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tv   Revival  Al Jazeera  December 27, 2018 4:00am-5:01am +03

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to do what it's done for the past thirty years hunts for what it calls scientific research purposes and in seven months time resumed the commercial killing of whales to. al-jazeera. at least eighteen people have been arrested in china's year during two days of protests sparked by the death of a journalist. and a video online before he set himself on fire complaining of the country's economic problems and calling for a revolution there in holland has more. discontent has been simmering in tunisia for months. they've been messed demonstrations even a nationwide strike to be interesting meant of the soaring living costs and unemployment but it's the death of a journalist on monday that could ignite the anger protestors have been clashing with police for a second day responding to abdirizak silkies online post calling for a revolt. this is a call to the unemployed in cusser arena let us start
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a revolution i will demonstrate on my own and i will set myself on fire for eight years i've been trying to find work year after year nothing happens everything is lies. zoellick is funeral drew huge crowds and turned into demonstrations sold he says himself on fire in protest just like a street vendor in two thousand and eleven whose death gave birth to the arab spring and brought the twenty three year rule of president son ben ali to an end to as he enjoyed a relatively smooth transition to democracy but has failed to fire economically. and now feeling the pinch unemployment is at fifteen percent inflation is a record high and a two point eight billion dollar loan from the i.m.f. two years ago came on the condition of economic reform i just last
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month around two thirds of a million public sector workers stopped work to demand better wages and to much for two nescience who they say it was struggling to survive a sentiment echoed in sort of these posts. they don't have anything to eat to fill their stomachs people protest but the authorities close terrorists they just tossed a shot up. the promise is that the arab spring remain unfulfilled and the response to his death could force the government to confront how to deliver for its people while satisfying those it owes money. now to syria. as news just in the president donald trump said on wednesday that he's prepared to wait as long as it takes to get five billion dollars from taxpayers for his us mexico border wall and that those remarks were made during a surprise visit to troops in iraq with the first lady warn that later on now the
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husband of a british iranian mother detained in iran is calling for her release richard ratcliffe made the plea on his wife's fortieth birthday saying she's in urgent need of medical help me shop reports. the british iranian mother turned forty on wednesday but her birthday says amnesty international will be a day of anguish rather than a day of celebration mezzanine zacari ratcliffe was arrested at tara airport in april two thousand and sixteen the charity worker was later sentenced to five years in jail accused of spying charges that she and her husband richard ratcliffe vehemently deny he used her birthday to appeal for her release she is innocent he says she's been wrongly detained for three years separated from her family in young daughter and she's broken no laws and he says she's now being denied urgent medical attention senescent probably about two weeks ago now found against lumps in the breast this time she went into prison doctors said yes you need an urgent referral
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and then she's not been able to have it so we've been battling with your brain of course is flat to happen i know she was pushing again this week as far as i know she's still stuck in prison or able to get. an obviously today today's her fortieth birthday that's been looming as a landmark for a very long time in that you know this is someone that as you say has been three years in prison and she's innocent on day one she said innocent and dana hundred ninety eight what today is amnesty international's birthday present for nelson mean is a simple one a promise that we will campaign for her freedom for as long as her family needs us peter shop al jazeera i want regarded as pure science fiction human microchip implants and making a slow but steady arrival in the modern workplace while some volunteers have already been fitted with a technology several businesses in the united kingdom and are actively looking to provide them to willing employees as a packer reports there are concerns the risks may outweigh the benefits the
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future is a wave of a ham the way in case you missed it here it is again. this is a whole new level of security no keys or access cards difficult to steal and copy but the technology requires a certain level of commitment that is not for the faint hearted. so this is where the micro chip implant story begins for those who want them at least a clinical setting a sterile environment with some rather daunting bits of medical kit so talk us through what happens next so far as part of a seizure is why when acetic the points interest you and. emma use a scalpel just to make a small incision. and then finally rob a large need to out and that we first just i'll stop you there for me in my case at least i think i've already was no is because it really had completely pain free the
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u.k. firm biotech office implants to businesses and individuals is fitted one hundred fifty implants in the u.k. so far and the numbers rising assistive technology from stable people implant. banking security general use of contact as payments passport date or be stored on these microchips and embedded in your hand comes down to convenience i suppose for people it's very hard to lose your hand it's easy to lose your he's your wallet so a lot of sound demographics will not convenience this is one of several implant firms reportedly in discussions with british financial and legal companies the names of the companies are being closely guarded this isn't new technology microchips have been implanted in tents for many years but the prospect of implanting them in employees to spark concerns from trade unions back tipping gives even more control and power to be employer and that comes wary of inherent risks
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and dangers overstressed inventors a shouldn't just be ignored by an employer i would need to of into consideration and their definition be pressuring any workers into every market biotech companies say the technology should be voluntary and that people must have a right to privacy but with one swedish bio hacks claiming to have already implanted four thousand people. all their worries micro chipping could eventually become the new normal society's embrace the mobile phone making is easy to track on a daily basis but by implanting microchips there may be few places left to truly escape technology leave barca al-jazeera london. and we're going to run to the top stories on our jazeera sunday's long awaited presidential election in the democratic republic of congo has been postponed in
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some parts of the country sparking concern about an upsurge in opposition protests the vote is delayed in many and tembo which are dealing with an imposed outbreak and you may be where more than one hundred people were killed in ethnic violence last week the opposition says it won't accept any further perspire moments. she turns president has accused protesters of being traitors after more than a week of rallies calling for him to resign demonstrate his are valid to fight on saying they won't stop until omar bashir is gone it comes as doctors have also staged and to government protests with promises of more to follow after there is help him organise in khartoum with the latest of them is that a standstill are between the protesters on one side saying that they want the government to go away and that they want to see a new government new faces new cabinet new reforms a new policies and president bush you saying he's not going to back down he is going to try to put together to provide new economic reforms and new policies but
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then people said that we've been there before we've heard that before we don't want that anymore we want to new government that would give us the ideas. russia has accused israeli jets of endangering civilian flights well don't you want it called a provocative rage near syria's capital russia's defense ministry says six israeli f. sixteen jets started strikes as two planes were preparing to land in damascus and beirut syrian air defense forces shot down fourteen of the sixteen percent in guided bombs or the remaining two hit a military deco injuring three soldiers israel says its own defense system intercepted an anti-aircraft missile fired from syria u.s. customs and border protection says it will carry out medical checks on every child in its custody after a second guatemalan child died in its care eight year old for the paygo is unknown so died on christmas day after being in hospital for a second time within twenty four hours it happened on the same day that a seven year old guatemalan girl was buried after also dying in u.s. custody and president donald trump says he has no plans at all to remove u.s.
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troops from iraq as he made a surprise visit to the country the president accompanied by his wife spoke to troops and met military leaders up next stream have more news for you after that thanks for watching. and here in this stream today a wave of african-americans are choosing to move to the african continent but why and what happens when they get there join the conversation using the hash tag a.j. stream or if you're watching live on you tube you'll eventually see us in that box
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you can leave your comments in the chat box and you too could be in the string. right. in recent years thousands of african americans have made the decision to quote return home to the african continent many say they want to escape the racial pressure pot of the united states while some want to connect to the land of their ancestors for others countries like ghana wooed them with an easy immigration process and the promise of a better life though many african countries are welcoming of the americans in their midst not everyone is thrilled by their new neighbors so joining us to talk about all of this in accra ghana. she's a marketing and media consultant she also made the documentary film blacks it about the migration of african americans in cape town south africa. he's an anthropologist and social literacy consultant and kaylin read into she's
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a journalist and editor of the website african american in africa and here in our studio there a writer and journalist focusing on race culture and politics in the united states welcome to the stream to everyone so this is a conversely. and that is very hot for their audience they love this topic and so everyone wanted to chime in with why people might want to move to the continent of africa this is just one of the tweets we got this is from adman who says it's about identity events like the slave trade in the colonial rule almost wiped away that african identity and thank goodness people are once again asking these questions about that identity so kalan i want to go to you with that idea talking about the draw of what made you want to leave the u.s. and move to namibia have a picture here on my laptop that i pulled up of you not too long ago you teach english to talk to us about that experience and what made it so enticing for you.
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you know basically by the time i was about twenty three twenty four years old i personally just became kind of tired and bored of america and i just really fell in love with the energy and vibrancy that came with black nations especially after visiting barbados which is where i have met lineage and so i basically decided that you know i wanted to experience life on the african continent and so i started doing research on the internet about ways to move to africa and i found out that one of the easiest ways was through volunteer teaching and so i applied to an american organization and that's how i ended up in the libya and you know the rest is history i ended up getting married twenty maybe and i'm now a mother here but really just for me it was you know i personally was was kind of unsatisfied with american life and i've always felt a connection just to the continent and to my african ancestry and just sort of the energy of blackness so it was really attractive and it's been there and
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intoxicating experience you mentioned that i had to chuckle that tired and bored of living in america and the american context really so i mean i want to go to you with that idea pull up on my screen here. a an article about you headlined why some african-americans are moving to africa this is from our colleagues on the al-jazeera english site and you decided to move to gone on for a one year fellowship in twenty fourteen and then stayed what was behind that decision. well actually i did graduate school and bomb in two thousand and three but i didn't feel like it was time for me to move getting other things lots of things run in place and i came back ten years later in two thousand and thirteen i had an amazing experience there with so much development that happened in that time that i was like now is the time i applied
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for a fellowship of the one year fellowship i figured that would give me i'm not trying to you know get the lay of the land see how much i like it and at this in the one year i was like i'm here i'm not going anywhere and i've been here since been. there if you heard this two experiences will go through your mind when you hear that. it makes a lot of sense and you know because frankly people not being enjoying living in the united states or having issues as an african-american in the united states that makes a lot of sense and you know there's plenty of african-americans who have gone to you know countries in europe and felt more comfortable in europe than they have in america so going to africa and feeling you know the connection to war in african people which doesn't necessarily mean that it's your home per se where you go back and like your rican doing something that you you have like a very real connection that you you know you're not saying the connection is completely gone but the comfort level and the ability to adapt and thrive in that
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environment it makes it makes a lot of sense and so i can see why people would be you know interested in doing so ok so then i want to throw a little dynamite into this conversation here some people who are not so interested this is the mcneil who tweets definitely not african-american blood runs in the veins and sinews of the united states we should make this country more fair and equitable to people of color not cut and run so to speak we also got a video comment from someone who thinks similarly along those lines and she's also a former stream gas serine writes in this is video on this point have a listen as a descendant of american chattel slavery i don't necessarily feel the need to go back to africa a place that i've never been in order to reconnect with my roots because i feel like my right here in the united states where my ancestors literally their lives building this country as sleep people they start their legs sweat and tears into
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this country and i don't feel it's necessary to fight. so baird you you wrote a piece and twenty fifteen for the daily beast that pulled it up here african-americans can't go home and the title there is ruthless and this is under the opinion page but talk to us about that idea that serene mentioned in her video comment this is home this is where her roots are you know without a doubt as an african-american this this is our home like my my family is been here for generations upon generations and and i'm as american as you can get but the complexity of being an african-american is that we've never been allowed to have the complete agency to treat this fully as our home and like the true american sense and that will incline people to go in search of other places where they can feel they can fully exercise their agency and be their selves to the fullest and so that brings about a complexity where you kind of have as a culture to environments where you can't be fully home in either one but you do
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have an obligation domestically in the united states to to fight for equity for african-americans but at the same time the colonization across the globe has made it so that at black stories african stories don't get the representation that they need and collectively we have to work to enhance that too so it's it's a fight domestically and internationally to elevate black voices and strive for equality across the board so you can go home birthday but you do have a connection to both places that you have to you know work for the betterment of all black people let's i want to bring you into the conversation here on that point rick barry greatest about you can go home. you work with students who go to the continent specifically south africa and have different experiences can you talk to us about that. we work with students like american exchange students they come here for study and for programs we do also work with a lot of american international schools. and they are based here in south africa
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and what you often find is there's this desire for. the white students to you know serve this environment and help africa in a very romantic sense but on the flip side you've got african-americans who come here and i'm looking for an idyllic sense of home magic sense of a reconnection with their roots which there is a little bit shallow because the i don't know but africa and the homeland that you're looking at is messy complex and asked people who were born and raised just trying to figure out themselves and so i think i am that when the desire is very romantic and one that is lacking context i was just on the ground what is happening within the country if it becomes problematic and at times a little bit difficult for us as local south africans to engage with you realistically as a foreigner coming into the space to try and find something in this like spiritual mecca it's very complicated kalan why i think that's kind of like. first i think
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there's a misconception that i've seen thrown around that african-americans you know across the board like we don't have any insight you know to what is going on on the ground in africa and in african nations you know like i am professors at howard university that that you know which is my alma mater that i know for a fact are you know all the way from from d.c. deeply engaged and aware of african politics of course being on the ground an african country and there's nothing that can replace it and also being an african or being a south african there's nothing that can replace you know that direct insight but i think it's a little bit you know a little bit of a reach to sort of just kind of say that you know we kind of have this shallow understanding. you know shuttle approach i would say you know i don't really think that's the case and i think sometimes people just kind of underestimate the insight that african-americans that many of us actually do have i mean i get
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a lot of african-americans don't know you know i don't have any interest in what's going on in africa but at the same time there are others that do like myself you know and i think that can be done is to give us a chance you know what we are starting we're starting from you know from four hundred years four hundred plus years you know like you can't expect i don't think you should expect us to come you know and just know everything and just have a lay of the land that's where you know you can meet us halfway and we can all work together and get a better understanding and it won't be perfect and it will be kind of you know i don't know when i do it or what i do wish to add there's a quick caveat is i'm. we welcome people that wish to learn but what i'm saying is with the students which are particularly young become and with a sense of this place will fit in this kind of walks of life to the motherland looks like i mean. actually many many african-american scholars of his years showed us to have an acute illness of the african continent. that's what james baldwin and
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his perception of. africa was milan's and in many ways fully aware of how that four hundred year history creates a gap of knowledge so one hundred percent what i'm saying is. self interrogation which is happening from us locals i don't want to raise needs to be extended and a desire to the needs to also occur with people that are coming inside if it makes sense. or people will struggle i don't talk i hear you saying i hear you're saying when you mention south interrogation and i think one of the things that came up in our community is a feeling for people on the continent that some americans are not doing that self interrogation as accurately and thoroughly as they need to be take a look at these two tweets from monterey he mentions first of all this isn't new and that goes to the idea that the back to africa movements have been happening since one thousand nine hundred two contemporary times he says this is an experiment hundreds of years in the making i have friends here in nigeria who
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surnames are fernandez de silva. their great grandparents are return east slaves from brazil and they all have your about first names though and they're completely re assimilated he goes on to say i haven't come across any of them in lagos and frankly i wouldn't advise them to come here nigeria is where dreams come to die quickly disillusioned and gone they might find more to their taste because of its economic climate and low population so there is one naysayer there but i want to give that one to you mohammed out because i'd like you to give us an idea of what happens when you land it can't all be rosy what does that look like what do people expect. i think you know it's important for african-americans to manage expectations you know we have like. i you know this placement and we wanted to go away you know and land is going to magically go away they're going to be drummers and fingers at the airport well
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exist i'm not like that you know most people on the ground don't see any connection with african-americans like you go through harlem or brooklyn or somewhere a you know most people are like i'm not african you know they don't see a connection so it's really up to the individual to manage their expectations have a more realistic idea of what's happening in modern day african cities and then understand like what you need as a person so even for me i know people may not be as a long lost sister or cousin but it doesn't matter i know that i'm connected to their plan i know that i'm connected to people and back with important to me you know it doesn't really matter what they think just like in america you know i want to point they consider to reset the monuments so i know that i'm a whole human i guess like here i know i'm of african descent and i'm here more so
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for this feeling and the connection that i have to the place so it's not so much of what other people think about me so for me i have to manage those expectations so i have. a better time and a better experience i haven't had that class that most people have and then they have to build back up so i think that's something that's very important for people who are thinking about coming here and i could see you nodding there i see all of our guests nodding their berets what do you want to say so i guess the key thing from an american perspective as a country we have our amanda size idea for homeland so when we talk about as a nation of immigrants in this it. tends to all americans you know white americans asian americans the idea of you know if you're irish or korean or whatever there's a romanticized like connection to where you're from and as african-americans even though our immigration story is vastly different there is a yearning to have the romanticized connection to to africa and that is i think
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when you get to africa and you now have the reality just i guess the reality if you go to any country that remand the size notion needs to kind of fall away and you have to do the legwork you have to know a lot about the continent the place you're going and all the all that inanimate so that you can fully immerse yourself in and i think he made a good point though for the younger generation when the going over there it's very very prone to have the romanticized ideas of what africa is and the culture shock and then you know the africans actually have to now you know get the americans to come to realize this is what the country is like this is what's happening and i think the sooner we can have a more realistic view of our struggle domestically and internationally with regards to africa in the perspectives need to have the the more capacity will have to thrive in whatever way we decide to to go into africa whether we know which which countries they are in the dynamics i have been there can i jump in i mean if we're talking about student you know i don't think that the expectations should be high on coming to africa study abroad to study abroad or whatever it is that they're
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doing you know like i just think that's a bit unrealistic i mean i came here i moved to namibia twenty six years old and to be honest you know like it has i've been here for four or eight eight eight to nine years and it has taken me a long time and it's still not perfect just for me to you know understand my feelings and you know continually manage my own expectations so you know i really don't think that you know you're going to find you know this perfect african american like adaptation or entrance into the african continent particularly with student i hope that you don't hold their. i hold them. with them you know because it really seriously is a process for me i came as an adult you know and i'm still learning every day little things big things you know it's just it's really a process and it does take patience and it's not pretty all the time. you know so. and i told him i tell you greta you know you could have certain expectations for
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students or you know adult professionals or what not but the idea of building the connection to africa if we're building the strong connection we have to get past the remain at the size idea and you know really kind of and the earlier that the african-american community can do that regardless of you know whether you're a student or you're an adult i think the better if your goal is to to visit africa and have a really vibrant connection with the continent so like there is like an american in impediment as to how we perceive countries outside the united states and see it with you know a realistic perspective and not a man to size one and i think america needs us to have that romanticized view and i'm glad you are going to stop i want to do that i want i will go to you but i want to bring this up because this is race is a good point we're talking about this for a man to size view and we got some africans from people on the continent because of course africa is not a country and we did get pushback from people online who said remember don't just
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call us africans we're very diverse and who we are there's this quote this is from the article featuring. and you write you might not have electricity but you won't get killed by the police either talking about moving to ghana we got pushback because this is one person out of nigeria who says the chances of people killing you in one thousand is eight out of ten please don't deceive yourself check the hash tag in sars and reform police to verify real stories or produce police brutality and syria that's actually something we did a show about so it is a real issue but keeping that in mind others are saying there is a pretty. being african-american on the continent this is from sahara reporters and news site passport privilege and black guilt tales of an african american acts pat and this is something our community definitely relates to our will says i've been telling my african-american brothers and sisters that they are more privileged and protected as americans in africa i'm going back to my home if because i can be in
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a better position as a u.s. educated with e.o.p. and then trying to find acceptance here so that's a little push back on that idea let's i want to bring you in here what are your thoughts so is this me now so i was it is yeah so what i want to just add to that point is you need to understand something when african-americans come to south africa and into action other black south africans they're kind of exceptional eyes because of the social capital and like the soft power you know you have and i'm an african-american engaged in the black south african whose favorite t.v. show was scandal and sing jay z. lyrics off by heart and like who has so much affinity to so much american black american pop culture that we enjoy this privilege of cool that you know obviously not afforded to other foreign national africans and so what i've noticed is how with that privilege there's almost. a responsibility to use your if you want to
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come in like stay here and be part of the situation and part of the country you have to use that sort of privilege you have as an american with the resources to try and better the place because to be honest south africa unlike many other african countries we have trust issues when it comes to earnings coming into this space and so that's a point i would want to make that the privilege does exist but the privilege needs to be used to combat certain inequities within the local space that you exist in a way that you can regarding skills or resources. so how did i what i think we do when i want to bring the hammer down on that point of privilege because we got this via you tube someone watching live they said god made a law in two thousand and one allowing descendants of the diaspora to get citizenship and work and here is what that looks like it's the right of abode granted to people of african descent in that they asked for a so there are other saying it's not just studies that you have to have several documents and a little time frame for making sure that you can be a citizen there but it is
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a welcoming announcement mommy that when you see that do you recognize that there is a privilege to being welcome to this country that's not necessarily your own. i think there is a privilege you know being african-american i mean i do understand that i'm just coming in with you know dollars or you know an american education and you know i'm not going to you know act like that doesn't exist but one of the great things about it is finally i can use my an american net you know and get the benefit because i'm not getting that at home so finally you know i can you know they benefit me. and you know to my advantage i don't like you know i i like to pretty much go. as anonymous as i can and you know i don't talk no one even knows that i'm american and even if i do talk they just assume that i'm probably going manson was educated abroad and i love living. within that i'm not anonymous anonymously where you know
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. so you know i i know but i have it in my backpack if i need to use it i use a try not to because i want to live as normally as possible. doesn't not going to not that that exists and i think like the gentleman said in south africa it is you know it's our sponsibility i need to you and i try as much as i can you know to improve my environment to improve you know just and also just people are realistic view of what african-americans are too because i think that's the flip side people romanticize african-americans they want they can change the meaning of rappers and things like that on t.v. and they think that's what our life is you know and i'm like no it's not like that you know and so it's always. education that's happening on both right cayless. yeah and i mean on the flip side of that i really do think that you know maybe
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africans sometimes or south africans that i want to generalize are confident last week the south african on the panel you know don't forget that you guys also have a privilege you know i mean there is serious power in knowing your tried and having that growing up in the rich culture that you grew up in you know like like. a young woman before me was saying you know like it's not don't don't also don't overread romanticize black american privilege you know because it's not like one hundred percent rosy but i do hear what you're saying i'm in terms of when we're on the continent i mean for me personally i try to you know keep my privilege in check when i can or stand up against my privilege when i can whether it's someone you know saying like i just recently a guy said to me all i want i want some american sisters i don't want any million women and i was like you know like i checked you know like i'm not ok i mean may seem like a simple thing but just there are many different ways and you know in terms of african-americans coming here and becoming entrepreneurs or whatever and just
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keeping social responsibility in mind so there are definitely things that we should do so knowing your privilege checking it and making sure that you are aware of it unfortunately we are out of time i want to give a big thank you to all of our guests for this fascinating conversation and our community for making it to great i'll end with this tweet from bon jovi who says i have land in kenya to share with anyone willing to come to africa our ancestors would be happy. st see online.
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look the arrival of refugees is debated in european parliament's. but the journey itself is little understood. to syrians document the route that has claimed so many lives searching for sanctuary padawan people in power on al-jazeera. fresh perspectives new possibilities fearless journalism. debates and discussions global terror attacks told by a fifth i'm so talented from those attacks told by a cool to that's a good news story out his ear is award winning programs take you on a journey around the globe because we. only on al-jazeera. getting to the heart of the matter how can you be a refugee after
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a while it borders between five safe countries facing realities the brain starts from the very beginning of the ballet school providing context housing is not just about four walls and a roof hear their story on talk to al-jazeera i mean this was different whether someone was going for something that's very rich but that's not a weeny tree thing it's how you approach an individual and as it is a certain way of doing it you can't just inject a story and fly out. and i am on the top stories on his era u.s. president donald trump has made an unannounced visit to iraq his first visit to u.s. troops in the region donald trump and first lady manana trump landed at an air base west of baghdad late on wednesday where they thanked the troops for their service
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whilst there he defended his decision to withdraw u.s. soldiers from syria while the same time insisting that he had no similar plans to withdraw from iraq let's get more now from al-jazeera is imran khan in baghdad to tell us more about the visit itself and what else trump had to say. well the visit was unannounced as you say and it came very late on wednesday night he was only here for about a few hours in hours visiting our asset air base which is just west of baghdad now he was there he met with some of the troops he wanted around the canteen there shaking hands it was very much a photo opportunity now the president has come under a tremendous amount of criticism for being the thirst president in recent u.s. history to not does it u.s. troops before the christmas period so it's likely that he listens that some of that criticism and come to iraq as a result however iraq has is
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a country that only has five thousand two hundred u.s. troops stationed it take for example you have a going to start so about fourteen thousand u.s. troops seven thousand which are due to leave and take a look at syria where you have about two thousand u.s. troops where the pentagon has already signed off on those troops from leaving he defended his syria policy he's now back in the air and going to ramstein air base which will be it which is in germany sorry and he'll learn a few hours so a lot of people here are quite taken aback by the visit he didn't meet with any iraqi political officials and he didn't meet with the iraqi prime minister this was very much and in and out. imran khan thank you very much indeed sunday's no way to a presidential election in a democratic republic of congo has been postponed in some parts of the country sparking concern about an upsurge in opposition protests and the vote is delayed in
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beni and the tempo which are dealing with an unfair outbreak and you may claim more than one hundred people were killed in ethnic violence last week the opposition says it went except any further perspire minutes malcolm webb has more in contrast or. the opposition mandia who we spoke to a while ago said that they won't be calling their people to the street and when the last delay was announced last week all the opposition parties and the civil rights groups have been campaigning this election take place that there was just a delay of a week everyone to stay calm and not in the country but just a few hours ago in town and when the city of the tempo in the which is one of the areas where people now be allowed to vote on sunday rudy theme people take to the streets burning tires at least of this some of those protesters and that may be a sign of things ahead if people continue to feel this kind of frustration about not being allowed to vote in those places and a growing skepticism about the credibility of the poll everywhere particularly
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among opposition supporters he says their strongholds that are now being excluded from the whole protest against the government of president omar bashir have ended their second week in sudan hundreds of people are once again rallying in the capital khartoum but right police have been heavily deployed to stop them from marching to the presidential palace there were similar scenes on tuesday when right police dispersed thousands of protesters with tear gas and live ammunition so far at least twelve people have died in the unrest though some groups suggest the real figure may be as high as thirty seven russia has accused israeli jets are endangering civilian flights while launching what it called a provocative raid near syria's capital russia's defense ministry says six israeli f. sixteen jets knowledge their strikes at the moment when two civilian airliners were preparing to land in damascus and beirut japan has announced it's restarting commercial whaling in july and a move has drawn criticism from conservation groups japan has hunted whales for
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decades what it calls scientific research there's a top stories do stay with us next up it's witness time to love see after that i think. elaine.
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it has ariel that being. said ok i want what i want to know but as i will i don't even know why but i do know where for somebody who i am i will allow in that if i don't matter there's little that jazz i am given in me but when i have it a child with one of those who knows and doesn't want others are not gonna watch. the way they're not banged up the onus is on us i. think will they know me or there was a breakdown at all no topic that the. whole. you . know that's an old summer that was good monday to her. young son brought
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home some clothes ago that no i don't. think want to see go. go totally event. and only look at. the b.p. i. feel. like we like. it when. there's nothing. but the nominee no never never never you're never going to not. oh i love it when the other week as the last game a whole round before. me nothing and i guess only like you supplement. the net i don't need. money well then it's physical had moved to
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a scam or i will confess. it next weekend but that governor huckabee and. i think in the words of the well we were. right there when. is there any. i mean. you look.
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i'm. ok. what did that mean anyway it was. it was a family it was big they look at it. see if you. look at it this is the real. thing that this is i was going to be able to say i
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was this and there's already. your you're almost i mean i'm going to be out but i could then you're much more i mean more as an adult i was a little. i guess with you know what i see the man being i saw in a way he was. it afraid. that my. if someone is that if. they're going to kill me. i may see them when i had my money. and went to see where they were going to come a big debut to work with in the mts we were goes nowhere but as you know. ben is. going to get
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a new one i mean i don't know you know i mean you know how many. yet though we. got to see demanding up out of but i mean it about a think i mean i think i want to know him but i'm not going to to quote him but i'm not. i thought it was right that. the other hand this. is a reasonable beginning of the windows isn't it pianists someone you know. and i'm annoying but i could do this if i said. i mean you know i'll be able to. say could conceivably. going to homeowners i mean the guy you can only you're. going to have those are going on the zone as an elite those so when i said oh man was it a saying you know song and yet they are no good i mean look at the thing in the essay in the class ok cody. are you one not.
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going to hold your thought over. that i'm promoting. i don't. know what hour. you're c.p.s. on which i came down i mean this invest your neck in life when you think you know you. made a lasting winner your to look for nick i love what he does a little. better of us now. because i need some policing. when i see no one no less think that that's not me i see no no. it isn't i was you know when or last. you said i was an essene cinema go down because of ok set that is the melody. on top of a couple you don't. like the scene or your mrs sees your lawsuit during
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a game about it but if you don't there's a bit of a.

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