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tv   NEWS LIVE - 30  Al Jazeera  December 11, 2018 11:00am-11:34am +03

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ambassadors for both the united states and canada were brought in to the chinese foreign ministry in beijing over the weekend and given a severe tongue lashing and warned of unspecified consequences if it is not released one of the sticking points according to the judge was whether mings husband lu shan zone could act as a guarantor that she would not leave the country or break her bail he said he was not sure that that was possible because mr lu is not a full time resident of canada so this case which has created a great deal of tension and create a great deal of financial turmoil in markets around the world will continue. and in a further set back to how it japan has become the latest country to ban government contracts with the company and fellow chinese telecom giant said t e reuters says the japanese government wants to guard against intelligence leaks and cyber attacks
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similar concerns have been seen by highway where they've been banned from building five g. networks in the us australia and new zealand a legal battle in china between two american tech giants is causing jitters on wall street qualcomm says apple suppliers of it money for its patents and intellectual property and in a court in providence has agreed granting an injunction against apple the court decision bans the important sale of some i phone models in china apple is fighting the ruling and released a statement saying that call comes after to ban all products as another desperate move by a company whose illegal practices are under investigation by regulators around the world all life a model's remain available for our customers in china we will pursue all our legal options through the courts. still ahead here on the al-jazeera news our reliance on coal and a trade war with the us put the brakes on china's green energy plans. protesters in
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yemen demand an end to the blockade on a key port of port while warring sides are far away from a political solution. livable prepare for a must win champions league game with the police peter what have those details later in sport. one hundred sixty four countries have signed the first ever global deal to manage mass movement of people despite strong objections from the u.s. and other nations the non-binding pact drawn up by the u.n. calls controversy with some countries on the front line of the month of crisis refusing to sign such as italy and hungary i should alba reports now from our question morocco where the agreement was signed i it's the moment millions of refugees and migrants have been waiting for a global agreement to better handle migration adopted by
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a majority of united nations states the deal is not binding but for the united nations secretary-general and tanya the terrorist this is a significant achievement whether their movement is voluntary or forced and whether or not they have been able to obtain formal authorization for movements all human beings must have their human rights respected and their dignity. to the united these and to vilify any group of people is the road to diomed a station and order but the us which championed the push to protect by grants during former president barack obama's time in office is dull turning its back on the pact and of president donald trump the u.s. italy hungary austria australia and switzerland all pulled out of the deal saying it compromises their sovereignty we think that this is a momentous significance because it charts
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a middle ground between the two groups that we have in the world today those who are adamantly against migration and those who are adamantly for it and neither can win so what but but countries need migrants if they are to prosper and flourish we know that migrants are enormously to the wealth of nations to the wealth of people that i'm to the countries that they departed from as well the pact offers a glimmer of hope for chair will. who comes from a family of migrants and raises into national attention on the abuse suffered by child migrants and refugees worldwide there's no need to be afraid of migration can be a positive experience in a safe experience from if we look at the fortune five hundred companies half of them have been founded by immigrants or children of immigrants if we look at the at their of the population migrants make up three point four percent of the population but they contribute just a little bit less than ten percent of the global g.d.p.
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migration has become a divisive issue over the past few years europe faced an unprecedented influx of refugees fleeing war in syria hundreds of thousands of ranger from myanmar are stranded in camps in bangladesh and there are thousands of africans risking their lives to cross into europe helping by iran's and refugees was subtle go to school. and get access to health care is always going to be a long process it's unclear of those countries in europe where the far right is on the rise will ever be able to make concessions provide safe havens for those driven out of their homes or simply cannot return while the conflicts continue in their own countries. marrakesh. now thousands of central american migrants come to mexico's northern border not giving up hope of seeking asylum in the us their own climb the border fence and claim political asylum once arrested on the other side.
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of the border city of tijuana following a family trying to do just that. if anything mexico's northern border 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 is not easy. the boys are petrified and one shouts heard my mama oh my papa. you keep on trying i say the american border patrol. 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 administration since the reason why here was added
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a few weeks ago. if the heavy presence of the american border patrol is meant to be a deterrent it's not working these young men jumped over in a matter of minutes they have nothing to lose. about an hour later another group arrived killing maldonado left honduras with her twin daughters along the way she became friends with and her three children they're relying. to take the leap across the border carolyn 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 an elder. it's too difficult the border patrol has a radius around that those who jumped. right. it's too late for them
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one of kellin daughters sneaks back through the bars she pushes her back into the united 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 to have the right to claim asylum. to our elder is in pain and wonders what will happen to her eighteen month old baby she was still breastfeeding can we ask where the children spend the night i don't know is d.n.c. . then it's slowly sinks in the children are in the us but killin an elder are still in mexico separated by the wall they will try again and again this time in search of their children held somewhere in america but at the al-jazeera along mexico's dourdan border now your statements of arrest of thirty two people during
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a rally at a border separating san diego from tijuana then elton front of guards calling for an end to the detention and deportation of asylum seekers about three hundred people including many religious leaders from sunday or took part most were arrested for trespassing. a group of protesters have been found guilty of terrorism related offenses in the u.k. for training cells to a plane they were trying to stop people from being deported to africa the plane was to takeoff from london stansted airport where the fifteen activists broke through a perimeter fence to reporters. it was eighteen months ago that anti deportation activists breach security at stansted airport and change themselves to the aircraft to stop it taking off. what charge should a dangerous and airdrome a criminal offense introduced after obama brought down a plane on the scottish town of lockerbie in one nine hundred eighty eight this
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woman was about to be deported to nigeria despite living in the u.k. for twenty eight years and having offered proof that she had the right to stay when she spoke to al jazeera she said the protesters had saved her life those people will stop the taking office there i'm solidarity with the people who do people who hasn't got the voice we did. the government they're trying to deport years i've been in this country why do you want to put me i came to this country because i was really a beauty the need. if i wasn't in this country are probably wouldn't be here sitting . defending the human rights of people which the british government should have been protecting under international legal obligations is what the protesters say they were attempting to do these sites are secretive very soul and barely legal i was deeply concerned about how the home office forcing people have ongoing claims
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it's frequently horrendous shock for people when they arrive here and they're treated with disrespect and. cruelty. we know systemic racism and brutality over several years successive british governments have created what's become known as the hostile environment effectively blurring the lines between migrants and refugees and asylum seekers it led to wrongful deportations of people from the caribbean known as the wind rush generation and their refusal to allow child refugees in the french port of cali to come to the u.k. to be reunited with family members and also cause people trying to stop asylum seekers from being deported being charged with a criminal offense but the maximum life sentence. the defendants in the case received much support throughout the trial and what often in tears after giving evidence at least one of the people on board the flight
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has now been granted the right to stay in the u.k. the government has now shifted deportation flights from commercial airports to a military base to stop any further protests sony vaio al-jazeera as yemen's warring sides sit down and talk for the first time in two years al-jazeera has obtained a un document outlining two initiatives aimed at ending the conflict that's been put forward by the un special envoy to yemen botting griffiths who's part of the negotiations and sweeping rhetorical because the story. yemen's rival factions are entrenched warning if that demands are not met the un 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.
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wants to revive a twenty sixteen peace agreement the other focuses on who data the rebel controlled seaport 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 leave. major. population. and. i'm hopeful that we can reach agreements. deescalation drink juice the fighting in both places. i'm hoping that we can bring . the. warring sides in the yemen will have been meeting in sweden hundreds of yemenis have been protesting outside the un headquarters in the capital sanaa calling for an end to the blockade which they say is hampering access to vital goods. were asking the u.n. to lift the blockade on the raffle and calling for the international community to
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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 access to 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 food 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 putting the. life saving 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 tory gates and be out as they are. democrats in the u.s. house will have a majority from january planning a complete review of u.s.
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policy toward saudi arabia including the trouble administration's response to the murder of jamal khashoggi tuckey's president has repeated his call for justice saying the case should be tried under international law as it were described saudi arabia's decision not to extradite eighteen suspects for trial in turkey as disappointing returns he has more from 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 salman those messages could well be fair game now or indeed any of the business documents any of the business transactions between members of the trump of ministration and the saudis those two can be used as members of the administration can be required to testify to congress all of that might be behind closed doors but we should be clear the closeness between the u.s. and saudi arabia didn't begin with the drop administration president obama pretty
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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 there will really os whether it's still in the strategic interest of the u.s. to keep things as they are. the united nations as call the group occupying libya's largest oil field to leave libya's national oil companies says the shutdown of the sahara oil field has led to a production loss of three hundred fifteen thousand barrels a day is a cue security guards of helping a local militia stormed the premises on saturday libya has been in term or since the fall of moammar gadhafi in twenty eleven with multiple armed groups vying for control three was taken by the u.s. troops during a war more than a century ago are being returned now these are live pictures from an air base in the in the philippines on saturday the repatriation ceremony will be held at.
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where they were taken from one hundred seventeen years ago. be following that story through the day still ahead here on the al-jazeera news hour forced to destroy. one life as they knew it a palestinian family in occupied east jerusalem explains what drives them to take the drastic step. they survive what the u.n. calls a genocide the thousands of years it is all still fighting to exist we have a report called in iraq. legendary quarterback tom brady a great fit about the reference to the n.f.l. he took up the story school to take away. from the waves of the sales. to the contours of the east. get to welcome back to international forecasts were here across china we are seeing
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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 sing some better conditions to the north it is going to still stay quite cool only into the a single digits up 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 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 can be seeing 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 increased 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
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east of you the development of possibly a psych low we're going to be watching that very carefully but you could be seen. some rain showers in your forecast to the north though calcutta is going to be partly cloudy day twenty seven. the weather sponsored by cattle and maize. anti fascist anti establishment and pro violence despite the recent official disbanding of its militarized wing a basque separatist movement just found alive and well on the terraces of a bill dal stadium. a place where political revolutionaries share a platform an ideology with violent football hooligans. and read all death on al-jazeera. fresh perspectives new possibilities fearless journalism. debates and discussions global terror attack style by affair i'm fatalities from those attacks
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fell by a quarter that's a good news story out his ear is award winning programs take you on a journey around the globe because we see. only on al-jazeera. land. welcome back you're watching the al-jazeera news hour i'm civil robin a reminder of our top stories the british prime minister theresa may has postponed tuesday's parliamentary vote on her breaks that deal expecting defeat e.u. leaders will meet on thursday to discuss breaks it but war no renegotiation. the french president has taken partial responsibility for the anger that led to the
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worst unrest in decades. offered concessions to pensioners and the working poor but stop short of reinstating a wealth tax on the rich keep so-called demand called from by the yellow vest protesters at the top executive of chinese telecom giant way will spend another night in custody after a judge in canada delayed a decision on granting bail they want joe who is accused of breaching u.s. sanctions on iran and faces charges. thousands of palestinians living in occupied east jerusalem face the threat of the israeli government demolishing their homes or businesses many properties were declared illegal after israel routinely tonight and permits potential going to spoke to one family which was forced to bulldoze their own home. with no more fight left and all. gone even the youngest members of the family knew the bulldozer was coming they want to diminish my house i don't want them to
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diminish my home. the palestinian family repeatedly tried and failed to get a permit from the israeli government to expand their home in occupied east jerusalem human rights watch says it's a system that discriminates against palestinians and is part of an israeli policy to maintain a jewish majority in the holy city the house she has built anyway and then spent the last twenty years trying to keep the walls standing for days before the israeli government's bulldozer was supposed to arrive they made a heart wrenching decision. they would demolish themselves so they could avoid more than fifteen thousand dollars in fines and fees and a possible prison sentence. in the high it of my husband isn't just destroying the house he's destroying his life the children
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a second spend life is really high. the human rights group that salem says since two thousand for more than one hundred families have done the very same thing as the has she approximately seven hundred eighty palestinian housing units have been demolished so far. in the shaky neighborhood there are forty five palestinian families facing even action including these elderly men one is a refugee the other lost his previous house in west jerusalem years ago now as they approach the last years of their lives they worry about be homeless i am of a club they not only want to evict us but the entire neighborhood to build houses for the settlers given that demolition orders can take decades to enforce these men may not live to see their homes reduced to rubble the same cannot be said for their loved ones and so many other families natasha going
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a mel does iraq occupied east jerusalem the arab league has warned brazil's incoming far right president also nara against his plans to move his country's embassy from tel aviv to jerusalem the group's secretary general said it would violate international law and brazil's relations with the arab world all during his election campaign said that he would follow u.s. president donald trump's lead and relocate the embassy if he follows through there would be a major shift in brazil's foreign policy which is traditionally backed a two state solution to the israeli palestinian conflict. and researchers have recovered war than one thousand five hundred pieces from the day of a massive fire that destroyed brazil's national museum in september the objects feared lost or one of the oldest human fossils of a found in the americas and recordings of indigenous languages some of which are no longer spoken the museum in rio de janeiro is one of the world's oldest russia has
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sent two of its long range bombers to venezuela to take part in military exercises that are capable of carrying nuclear warheads moscow has also sent one hundred pilots but as well as says the joint exercises are aimed at boosting its defense capabilities russian president vladimir putin has been supportive of the increasingly isolated nicholas maturer government. nobel peace laureate said dennis quaid and nadia murat have called for greater international action to stop the use of sexual violence as a weapon of war the pair made the play as they accepted their prize at an emotional ceremony it all slow from where charlie rangel reports. sharing a prize and a sense of justice for victims of sexual violence in conflict. and dennis mccuaig receive the nobel peace diplomas and medals their speeches urge the international community to act when war crimes are committed a call they reiterated during an exclusive interview with al-jazeera after the
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ceremony i says fidel you know group i def been doing to the girls and women kidnapping. and raping the years see. and to women and believe and those people believing according to this and saying this is right we see this is the the wrong this act they can't possibly talk nobody knows firsthand the injustice of eisel seen here returning to her village in northern iraq she is a survivor of trafficking and rape at the hands of the group's fighters now she's desperate to rescue and resettle her people three hundred thousand there in refugee camps while three thousand new cd women are still in slaved she has told her story of sexual violence and torture receiving standing ovations at the european parliament in the united nations but she says there's been little action the people live in hope for justice but that hope has an expiry date. shares the million
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dollar prize money with dennis mccuaig a gynecologist who is 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 had better take them with physical psychological and economic support and now we can have campaigns as we have done. chemical weapons and biological and nuclear weapons we can reach a level where any person who is involved in a conflict knows the already. you know if he uses this rape as a weapon of war you're describing be very will be no country that will accept me. unlike other nobel peace prize winners these laureates have not completed their 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
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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. the z community in northern iraq was torn apart in twenty fourteen when i saw attacked villages thousands of men were killed one of the women nobel laureate not emirate among the forced into slavery today the struggle continues they say the world has abandoned them most are living in terms for internally displaced people robertson visited one in the hook in northern iraq. khalid al yes is one of thousands of years e.d.s. once driven to the mountains of northern iraq ahead of an onslaught by eisel in august twenty fourth teen holiday last thirty seven members of an extended family of one of the darshan i still had no mercy we were told that my family had been stopped at an isolation point the men were killed and women and children were taken
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reports of years he's dying from lack of food and water huddled together and leaks in john mountain finally provoked other countries to take action western helicopters drop 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 residents 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 days the ferocious attack by i saw them twenty fourteen was just another attempt at what the u.n. described. some aid organizations are still working in the camps but global help is dwindling. that is over here.
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all the other places but it's not like that because people are still living in the camps and they need they need food they need shelter. place. some years it is believe the war against isn't over and that armed fighters are living among them in disguise where they. were not expecting much from the world right now is not giving much to help ease our suffering we feel left behind as you say that is threats remain and supplies shrink their battle simply to exist is being forgotten by the rest of the world right matheson al-jazeera do hawk the northern kurdish region of iraq and is reserve bank governor has resigned citing personal reasons patel's announcement follows weeks of disagreements with the government over policy when the issues was pressured to relax lending rules toward some state run banks the government is believed to be unhappy about the reserve bank's unwillingness to use capital reserves to fund its fiscal debt. can things and away
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in regional elections in five indian states that are being dubbed as a semi final with national polls just months away prime minister narendra modi's b j p is facing a stiff challenge from the opposition congress in three northern states where it currently holds power economic slowdown and farming prices and rural areas have put the b j p on the back foot a strong showing by the congress is affected to boost its chances to lead a united opposition. throne because ousted prime minister has threatened to launch what he calls people power to the streets if he's not reinstated run ill become a single as thousands of his supporters will rally in the capital colombo next week the country was thrown into political turmoil in october when president ma of a profit center replaced him with former leader mahinda rajapaksa the supreme court is expected to decide later this week if his dissolution of parliament is illegal.
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protesters have disrupted of the event promoting kohl on the sidelines of un climate change talks in poland. was. about one hundred activists the u.s. sponsored event interrupting opening remarks by president trump's top aides house a white house advisor on energy and climate the top administration support for coal is a told with many other government delegations who want the climate talks to focus on how to move away from fossil fuel use. my argument that the trade was ok doing my government was saying you guys are actually waiting for this local climate crisis actually there he said they're violating my interest in all right and i'm saying that because there's no future that my great mother god me nick plant cars more on our special coverage. after the united states announced it would terminate its membership of
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the paris agreement beijing in china was quick to brand itself as the global leader committed to fighting climate change through green policy making the country has been investing heavily in renewables last year for every dollar spent in the u.s. on alternative energy china spent three but china is carbon emissions have risen since two thousand and fifteen coal still accounts for over sixty percent of the country's energy consumption and new coal plants are still being built adrian brown has this report. the economic machine that is china needs a vast amount of power to fuel its growth engine much of that fuel is code. in order to meet the target for reductions in carbon emissions china's leaders pledged to move away from fossil fuels to clean energy even if it meant closing thousands of factories three years on that commitment is looking in doubt says one leading
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environmentalist the reasons slowing economic growth and worsening trade friction with the united states.

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