tv Engineering Al Jazeera January 16, 2019 12:32pm-1:01pm +03
12:32 pm
syria and of course snow is pretty obvious of a turkey and those in syria and that's going to fall persistently for the following thirty six hours and then the mass moves east was in the southern caucasus still dying down through northern syria and the eastern side of iraq the high ground of western iran and the rain by comes just as you say is shiraz and beyond possibly leaving sparking a shower the two across the gulf in qatar or possibly behind but the picture on wednesday looks fine as a southerly breeze says as you will feel quite warm in riyadh and doha it shouldn't really be high twenty's this time the end but there you go that can change and there's the change twenty two more like normal for riyadh and twenty seven in the crowd with a hint of maybe a shower or two as i suggested in qatar but of course the more usual rain is to move of madagascar drifting a bit sasso wednesday so if you're lucky the eastern side of south africa including jo'burg.
12:33 pm
alpha this is the opportunity to understand a very vivid way way down before it happens and you don't even. mr speaker the house has spoken and the government will listen to these trees may faces a no confidence vote after her break that deal suffers huge defeat. this is alex there are live from doha also coming up. more gunfire and explosions at a hotel complex in the canyon capital at least fifteen people. are soon to walk free on the international criminal court acquits the former ivory coast
12:34 pm
president of war crimes. the french president begins a round of nationwide debates aimed at calming the best movement. the u.k. prime minister's government is facing a vote of no confidence off to an overwhelming defeat of her breaks it deal pauline that will debate the motion later on wednesday and it could trigger a general election as bill bratton explains from london to resume must now come up with a new price by the next week. the eyes to the right two hundred into. the nose to the left four hundred thirty two. two hundred thirty vote margin of defeat was an emphatic rejection of teresa mayes bret's its strategy but still the british prime minister is refusing to resign in stead of throwing down a challenge to the crowd a chamber every day that passes without this issue being resolved means more
12:35 pm
uncertainty more bitterness and more rancor the government of hurt has heard what the house has said tonight but i ask members on all sides of the house to listen to the british people who want this issue settled. and to work with the government to do just that the opposition labor party reacted furiously and after weeks of hesitation on the timing the labor leader finally launched his bid to oust her she cannot seriously believe that after two years of failure she is capable of to go shaping a good deal for the people of this country the most important issue facing us is that the government has lost the confidence of this house and this country i therefore mr speaker i inform you i have now tabled a beauchesne of no confidence in this. that motion will be debated later on wednesday that the indications are that she will win that vote. the rival camps of
12:36 pm
pro and anti brick city demonstrators outside westminster are still no clearer about whether it is going to happen and if so in what form is march the twenty ninth still achievable as a proxy deadline is another referendum the only solution or should britain just leave the e.u. and fall back on to w t o rules all of those options have their supporters here rex it is raising a question of the whole principle of polyandry to not proceed with your government against the parliament and parliament against the people one last initially a primary in how the question has now given rise to a whole kaleidoscope of catholics objects to outcomes europe's reaction was swift junko spoke of his regret at the u.k. vote the risk of a disorderly withdrawal of the united kingdom has increased with this evening's vote he said i urge the united kingdom to clarify its intentions as soon as
12:37 pm
possible time is almost up been very very clear it is not going to reopen negotiations and even if it did it will not get rid of the back story which is the main thing that this place doesn't like so she's out of options which is going to keep on pretending that she does have options because that's the only way that you can survive for one more day one week one moment. had warned m.p.'s they faced a choice between her deal no deal or no bracks it the options have just narrowed by one paul brennan al-jazeera westminster let's go live now to london we have barbara starr on the prime minister's residence and downing street the first service jenna hall it joins us from west palm and sits and a huge historic defeat has brought about is no confidence nation in the government took us through another busy day there on holman's. absolutely will the heat laura hasn't gone out of this week he yet because at seven pm on wednesday evening there will be that vote of confidence in the government
12:38 pm
tabled by jeremy corbyn the labor party leader invited indeed by two reason may the prime minister to do so in the immediate aftermath of that devastating defeat of her deal this vote will take place after several hours of debate on the motion a motion that will say that this house has lost faith in her majesty's government it's the first time this mechanism has been used to try and oust the sitting government in terms of the two thousand and eleven fixed terms parliaments have fixed term parliaments act which was introduced to try and keep governments in place for a full five year term removing the government the prime minister's probative to call a snap election whenever he or she wanted to i think it's likely that the reason may will survive this vote simply because her own m.p.'s along with the ten unionist m.p.'s from northern ireland do not want to see a general election take place now that could open the door to a labor and a jeremy corbyn government she seems therefore safe if she loses of course well
12:39 pm
then there's a fourteen day grace period in which the government can try to regain the confidence of the house or sort out some other kind of governing majority both of which seem extremely unlikely at that point parliament would be disbanded and a general election taking place perhaps a month or so after that i can just remind us why parliament is so and the main. m.p.'s know what they want and stand. well i mean this amount of opposition to reason may's deal in theory at least coalesces around the northern island backstop mechanism within the withdrawal agreement that seeks to guarantee no hard border on the island of ireland and which keeps the u.k. in customs union terms with the european union until some successor agreement trade agree. it is put in place that could take years many m.p.'s fear therefore u.k. subservience to e.u. economic structures potentially indefinitely that's what they say the reality is
12:40 pm
that there are different factions in parliament with different ideas of what they would like to see happen next this agreement and it would preclude all of those options so there are lots of different reasons to have opposed it there are some who want a customs union like the labor party others who want a customs union and a single market a so-called norway plus agreement still others in the cabinet no less would like to see a so-called managed no deal shipping out of europe with only world trade organization rules to govern relations after that and still others another group battling hard for a second referendum to take this whole bracks breaks it mess back to the people important to remember is there is no majority not just for the deal but for any of those options for last night's vote does little to break the existing deadlock that's they no clear path for decades many thanks for joining us there and now and westminster as they are now to bob outside downing street and i once again fighting there for political survival what's her next road. or it's
12:41 pm
really interesting and if these were normal times then of course in a few hours from now mid-morning we would see the reason may come out of ten downing street and either announce that she was resigning or call for a new general election of course these are not normal times they haven't been in the u.k. since that bret's a vote in two thousand and sixteen so now to reason may has said that she will fight on and stay and deliver breaks it in whatever shape may be to the to the british people so she will obviously be facing the vote of no confidence in parliament as jonah was mentioning but her real challenge over the next few days if she does as is expected to survive that vote will be to come up with a new bricks of plan one that is acceptable both to the house of commons and crucially obviously also to the european union in the brussels as far as we know she has no plans or at least has hasn't announced any plans to travel travel to brussels just yet so it looks like she's doing it the other way around whereas
12:42 pm
before she got a deal from brussels and presented it to the house now it seems that she is going to try and build consensus here in london in parliament before she goes back to brussels now it's not going to be easy her detractors say that partly this is her fault that she didn't have support in parliament because she hasn't sort consensus since the start of this process more than two years ago other people say that it is simply an impossible task that she is faced with she said something i think quite interesting at the end of the vote yesterday in parliament she said she wasn't going to run down the clock on breaks it we are of course seventy two days away from when on march twenty ninth the u.k. is meant to leave the you with no deal of no deal has been has been put forward and i think she is there trying to reassure people that the no deal breaks it is absolutely the last resort she's always said that that would be disastrous for the country so we're now waiting for her to pass to survived
12:43 pm
a vote of confidence in parliament. and then monday will be the day when she has said that she will probably try to present her new deal whatever shape that may take to parliament and see if that made it just us ok barbara many thanks well meanwhile leaders are insisting that the existing deal is the best they can offer. can only be extended if all e.u. member states unanimously agree on. everything after three. to ten years to expect. the united kingdom to turn into richard do you trust stories or maybe she did. what we don't want is that this mass in british politics is now transfer that and importance in european politics so let's try to find a solution. before european elections and the thing what is important for us is in
12:44 pm
any way european parliament if necessary in a direct contact with the house of commons we shall secure safeguard the rights of the citizens because this is cannot be defeated and this party political game. i sent some of the news down police in kenya say there's an active security operation going on at a hotel complex attacked by al shabaab gunman at least fifteen people were killed when attackers targeted three cars and decimated a bomb in the lot be more gunfire and explosions have been heard at least sixteen hours after the old deal began heavy security presence remains reports that some of the attackers are still inside as to who can yes it is expected to address the nation shortly and we'll cross over to that when it happens in the meantime let's take a closer look at where the attack happened the dusit d two hotel is part of the luxury riverside drive complex and kenya's capital nairobi many embassies and offices are
12:45 pm
based in the area in the western system that's about to comes another big attack took place in two thousand and thirteen and want to one witness explain his ordeal . employees are running all over the place he was screaming. and in the process. running bug point i realized the best thing to do is to find a severance place to hire me. joy is at the scene in nairobi and joy still herring sporadic gunfire and explosions from the hotel complex. yes the still a lot of gunfire and explosions just like thirty minutes ago there was a havey. sound exchange of gunfire and you could tell that even just minutes ago one of the security officers was rescued and we've seen his
12:46 pm
injuries on legs gunshot wounds on both his legs just being whisked away to probably a hospital so there's still activity going on from about three am to about six thirty this morning seventy five people have been rescued family members waiting out here in tears for those who were rescued tears having seen their loved ones come out. hurt having gone through such a hard experience and it's also good to note that the cordoned off area has been increased because the media has been moved. further back so we are about two hundred meters away from where the action is it's also. evident at the there is a lot of security have been deployed more security more police officers we've seen . a big number of. have been stationed here so the situation
12:47 pm
is. ok joint many thanks for the update there from the scene of that attack in nairobi. now still ahead here on al-jazeera afghanistan's silent killer how appellation is causing more deaths than the ongoing war. and gun crime controversy why brazil's me president decided to relax firearm laws. that are the worst of the rapidly falling stars probably gone from the european main now there is still more potential as you can see the white cloud gets trucked on the northern opes but it's more a case of clearing the avalanche danger than waiting for more snow to fall into the
12:48 pm
concentration more recently has been in turkey and daytime on wednesday will still be in eastern turkey is for to get through northern syria and to georgia as well there's still some snow behind as you can see because the temperatures here we have got snow potential below four degrees when you get to seventy this is more of a melting situation to be honest and much of northern and western europe is mild than you might expect considering it's virtually mid winter never to even wednesday to thursday the next frontal system that band of green and white has reached the alps i'm behind it's a little bit less mild but not that much to be honest it is going to be wet snow falling on the alps again by which time much of the sky has cleared in southeastern europe and turkey it's a sunny day once more snows for the dolls which means the mediterranean actually it's quite enjoyable the breeze is turned to.
40 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on