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tv   Cup of Tea  Al Jazeera  January 27, 2019 3:56pm-4:00pm +03

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hind mike hanna al-jazeera united nations hope is turning to anguish in brazil over the increasing likelihood that hundreds of people missing after a dam collapse want to be found alive so far thirty four bodies have been pulled from the muddy disaster zone after the dam next to a mine caved in on friday daniel schorr i'm now reports from the town of ramadi. the heavy rain only makes moretti fraught rescue operation much worse many have been saved being cared for at this center relieved distraught concerned about their missing loved ones. the feelings that you're going to die that is the end of everything and you don't know which way to run. a president job also not all visited the disaster area but didn't stay long his ministers are overseeing the rescue and relief efforts to see that soon all the mud is being monitored by local and national institutions at this moment the heavy part is moving more slowly as we have several monitoring points along the river and we are tracking its movement. an
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investigation is underway into how the dam burst releasing millions of liters of ways from the iron ore mine the owners vale expressed their sorrow they've already been fined sixty six million dollars but they were also part owners of a mine were a little over three years ago a similar downburst one thousand people were killed damage to the environment was immense we still don't know the scale of this tragedy on either the human or the environmental level what is know is that lessons were not learned from the last downburst in the them but two thousand and fifteen nobody was prosecuted nobody took responsibility many already asking whether they'll be ignored again there it is there it's disheartening it's sad what carelessness where are the authorities spare the petitions how long are people going to die for things like this how long we'll be crying for our loved ones who was sent to the morgue in search of a missing husband angelo he wasn't there but he doesn't know where he is she may
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never know and will join others wondering how another down they were told was safe has caused such death and destruction a. brahman guignol was ill russia is marking seventy five years since the end of a siege of leningrad that claimed more than eight hundred thousand lives during the second world war these are live pictures from the ceremony the centerpiece of the commemorations will be a military parade in a city now known as st petersburg featuring more than two thousand five hundred personnel as well as tanks and weapons some people including survivors have denounced operators poorly timed military propaganda the kremlin denies this saying the occasion is important for all russian. the u.n. human rights investigator looking into the matter of journalists wants access to the crime scene in the saudi consulate in istanbul agnes kavanagh has also been as also asks rather to visit the kingdom saudi authorities have not replied to her
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requests she says the inquiry is a crucial step towards for more accountability for the murder column are always in un special rubber torn executions arrives in turkey on monday more protests have been called again sudan's president omar bashir hundreds of people have been arrested during a government crackdown on demonstrators and their families are demanding to know where they are he morgan reports from the capital khartoum. has been starts his day in the capital with foreign calls and internet searches he's hoping to hear some news about his brother was the man who went missing on the twentieth of january after protests in sudan's second largest city into the man. i mean we don't know where he is we checked hospitals but he wasn't among those injured those who were with him during the protests said that he was arrested by armed masked men and trying to pick up we haven't seen or heard from him since nearly.
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six weeks of anti-government protests started on the nineteenth of december over rising food costs the crisis will change soon grew into calls for president i will push you to end his thirty year rule which is refusing to hand over power security forces have been criticized for firing bullets and tear gas to disperse protesters . the government says twenty nine have been killed since protests began rights groups see at least fifty have died widespread arrests have also been reported with activists and opposition figures targeted sometimes in their homes. this growing concerns for their safety the government's long been criticized for torturing dissidents and activists sometimes resulting into death the number.

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