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tv   Trust WHO  Al Jazeera  December 16, 2018 4:00am-5:01am +03

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in prison for allegedly throwing a cinder block from a roof and killing an israeli soldier last may despite being illegal according to international law demolitions of palestinian homes are a common tactic used by the israeli military human rights groups say it's an unjust form of collective punishment when i don't is the international community that the international community is backing israel they are not set of ass with the palestinian people the abu have made family has become a symbol of resistance in the occupied territory six sons are in prison accused of attacking israelis one is a co-founder of fatah's military wing and their mother latifa abu hamid is a well known activist in two thousand and eleven she was sent to the un to make a presentation in the palestinian bid for statehood. the palestinian authority has condemned the demolition and called for peaceful protests the number of crimes that
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are to committed against palestinians have reached an unprecedented level because of all of that the lack of potential for any peaceful resolution and because of the . on the ground i think of the situation is moving towards a popular uprising the demolition the raids the administrative detention of hamas members and the increased military presence at checkpoints and roads in the west bank these are all measures israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu valid to take in retaliation for the deaths of a baby boy and two soldiers this week there is a manhunt underway for the suspect or suspects involved in the killing of the soldiers meanwhile abu honeyed says the israelis have demolished her home not once not twice but now three times she vows to rebuild the palestinian authority says it will help her do just that. al-jazeera l m r
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e refugee camp in the occupied west bank still had fun on the program u.s. affordable care under attack again as a judge says tax changes have made obama's health care plan unconstitutional. get ready for. why the russian president wants to take charge of the countries that are using. how the rain fell over the balkans rufford leaves turned to snow this massive cloud here there was fed from below that sent with plenty of warmth and moisture is coming against cold and hard ground the two combine very easy to make snow and here it is running on sunday i think east of serbia east even of hungary running into
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montenegro and remained in that carry on overnight with a line to the north stretching up driesum snow to poland and better routes plenty more coverage through the alps and leaving on monday a line still potentially forming getting snow in austria vienna's max minus one this is definitely the cold proud of europe where it's bit warmer in italy's generating big thunderstorms in the adriatic for the coast as far north indeed as north misty in slovenia to the west things are sunny and dry after the warnings of sunday for the british isles of severe weather it's a quite a ten degrees in london and a less cold night in paris to the south of all this well all the action is going on really in the central eastern med so once again a cold wind blows into northern libya showers will come with it they'll tend to drift eastwards and there's more rain heading into levant as things quieten down but don't warm up further west.
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the tunas in scientist who led a double life so secret even kept it from his family. but his activities would have a military impact for which he would pay the ultimate price. out as zero world investigates the life and death of mahmoud soiree the tunisian drone engineer. welcome back a quick look at top stories now french officials say more than sixty six thousand
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yellow vests protesters have demonstrated across the country for the fifth weekend in a row that's less than half the number testers who turned out for last week's rally the global climate change talks in poland have been extended for another day as turkey appears to now be holding up a final agreement. on the israeli army is demolish the home of prominent palestinian activist latif abdul hamid in the occupied west bank whose son is accused of killing a soldier protesters criticised the destruction as collective punishment. we moved to yemen now where the vital port city of data is reported to be calm a day off the fighting broke out despite warring parties agreeing to a cease fire video add on a hundred feet t.v. network appears to show as strikes by the saudi coalition on friday witnesses say at least one woman was killed and another two severely injured a ceasefire for the city was announced after a breakthrough in peace talks in sweden on thursday. this is blood aggression a violation of the cease fire these are two stutz one although one is in critical
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condition hanging between life and death there is an affront said the rome three women the air strike targets of the religious right here look at the blood look at the shop know the ceasefire the of trying to promote mercy. the warriors out to the front lines not true and civilians areas. well now to sri lanka where the recently sacked prime minister ronnell wickramasinghe we sworn into his old job on sunday comes after his controversial success and rajapaksa resigned anding a forty day power struggle that's left the country without functioning government welfare and his reports from colombia this was the moment former president and now former prime minister behind the rajapaksa signed his resignation letter. i have no intention of remaining as prime minister without a general election being held in order to not harm by the president. i will resign
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from the position of prime minister in more equate for the president to form a new government rajapaksa criticised what he called attempts to run the country without in the elections rajapakse and president might have a serious say in his bid to hold a snap election ended on thursday when the supreme court ruled that the president did not have the authority to dissolve parliament and call elections a second case challenging rajapakse as premiership is also before the courts and. this is not good should remain prime minister he finished the war it was developing the country our people don't mind about all of this happened because mahindra did not have a majority in parliament when a country is on stable it is difficult for people like us to make a living with these plans messed up and according paused restraining order rajapaksa had few options but he was clear that it doesn't end here.
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the change of government by the people expected his now here to be put off by the people will definitely be changed. no one can prevent it. after weeks of scathing attacks on the man he sacked and vowed never to reappoint presidency to say knees due to sweat and run a victim a singer on sunday morning and the curtains come down on the main act of the political drama that has gripped sri lanka over the last few weeks with the resignation of my head the rajapaksa but how the broader plot ends i read this country goes politically needs to be worked out over the coming days behind the rajapaksa will no doubt be planning how to be part of that future when a finance. colomba. on the stories we're following has been more fighting in mali between for loni herdsman has been linked to i.c.l. and twice tribesmen loyal to the french military on wednesday full on fighters attacked villages around two shack in the eastern menaka region at least forty
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three were killed in the attack and grazing lands burnt around one hundred civilians have been killed in the region this year mostly in fighting over land and resources. on out zimbabwe where the president is promising to turn around the economy which is suffering from its worst crisis in a decade amisom and made the pledge to thousands of supporters it is parties annual conference who endorsed him to run for a second five year term armatures has more from that event in s.c. . when ever some people see others lining up for something they join the queue just in case they find what they're looking for there is a shortage of cash in zimbabwe especially foreign currency suffering that we need to lead others other countries the league total self would. really need like at the rulings on e.p.a. party conference the economy and what to do about it was high on the agenda. was president or try to reassure his party will turn things around we.
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all know. with regards to all the subsidies. and we'll be remiss to do our best. to interfere. must be for. our people in every corner of the. fuel and some medicines are in short supply in zimbabwe food prices of more than tripled in recent weeks people are growing impatient doctors and public hospitals are on strike for the second time this year they want. to give also threatening to do the same if any want to pay the u.s. dollars not in local one which cost about. despite reports a party infighting all ten provinces have indorsement as well as a presidential candidate for the twenty twenty three elections
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a sign not much will change politically as for the economy or people can do is wait and hope their leaders make good on promises to deliver otherwise it's going to be more of the same. if somebody. ukrainian church teaches of agree to separate from the russian orthodox church and form their own thousands of people gathered outside sansa fiske a feature in kiev to witness the event inside orthodox priest approved a new charter and named thirty nine year old metropolitan appear fany is that lida ukrainian president petro poroshenko push for independence as a key campaign issue was devouring one member asked we have some spiritual independence which could be compared to getting political independence we are cutting the shackles which tires to be imposed we are getting back on a truck defined by god at a following our own poll texan democratic congressman beto rule has called the
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death of a seven year old guatemalan girl in custody earlier this month heartbreaking yet all too common jacqueline may rosemary coleman quinn was picked up with her father and other asylum seekers in a remote area along mexico's border with the u.s. she later died of dehydration a father has told officials she didn't get any medical treatment for ninety minutes despite vomiting and running a very high fever. well the developments us president donald trump is confirm that his interior secretary ryan zinke he will be leaving the administration at the end of the year since he is facing several investigations over his use of security details charset flights in a real estate deal democrats have promised to intensify probes into his conduct he's leaving weeks before they take control of the house of representatives zain he played a key role in trump's efforts to roll back environmental regulations. well a federal court in the u.s. state of texas has ruled that the affordable care act also known as a bomb a cat is unconstitutional it found that
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a change in tax law last year invalidated the entire act by eliminating a penalty for not having health insurance republicans have repeatedly tried and failed to repeal the affordable care act since it was introduced in two thousand and ten rob runnels has more from washington. the texas federal judge's actions striking down the affordable care act will set off another round of legal maneuvering that will likely wind up in the u.s. supreme court but the law remains in effect none of the seventeen million plus americans who rely on the a c. a for their health insurance will see any immediate changes president donald trump posted on twitter that he predicted all along that the affordable care act would be declared unconstitutional but it was actually some actions taken by the republican congress and the trump administration last year that led to the judge's ruling
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though the political fallout from this could be considerable the ca has become more popular with american voters as time has gone on and in fact many of the democratic candidates who ran successfully in last month's midterm congressional elections made health care reform ability a centerpiece of their campaigns democratic representative dancy palosi the leader of the house who will become the speaker of the house of representatives in january promise that she and the democrats would take what she called swift action to prevent republicans from destroying the affordable care act. i eventually u.s. troops chairing a philippine american war in one thousand i want have been returned the bells were handed back to the senate payne's at
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a ceremony in manila on change day and now they're back in their hometown of. alan tuchman reports. a symbol of the philippine independence is playing at home these antiquated bells were taken as war trophies by american soldiers from the small town of poland guy eastern samar the philippine american tour. people here say the bells evokes so much emotion because these feel like missing chess pieces in the country's violent struggle for freedom from its colonizers the balinese massacre is the single biggest defeat for the american military during the philippine american war but for the philippines it is a reminder that over half a century ago a handful of filipino guerrillas armed with machetes fought and won against
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a superpower a reminder too for the current generation that filipinos will do whatever it takes to earn their freedom historians say thousands of people were killed including women and children nimish should denounce great grandfather was one of the last bell ringers of the believe that church during the war he says his family never thought this day would come. i feel like i am in the clouds this best represents our fight for independence you can see the people are so happy they are finally home. for decades philippine president and independent groups have lobbied hard for their return i know nobody but nobody can claim singularity credit or the generals of the american. various i returned. but i did go through your marriage not to be able to be fully
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been me. this year the u.s. secretary of defense with authority delegated by our president was able to send these religious artifacts home as a gesture of respect for a close friend and ally with whom we have shared so many sacrifices but for the faithful of. the bills are simply beyond politics it is a homecoming that's taken one hundred seventeen years they see the bells return is proof that all wars do end no matter how brutal. the. dogon al-jazeera eastern samar said to the philippines. now a tomb nearly four and a half thousand years old has been discovered in egypt the private to belong to
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a senior official from the fifth in a city of ancient egyptian pharoahs it contains forty five statues carved into rock showing him and his family now the president of russia says he wants to keep a tight rein on rap music in his country as amazing was culturally does vladimir putin said rather than banning this type of music they must lead and direct it patients said a ban could have the opposite effect and actually increase its popularity. through the rap and other modern music is based on the three pillars of sex drugs and protest well the biggest concern amongst all the drugs is not this thing this is a path to the degrades ation of the nation. but just a quick recap of the top stories this hour now one hundred people have been arrested in the latest wave of yellow vest demonstrations across france overall officials
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say some sixty six thousand protesters turned out for rallies against the government of emanuel macron but that's still only half the figure of demonstrators at last weekend's protests but its myth has more now from paris the most significant difference on notice this week of the weeks ago is the you've not time these sort of violent groups within the protesters but tucking in smashing up shops and cars and vehicles that sort of thing the housing bitterly about i'm not any of that this time around. these peaceful demonstrators moving around the parish the numbers are down but of course their presence is still disrupted because we've had shops closed roads closed off the metro system many more troops drop will stop to close as well and people are put off from coming into central paris affecting businesses and our other headlines the clock twenty four global climate change conference in poland has been extended for another day as the final agreement has
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been reached the u.n. led event was meant to end on friday but went out continue on until early sunday representatives from almost two hundred nations that at discussing how to implement the paris agreement which aims to cap global warming at two degrees celsius the israeli army has demolished the home of prominent palestinian activist latif honeyed in the occupied west bank will have made son is accused of killing an israeli soldier protesters have criticised the destruction as collective punishment . meanwhile strayer is formally recognize west jerusalem as the capital of israel prime minister scott morrison says australia will not move its embassy from tel of the for now but will open a trade and defense office in jerusalem. because disputed prime minister amanda rajapaksa has resigned he was appointed seven weeks ago setting off a political crisis that's left without a functioning government at least seven people have been shot dead and dozens injured when security forces fired on protesters after
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a gun battle in indian administered kashmir the exchange of fire came during an operation targeting suspected rebels and the whole wal-mart region i'll have more news about twenty five minutes time do join me then now it's time for the listening post. facebook inform the public on bridgetown it has access to fifty million profile political site oxidative at the time. that my crush on five or five has been filed after i think i think i really thanks but i think that's up alarm richard gives birth in europe the listening post here are some of the
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media stories that we're covering this week facebook's two thousand eight hundred its year in review is not a pretty picture there's a lot not to like four hundred and eighty news outlets in hungary are consolidated all under one roof and the regulators just look the other way activists armed with cameras are documenting the way the american authorities go after undocumented immigrants and. a rhapsody reworked for the social media generation. new year's resolutions are tricky promises of performance can prove difficult to keep but that did not stop facebook c.e.o. mark zuckerberg valuing at the outset of two thousand and eighteen that this would be the year that he would fix things that his company would start protecting its users from abuse and hate defend them against interference by nation states and bad political actors and make sure as he put it that going on facebook would be time
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well spent since then multiple controversies and unfavorable news stories including the cambridge analytic a data breach and the un's report on facebook's role in ethnic cleansing in me and maher have exposed some of the pragmatic. business calculations the company has made they've also provided a glimpse into how facebook goes after its critics and they put the lie to the feel good image that the company has worked so hard to sell it will be interesting to see what kind of new year's message zuckerberg comes up with a couple of weeks from now our starting point this week is facebook's california headquarters in silicon valley usa. facebook released its two thousand and eighteen year in review with lots of marking various global of its election and celebrity weddings and sporting occasions they drove engagement on the site what it did not know was itself because end of year
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the facebook campaign which might have been a time. i would have thought started with to cambridge analytic us dorian which this company run by a bunch of bond villains had sensitive data from untold numbers of facebook users around the world to coerce people and move elections that's only the start i would have had clips of refugees and me and mom driven out by the worst sort of propaganda spread by the government of myanmar and many religious leaders explicitly using facebook to foster genocide then i would have gone through all of the stammering. that mark zuckerberg committed. no while testifying before various committees the level of scrutiny is facebook too powerful the level of criticism the purpose they use their remit is to cover facebook's riri and then i'm going to finish with the embarrassing revelations that facebook itself has paid political operatives to engage in the spread of the very
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same kind of propaganda that people have been accusing facebook of fostering it's been a stunning year for facebook. and all of that came after the new year's mess. zuckerberg posted in january in which he admitted facebook had a lot of work to do the company was dealing with the hate speech and misinformation rampaging across the social media network and there was the aftermath of the two thousand and sixteen u.s. election when facebook was accused of enabling russian operatives out to meddle in american democracy the public noises sucker berg and his number two sheryl sandberg were making were along the lines of we're try doing our best and we have a lot more interest here statements that after the cambridge analytic a data breach story came out in march no longer passed the smell test the cambridge analytical scandal is not quite what people think it is that scandals about hell
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a company used facebook exactly as intended cambridge a link or not the only people that are downloading facebook data using it to like or target people in order to go back and send more advertisements to get people's attention on facebook because this is their very core business model this is what advertising is fraud essentially came journalist and russian descent from ation has gotten in the u.s. in the u.k. the real for me the real impact that facebook has had in twenty developing areas of the world. is one that has got the most attention and we've seen there how facebook has been weaponized and the government has and the army have spread hate speech against the muslims which is incited violence now facebook repeatedly told us that they're doing more and more people but they still don't have a full time employee and man in their. facebook suffered another reputational blow last month the latest of many at the hands of the new york times based on leaked
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internal communications the times reported that facebook had hired a washington based p.r. firm called definers to investigate and smear some of facebook's critics like that did not exactly square woodstock. sugary words electing people building community and bringing the world closer together one of those critics was george soros who in addition to being a powerful individual is also a lightning rod for right wing movement he's obviously a billionaire investor but he's also to the right wing sort of a symbol of jewish power and so the idea that facebook was looking into george soros really played one of those powerful emotional narratives and made the company really look bad the report spoke to. a certain level of chaos within the company. and said it didn't realize that the company had hired definers ultimately eliot
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schrage who's the head of communications he put his hands up and he said it was his fault but it just added to the sense that facebook is a company that you couldn't really trust and that they were doing things that facebook shouldn't really be doing. trust when dealing with the news media must be earned and facebook's corporate culture when dealing with journalists asking troublesome questions seems to be rooted in avoidance batting away stories refusing to answer on the record then finding itself on the defensive when the story comes out anyway in the case of the cambridge analytical data breach facebook tried to ignore the questions then after the observer published the story mark zuckerberg went on c.n.n. to do the talking what happened what went wrong zuckerberg is a self described and well it's hard to know what we'll find but we're going to review thousands of as
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a television performer and he's not exactly killing i think facebook was caught flatfooted used to getting a relatively favorable perception from the press and after cambridge analytical the public and the media chain. there too and that lack of being able to see itself the way the world did thirteen lee hampered facebook throughout two thousand and eighteen as it tended to under react under intense and paid the level of scrutiny that it would get. the bottom line on facebook will always be the numbers and their mixed it has two point two billion users worldwide and is still growing in asia and africa however growth is stagnant in europe and the americas where most of the revenues come from and that has shaved about one point two billion dollars off facebook's share value a drop of about thirty percent the real threat to facebook though the one mark zuckerberg must be thinking about comes from governments and their regulators they
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have been a slow to react to the facebook problem as the company has but more and more of them are talking about and inching towards reigning in the social media giant potentially effective regulatory action a sin against facebook has come out of the european union with the introduction in two thousand and eighteen of the general data protection regulation the very fact that now companies that take our data have to allow european citizens to explicitly offer their permission for the use of the data i think is crucial those are important rights that i wish the rest of the world had across the water in the u.s. regulators have a much more hands off approach compared to dare you come to power but that could all change because with the switch in the hopes in washington come january we may see democrats want to pursue a more aggressive approach against these companies especially over the rush of this information campaign which is
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a huge issue and i think that ultimately we're going to see regulators come down on facebook much much heavier than twenty nineteen what we're seeing is governments are trying to flex their muscles and we're just one to see ever more examples. governments cracking down on this though magic within the next year we'll probably see the first example of a government just outright shutting down facebook in their country and seeing what happens i don't know which country it will be or how long it'll be for but i imagine some government is going to want to test their resolve relative to facebook and that will be that will be interesting. looking at other media stories on our radar this week with one of our producers will yong well we've reported on hungary before and how much media consolidation has occurred there under prime minister viktor orban but four hundred eighty separate news outlets now merged into one single entity yes it's called the central
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european press and media foundation and it's headed by the media mogul couple or list guy who's a close ally of prime minister orbán that's hundreds of t.v. and radio stations magazines newspapers including all of hungary's regional newspapers all handed over by their owners as charitable donations free of charge the political pitch for this is that newspapers a struggling economically so consolidation will help them to survive but many of the previously independent outlets that been handed over were struggling because the government was stopping them of advertising revenues which enabled the prime minister's allies to buy them on the cheap and here's the kicker although the government has blocked media mergers before on competition grounds or ban has decreed that this conglomerate not be investigated by the competition authority because the merger is of national strategic importance among the questions that this raises that is what's the effect going to be on news content in hungary and
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what political opposition exists there to this move if any observer say this is about politics and cost cutting second and that hunger ariens will be seeing more shared content and. less diversity in their journalism the opposition socialist party says it will sue hungary's media council which is also controlled by or ban and they are also looking for outside help from brussels but the e.u. has a pretty poor track record on intervening when it comes to member states and what governments do on the media side or burn knows that and is probably counting on it and time magazine has announced its person of the year for two thousand and eighteen collectively honoring journalists under fire who's on that list and why the subsequent debate online well there are four front covers for this week's time for different individuals or groups the capital because that newspaper in the u.s. state of maryland where five star for killed by a gunman back in june the wives of reuters journalists in myanmar one lone enjoy
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the two men have been in jail for a year now maria ressa from rappler who faces dubious tax fraud charges in the philippines after years of hard hitting reporting of the presidency of roderigo to turtle bay and the late saudi journalist jamal khashoggi who time describes as a lifelong defender of the truth though the reality is that has spent most of his career propagandizing for the ruling family in riyadh before he took sides against mohammed bin solomon when the crown prince rose to power time calls the four cases representative of a broader fight around the world in which at least fifty two journalists have been killed this year and while it did mention reporters the been killed in india and the case of russian journalist arkadi chang who misled the world by faking his death it was up to twitter to point out that two palestinian journalists yeah some were targa and ahmed abu hussein who was shot and killed by israeli snipers while
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covering the protests in gaza they were absent from times list ok thanks well before president trump took office most media junkies in the u.s. would not have known that ice stan. as for the immigration and customs enforcement agency for the troubled ministrations hard line immigration policies have changed all that data published this past week shows that in the past year i saw rests in the workplace have gone up by more than six hundred percent and with the president's ceaseless talking and tweeting about threats like a government shutdown if democrats refuse to fund his border wall or that migrant care of than from honduras stories about ice and its sister agencies c.b.p. customs and border protection are right up there on the mainstream media's agenda but some news organizations are doing more than just covering the story over the past year n.g.o.s and legal advocacy groups have collaborated with media outlets to
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at the grassroots level track cases of enforcement abuse and they train communities to use their own media tools to document wrongdoing by listening posts flow phillips now from texas on some of the media practices and stories that have come out of those collaboration. as i strain this seemingly indiscriminate often undercover operations to root out illegal immigrants and they happen across the u.s. day in day out. like the case of palomar alice luna a mother taken in front of her screaming children on a southern california street in march twenty eighth. over one hundred one days a mechanic in los angeles arrested at work in september twenty seven team even though agents had no probable cause or warrant. a woman know if she could
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gonzales a father of four apprehended in february twenty seventh teen was dropping his daughter at school just three examples of thousands we know about these three because they were caught. on camera eyewitness footage has been so crucial in exposing isis manipulative tactics ramiele of alec and solace was arrested by two ice agents who were an unmarked vehicles wearing jackets that only said police there's a reason why they don't identify themselves they're trying to use manipulative tactics to get information from immigrants or people who they've racially profiled in order to arrest and deport this happened in february of two thousand and seventeen and it was really the first high profile case that really showed what the human price of ice is new enforcement what looked like. u.s. immigration and customs enforcement ice is not a new body it's current incarnation the largest investigative arm of the department
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of homeland security was part of a restructuring effort in the wake of nine eleven and it's not as though the obama administration didn't deport undocumented workers as many as twenty thousand a month by twenty sixteen but donald trump has gone further during his first week in office the president signed an executive order that rewrote the rules on who i should prioritize in its operations making virtually every undocumented immigrant in the country all ten point seven million fair game for arrest and deportation whether they had a criminal record or not the former director of ours mr holm publicly stated that the days of florida from crossing. over they should all of you in this country illegally you committed a crime but entered this country you should be uncountable you should look over your shoulder you need to be worried then i did something which last administration had not done the actually this and every single process discretion to do so.
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after handing deporting anyone comes to attention became the new forms what that's translated to on the street. folks who maybe year ago two years ago didn't have to anticipate the possibility of being arrested and deported now do you seen a substantial increase in interest a lot of stories about the way immigration enforcement faulds arrests class country family separated deportations. stories about how i see racially profiled people on the street picks up immigrants a routine court check ins uses contentious surveillance tactics and makes mass arrests. some of the journalism does more extensive collaboration's between news organizations and advocacy groups groups that have done research and can show people a thing on t.v. we covered a project that was put together by the immigrant defense project the center for
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constitutional rights here in new york city tracked immigration raids and it showed a marked increase in operations targeting people with no criminal record so what we've seen under the truck administration huge increase in arrests all of these different colors correspond to different types of inforce an activity that was served. like a physical arrest or surveillance or use of force we have one hundred twenty eight cases observed here forty eight here i think that generally this kind of ice focused reporting can serve one of two functions either it's basically service journalism or it can be that kind of traditional accountability journalism and i think that that latter function is what more of the ice watch kind of projects serve the marshall project new york magazine collaboration was really interesting because it kind of was a mix of the two it was grounded in there are ports of individual immigration
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enforcement actions and deportations and in new york in particular that's fascinating because seeing the mapping of here is what has actually happened is useful to immigrant new yorkers who can actually turn the ambient buzz of rumors about what might be happening into a sense of what has actually happened and to navigate their own lives accordingly. abolish ice is the collective name given to a growing movement protesting ice's new mandate and that's if it's part of the agency customs and border protection or c.b.p. . the movement was energized by the release of an orgy ever quarter back in june with the sounds of children. trying out that pattern. and continues today with the president's constant references to the quote press of the migrant caravan. criminals just felt worse for trespassers but you know what about the
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water turn back now because you're not getting in advance the discussion a lot of traction and remains true that she started filming from an advocacy groups not just the media have suggestions on how to tell the story. and fit into a series of what shows scrutinized by what they mcallen texas it's a city why only us mexican border given the spiting immigration enforcement in this particular family the group says it's essential to get people here with tools and techniques needed to film events as they have. this program is a crash course in how video can help immigrant communities expose injustices advocate for asylum seekers and defend against deportation it teaches people not just how to don't kill and ice and border patrol abuses but how to do it safely and ethically our trainings focus on digital security issues so how to secure the
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content on your phone how to secure your communications your computer your social media we also focus on filming tactics what should you film what should choose film then go that it's off the mark when we spoke. in the so now we're also seeing mays it going up with him oh nothing must be on. but up with it that. and then a really crucial component of our work is helping people think their strategies around what to do after you film how you save it and how you can impact whether or not it can be used as evidence in a court case or a legal proceeding if i record something i would just posted online but like now we know that there's specific procedures that i was. before posting bad. what shops like this one having a real impact on local communities but the power of six in video is going well beyond having video footage having kind of
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a first person document is often the difference between something being a local story if not a national story we've seen in several cases things that were initially posted his facebook videos is becoming things that you know national outlets have said in their newsroom gee this is getting a lot of play on social media maybe you should write it up a phony oh showing an illegal immigrant i write this crap here off the street or try to rush hour us what i want of attack the new technology has become extremely important in your legal professionals for ice. and also guys immigrant who is a law breaker. for the advocate of that unauthorized person he or she is not just a law breaker which is true but he or she is also a parent he or she is also a contributing member of the community he or she is also someone who has roots in this way they want to portray that aspect of the person and these tools have
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become very important in making that happen. remember one hundred one days the mechanic in a arrested it was the entire incident was captured on the shop surveillance cameras footage that was used by his defense in court. and that video taken by romney. on his cell phone footage went viral helping him out of immigrant detention six months later breaking the ice one video at a time. and finally back to social media and the bohemian blast from the past reversion to the birth of the music video is often traced back to queen and the song bohemian rhapsody produced in one thousand nine hundred seventy five six years before the launch of m.t.v. both the song and the video became iconic destine accurately an american of samoan descent has reworked the video turning it into
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a cutting commentary on online trolling culture the stuff that we say we don't want to engage in but they started it since the original version of the song grew strongly from the individual ism of bohemian artists it's a fitting soundtrack to the self obsessed digital age that we live in today was the next time you're at the listening post. it's. a. eleven . eleven.
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eleven . all. you. had to.
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an investigation into the real powers that control the world health organization their obligation to their shareholders completely overwhelms any consideration of public health can they be trusted with building a healthier future if their loyalty becomes questionable reason of people that are solved in the h one n one is it getting less difficult like you are now a w h o has this chaz who says us trust that you trust our knowledge is the. hello i'm maryam namazie in london just a quick look at the top stories for you now french officials are saying more than sixty six thousand yellow dress protesters have demonstrated across the country for the fifth weekend in a row this is a significant drop from the hundred twenty six thousand estimated to have turned
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out last saturday after concessions from president this week while the demonstrations were mostly peaceful there was still some scenes of violence in the capital anderson is reports now from paris. crowds of paris once again loud with sirens and thick with tear gas but there are some differences all this happening most of the day had been peaceful with much more control but the best to avoid violence and rioting fewer people on the streets as well. the police have been using different tactics as well particularly at one of the main focal points of protest the arc de triomphe for. most of this was crowd dispersal not riot control and that varies from previous protests that have been much more emphasis on passive resistance and some strong imagery these women styled as money on the symbol of the french republic facing off the police in riot gear upon the
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set has been submitted this week and seen a major attempt from president emanuel mccrone to quell the protest movement with tax concessions and the increase in the minimum wage may have had some effect but the people here say the numbers may be down for a variety of reasons but momentum is still strong. for jolie people just like the numbers are down because we have been protesting for five weeks it's long simula vestas chose to stay at home or on the roundabouts in their town some couldn't come to paris it's also a result of the stress brooke attack me and i'm going to mourn those measures announced by my count come from an illegitimate government he has just done this for us. our movement to stop because it has hurt his popularity and image abroad but given our rights are not respected i will keep fighting. another factor that might explain some lower numbers is choose days attack on a christmas market instructs book in which four people were killed and security
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forces stretched the government had called on the yellow vests to scale down their protests and aside from that the christmas holiday season is here although you'd never guess that by looking at the show's elisei this weekend this is space that should be jam packed with shoppers only ten days ahead of christmas to get us in there with this demonstration is ending much the same way as the war last week of president mark thinks that he's combing the situation that might be a pretty sure judgment under simmons' al-jazeera paris well in our other headlines climate change in poland have continued throughout an extra day as data gets tries to resolve the final sticking points representatives from almost two hundred nations are discussing how to implement the paris agreement which ends to capitol warming to decrease l.c.s. talks were meant to wrap up on friday but the closing session has yet to start. the
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israeli army has demolished the home of prominent palestinian activist latif abu honeyed in the occupied west bank a son is accused of killing in his right the soldier protesters have criticized the destruction as collective punishment. well the yemeni port city of her data is reported to be calm after fighting broke out on friday despite a ceasefire having been agreed video ad on a t.v. network appears to show as strikes by the saudi emraan t coalition on friday witnesses say at least one woman was killed and another too severely injured a ceasefire the city was announced after a breakthrough in peace talks in sweden on thursday. sri lanka's disputed prime minister amanda rajapaksa has resigned was appointed seven weeks ago setting off a political crisis that's left without a functioning government. at least seven people have been shot dead and dozens injured when security forces fired on protesters after a gun battle in indian administered kashmir the exchange of fire came during an
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operation at the heart targeting suspected rebels and the whole want to reach him over the top stories now it's time for al-jazeera world.
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two years ago on the fifteenth of december twenty sixth avenue drove down a suburban street in the tunisian city of suffolk. a man needed in the front seat of his car. he was muhammad. attorneys in engineer who lived a double life that even his family knew all about. and my mother he model from very early on as. a point of lad i'm glad if what i do know. what it costs. why in. the arab media in the story but so did israeli news and put it to shreds.
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claim are you the usher mcgee out of me tunisia. mr whip the man this began to simply look the ass when the army of the orc buckets out a little ball a muslim. the russian must leave even lost both legs in the interests or shadow of a me. somewhere on the fulness and when they are sure lawyer. shalom mutual lawyer moment in the process the militia missile at medina malathi muhammad of the wall between. the medina. the will tell me to fuck if it's ok. in the twenty four thousand war in gaza the palestinians in the form of hamas used to respond to is that a tax now. maybe not. but they are there are they have be.
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a little shaky does. a little hump publicly documentation is about easy if left at the till into the homicide victim. yeah i have here. a lot of the. terminal mishap of al-jazeera arabic and i'm investigating the can to the visual defense of mohammad this is. his murder in a twenty sixteen to attention to a case which was and this still is very sensitive for both the tunisians and
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israelis. because this is where he was an engineer who specialized in the development of grown acknowledge. is what he had lift uneasier in one thousand ninety one to ski very shima for president dean and i begin been highly. he later joined a unit of the military wing of hamas the ruling party in gaza that is the dean of assembly gates and he was in a charge of making that unmanned aircraft called about people when used in the twenty four thousand gaza war. i managed to get an interview with members of an assembly gets along with hemis are considered a terrorist organization by several countries including the u.s. and israel but not by china russia. they asked for their voices to be disguised and their true identities hidden i asked how mohammed is worried
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had joined their cause some of the gates. i think most of them but they did them with this new that somehow might as well if it's a fork at the there is no cause jennifer they have forgotten and we're going for a few major lenders and you can make a year of imagine a sort of overdone it is obviously a lot of emotional of course near the end of the world of india in one or. another literally you must look long and almost all of it to free will and i want to have a more humble because. i care than most warmers i love him or her little all are going to fall it will i'm a loser. i don't ever get in so you are the poor who don't know your well looking after her. or not let's annoy you than in much for. this rare video shows the first more deliberate by the. drone units.
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it was called the iraqi aircraft project and mohammed is widely blade a key role in its as a supervisor and in its technical development. i asked what the story behind the project was. the end but that. does worry clearly. whether the house or the. people that walk. the day oh and more the. obama said while health. minister. or been offered up to the walk on the other to the. home of bob well if you do nothing off the last thing i haven't
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i'm also a mafia obama and the home of the earth orbit michelle years and charbonneau body the political without a tinge of loss the. fish are pretty i would not buy iraq. but in a year they get a week or so or forty kilometer lity can achieve them from it is worthy of him all more an aussie. from an the in force ok we got a little of that in my head a firm another. by the small government of the one. of the three of them still during my in fist a geisha and i meet israeli journalist. he was reporting life for israeli channel ten from the scene of the crime outside mohammed is where is home and.

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