their trauma the trauma psychological trauma was so strong that they could not continue a normal life and so. we included psychological handling when they're excluded by this family by the community by the husband if you leave them in the street they will be raped again so we must be able to support them. too so they can be reintegrated into society some finally when women are really integrated into society it is at that moment that they are asked for justice you know idea. congratulations and your fiance is here with us in the audience here in oslo. how were you able. to survive your ordeal and build
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a future for us what do you see the people have done is something huge and enormous they have accepted what has happened when we returned and all the married girl that went back were accepted by the husband with all know and they were accepted and we could see that many of these girls could actually get married they have given birth to children as a woman is on in was not and i didn't know that i would have a. beautiful life one day again that i would have my own family one day. and. i have a fiance know. and he's also his little buddy or big urban which is me and he knows everything of that and that was a difficult aspect but he knows exactly what has happened to me and more than anybody else in this world more questions from our audience here in oslo city hall
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than we have with us to business owners who also work on a project to prevent gender violence here in norway we have felicie who originally was born in liberia and we have saltire who was born in turkey and is kurdish and you have two related questions if you could give us your questions yes what you said all men across the war but the bin reaganite are women who have been raped what are most important ways to support this woman men who rape are not to men another to man is someone who can talk to women and who does not rape and respect them that the form is something men can do women have done so. i've done a lot to conquer sexual violence and it's time for men to be engaged to commit themselves and then yes while we're on the subject of men one aspect that really is
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on the report is in conflict zones and in your own country male rape is a quite you know that you can poland the big problem is that rape is when rape is used as a weapon of war we try to use all the means that allow. it and they allow us to do you humanize the other person and i've known and i've looked after men who have been raped by men it is not the specific armed group that thinks that the best thing to do is to rape a man before his wife before his children and to humiliate him before his family and i think that this attitude is simply an attitude of war which i also just as bad as the rape the raping of women. now dia you mentioned in your speech today and it's believed that some three thousand women still remain
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enslaved by ice or four years after they swept into. i know your dream is for your people to return to their homeland but what do you tell to the women of your community who had children from i saw fighters and who don't want to come back who are afraid to come back what is your message to them my message to these girls and women out there. it's not your fault it's not a fault of the children that's the fault of his and girl she is if you go and you see do woman no matter what has happened to you how many children you have from isis. thirty billion of again yeah you raise your head and go back for every single is a deep person. the doors are open and we are looking forward and we are waiting for you it doesn't matter if it's one child ten children as long as you are safe come
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back. thank you and back to our audience jordan. who was born in dr working in country the democratic republic of congo you have a question yes first of all dr required miss maraud thank you for all that you do for being so brave and for never giving up so what do you believe the international community should hope to address these human rights violations and to support those fleeing sexual violence both fleeing sexual violence that brings the whole problem of migration into this and we're in an international atmosphere of growing nationalism and populism you just have to look at the most powerful country in the world not the president trump doesn't have very good words for migrants what would you say to children of those question. a circus one would overcome and normally look at me i'm one of them i run away we want to have a safe life that's the reason we're leaving our country law expectation it is near
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and to look at these people they're running away from montreal cities they want to be in a safe place until there is justice in their own country so an idea we wanted to find out what life is lying today for your community the in northern iraq and we went to northern iraq to find out about the current situation that they're facing today the vast majority of living in camps for the internally displaced al jazeera as rob matheson visited one in his report. hello to all yes is one of thousands of years e.d.s. once driven to the mountains of northern iraq ahead of an onslaught by ice on the northeast twenty fourteen holiday lost thirty seven members of an extended family of course there are the darshan i still had no mercy we were told that my family had been stopped at an isolation appoints the men were killed and women and children were taken reports of years he's dying from lack of food and water huddled
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together and leaks in john munt and finally provoked other countries to take action western helicopters dropped supplies the u.s. joined the fight against eisel the threat may have receded but you say their struggle to live continues it's estimated there are between five hundred thousand and one million visitors in the world most of them are here in northern iraq and many of them live in camps like things they say they've been persecuted for hundreds of years because of their religion they say there's part of their religion which is misinterpreted to the easy to use the ferocious attack by i saw them twenty fourteen was just another attempt at what the u.n. describes as genocide some aid organizations are still working in years eighty camps but global help is dwindling they think that that is over here thought about concentrating on the other places but it's not like that because people are still
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living in the camps and they need they need food they need shelter they knew as safe a place. some years it is believe the war against eisel isn't over and the damned fighters are living among them in disguise for the opposition we're not expecting much from the world right now is not giving much to help ease our suffering we feel left behind. is it easy that is threats remain and supply and shrink the battle simply to exist has been forgotten but the rest of the world the united nations has established an investigative team to support iraqi domestic efforts to hold isolate countable for crimes committed in the country karim khan is the head of that team the un investigative team for accountability of diane uni todd thank you very much for being with us today place and up i have a few questions for you on the work that you're doing now the resolution that establish your team was adopted over a year ago but i understand that you haven't actually started anything would work in iraq what is the most urgent priority right now and is enough being done to
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preserve the evidence of eyesores atrocities in iraq well firstly i think we have two remarkable laureates today and i think the speech that we heard this afternoon is one that repays. relistening to because there's many important lessons that justice claps is to give a phrase justice requires that the acts don't take place in the first place and that requires a larger conversation so we actually give life to the promise that we've heard since nuremberg of never again what we're trying to do is accountability and that is. an arduous process to requires proof beyond reasonable doubt but we have the political not to let me bring you back in there's a new government in iraq finally are you hopeful that it will mean change for your people a brighter future for your people perhaps. at the head up their
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iraqi government is new. for more than just a month now our hope is that the iraqi government will give more right more rights to the u.c.d. people so that we have more respect and more in iraq no idea this subject you put on the world stage today the nobel peace prize you speaking at the un security council at the un general assembly this is something you the world is talking about this issue but how do you actually stop those rapes those attacks by those men on the ground things that have been going on down the centuries. every individual person i have met. i have told them what isis has done and they didn't saw that it was such a big on the such a big scale. cannot be stopped as dr mcvickar said until we find to give
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them the right we need to have the equal rights for girls and boys dennis if i can ask you to pick up on that we've talked about the accountability you've done your bit putting this in the international spotlight everyone is aware of the issue and focusing on the issue but what else is needed to stop crying means that have gone on to go back in ancient history and they talk about rape and more when the world becomes aware of this weapon of rape in conflict is a weapon to destroy is not only the victim but even future generations because i can see the indios see i can see the charred child being born who was born after rape and who catches hiv v. there is child if you can be a generation that will suffer of not only from this you liberal rape. vertically
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speaking but horizontally all the infections that can be caught so much. lead to additional victims without what about the injuries vertically in the hole horizontally if we become a word that we can fight this weapon and now we can have campaigns as we have done for chemical weapons and biological and nuclear weapons we can reach a level where any person who is involved in a conflict knows the already that if he uses rape as a weapon of war his client will be very will be no country that will accept me all troops will collaborate with me psychologically can make a difference but today we feel very well as the world is not. fully aware that it is a dangerous weapon this has been a very difficult conversation but an extremely important one can i thank you both
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for sparing as your time on what's been a very tiring day for you denis thank you for your lifetime's work and nadia thank you for your incredible bravery thank you very much dr. thank you to our audience here in oslo city hall for being part of this very important conversation to and to all of you at home also watching for me for me back to iraq and the whole team here in oslo thank you very much.
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he fled to protect his life but denied asylum a congolese activist must return home facing an uncertain future he once again finds himself at the forefront of a political revolution to try to and for democracy can come at a heavy personal cost. back to kinshasa a witness documentary on al-jazeera. an army of volunteers has come together to help with the influx of tens of thousands of evacuees. but their retreat to a church shelter has brought new challenges an outbreak of norovirus and other gastrointestinal problems. smoke from the massive wildfires now blankets much of northern california leading to some of the worst air quality in the world but with
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more than twelve thousand structures lost in the wildfires concerns remain about long term accommodations jobs and medical care. local officials say there isn't enough housing stock available. you're watching all just their arms the whole robin to doha these are all top news stories the british prime minister treason by already under intense pressure to finalize a country's exit from the european union has postponed a planned vote we told her a deal in parliament she's not looking for more concessions from european leaders but they say the agreement is the only option laurence li reports. warriors of
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lawyers i would say remain. crater the country if it with itself deeply divided and angry this was the scene outside parliament as the prime minister was about to speak i don't agree with conservatives new born on a very reliable warning very way because the democrat one of the people should be respected yes we did find out why did they. let the representatives of the people from the political classes equally in chaos order statements the prime minister. to so much time and energy spent on coming up with a way of. trying to leave the european union while keeping everybody happy the prime minister has found her deal has so little support it could not get through a vote m.p.'s were openly mocking her in return she looks totally exasperated as it is clear that while there is broad support for many of the key aspects of the deal . on one issue on one issue the northern ireland backstop
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there remains widespread and steep concerns as a result if we went ahead and held the folks tomorrow the deal would be rejected by significant. we will therefore defer the coach actual for tomorrow. and not proceed to divide the house at this time but the opposition was having none of it if she's going back to brussels then she needs to build a consensus in this house there is no point no point at all in this prime minister bringing back the same deal again which clearly does not support the government not supported by this house. and. gradually voices are being heard arguing that the parliament might have no choice if it can also agree itself how to leave the e.u. but so hold another referendum it isn't even clear what the terms of it might be
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aphasic ailsa displays will not be the largest of the loads this embarrassing the adage says a week is a long time in politics but here right now they stagger from day to day making it up as they go along so back to brussels she will have to go where the leaders of the twenty seven european union countries may offer her a small amount of sympathy but no way out of her nightmare as it stands the u.k. can neither find a way of leaving the european union nor persuading itself to abandon the entire project and reputations are being shredded in the process. al-jazeera westminster in london. now the french president has taken partial responsibility for the anger that led to the country's worst unrest in decades. of the concessions to pensioners and the working poor but stop short of reinstating a wealth tax on the rich a key demand for so-called yellow vest protesters the top executive of the chinese telecom giant highway will spend at least one more night in custody after
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a judge in canada delayed her bail decision they want joe is accused of breaching u.s. sanctions on iran and faces four charges china has threatened canada with serious consequences unless she's released democrats in the u.s. house are planning a complete review of u.s. policy toward saudi arabia including the trumpet ministrations response to the murder of jamal khashoggi turkey's president has repeated his call for justice saying the case should be tried in the international law. describe saudi arabia's decision not to extradite eighteen suspects for trial in turkey that's disappointing. because ousted prime minister has threatened to launch what he calls people power if he's not reinstated rebel with from a single says thousands of his supporters will rally in the capital colombo next week india's reserve bank governor has resigned citing personal reasons patel's announcement follows weeks of disagreements with the government over policy those
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were the headlines i'm back with more news that half an hour next donald as there is al-jazeera investigation should generation eight. do you. put a little over. the last. name. al-jazeera as investigative unit exposes links between one of france's largest political parties led by marine le pen. and
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a movement demanding the expulsion of muslims from europe. to says he's got a good reason. you don't know. what. our investigation unmasks an emerging right wing ideology called identity terry in islam it claims europe's identity is white and christian you suppose they see themselves as crusaders who defends the values of a white west in the face of the assaults of the arab muslim world. marine le pen's claims that she's read her policy of the extreme far right although i. think you. saw the arena pens demonization of is torn to shreds by these images. and how members of the
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identity arion movement behind closed doors celebrates hitler's germany. today with the usual i could see it was easier. to find it dull to slip something many faces because some do not use it to get some listeners . for six months legal was home to an undercover reporter from al-jazeera as investigative unit. infiltrated one of europe's fastest growing far right organizations. it calls itself generous you know you don't see ten generation identity because the forces across the continent. are on the cover reporter louis
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made contact with the group's flounders branch. generation identity and set up a store outside its headquarters a ball called the citadel. announcement. for the public but you know it's gone for so much for you know the full body to the to three feet as i go out for. the job the developers work on the mag reaching out investigator is already invested a little bit. more louis is led into the citadel where generation identity members drink and discuss the political strategy and we don't know. if you. just ever come up for your question which. this is adele is a ball with
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a courtyard at the back. there's another cool yard by the front entrance. g.i. members usually meet at the ball on a friday evening our undercover reporter uses a concealed camera to record conversations. the hospital says membership has nearly tripled in a year. if i see all of those of you on this on the first. coming. up the book is about. the single digits the need for. you to see if you. or your boss hassel is a very important leader in the north as a bottle his base in leo is a private which welcomes the far right about it's a conference space it's a place where they can hold discussions have some drinks like in pubs but it's private just wouldn't be but maybe brunch is a generation identity of also being set up in italy austria germany and the u.k.
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. g.i. presents itself as a patriotic movement that brings together people of similar culture and values it claims to be nonviolent and non-racist it's attracted thousands of mostly young followers across europe. vision the us generation identity is the largest far right group in france and probably in year in the uk the school it is mainly made of white nationalists for them and the greatest threat is islam and mass immigration which for them threatens the european identity and the white identity don't. the group has mounted a series of publicity stunts which attracted international headlines around one hundred militants blocked a mountain pass on the france italy border which was used by illegal migrants.
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that already in the hassle was one of the g.i. leaders taking pot if you will of fanfare like this it was a cheap open say to produce something to the meat dollar bill so when you know what they're going to cost when any such couple of your buddies don't you give off a little bit. our undercover reporter became a member of the hassles group. in his bar then he discovers the hidden world. behind the facade of respectability is the true face of generation identity. the door to the citadel is usually long enough in college kids to fill in. the is met by cyril when.
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in the course louis and way i'm joined by another activist charles. because george mitchell. says the men discuss a recent night out. first can move the focus to keep their own if it was the press corps on who food and sit in the crew to clean grease but only know diddly whose it was because. it is. written you know if possible to fall off which before constitutional two is really interesting because it. a few story pieces only to look circular for. shelter for the question you know. the failure of the far east to bargain for the recession.

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