tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera January 30, 2019 6:00am-6:34am +03
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tecno on al-jazeera. al-jazeera. and. we will now take this mandate forward to the british prime minister gets the backing of parliament to go back to brussels and renegotiate had deal to leave the e.u. . this is from doha also coming up on the program venezuela's supremum court the self-proclaimed president from leaving the country.
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again sudan's president refuses to die away despite an order to release hundreds of protesters also in sports. celebrations as counselor into the final of the asian cup for the first time by trashing the u.a.e. in a grudge match. so the british parliament has given the go ahead for treason made to return to brussels and try to secure a better deal but one of the u.k. prime ministers most important to go shaping tools was from her hands he's also voted to block a new deal breaks it not even bother explains what it means for the u.k. and how the e.u. has reacted. oh. outside the u.k. parliament the debate was fierce that is jesus bricks it is still as divisive as
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ever and as the prime minister opened the debate on plan b. she referenced the enormous defeat the commons gave her withdrawal agreement two weeks ago the vote was decisive and i listened so the world knows what this house does not want today we need to send an emphatic message about what we do want to hear the opposition labor party back to an amendment ensuring parliament would get time to vote on ways to prevent a no deal breaks it that plan was defeated but another simply rejecting no deal passed so the. key is have it so did a government backed amendment calling for the so-called irish backstop to be replaced with unspecified alternative arrangements but the european union has consistently said the backstop must be in the deal as an insurance policy to prevent border checks returning between island as an e.u. member and northern ireland up to brics it on tuesday the french president at
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a summit in cyprus was unequivocal coming across a european as the european council has clearly indicated this withdrawal agreement negotiated between the european union and the u.k. is the best deal possible and it is not to renegotiate. the e.u. second most senior brics it negotiator has said events here in westminster feel like groundhog day or an endless loop but amid dire warnings from businesses and the health sector about the impact of a no deal scenario time is certainly not standing still. it was meant to be about parliament giving us an idea of what kind of a deal it would be prepared to back but now we know they'll be weeks more deliberations here and it's looking more and more likely that the u.k. will have to ask the you for an extension to article fifty. more time. al-jazeera. friend as well as supreme court has barred the country's self declared
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interim president from leaving the country the court has also frozen assets this follows a move by the united states to give him control of venezuelan government assets in the u.s. that's. it took the venezuelan government less than twenty four hours to attempt to strike back against the latest round of you're saying since the country's attorney general announced that the leader of the opposition and self-proclaimed interim president will be banned from leaving the country and his bank accounts will be frozen. we have opened a preliminary investigation we have come to the supreme court to request cautionary measures cautionary measures as we carry out the investigation against the citizen a travel ban to avoid his departure from the country and to the. property and real estate three the freezing of accounts. shrugged off the announcement as more of the same. i'm not downplaying the threat of being imprisoned i don't want you to
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see it that way but frankly i see nothing new under the sun unfortunately this is a regime that offers no answers to the venezuelan people the only response is persecution and repression. the freezing of those accounts appears to be an effort to complicate a u.s. plan to direct oil revenues to the opposition as they try to win support from military officials still loyal to president nicolas maduro more than twenty countries have now recognized way door as being this well as legitimate leader yet my daughter still has some international support mainly from china and russia who once again said that the u.s. sanctions are illegal and. what the united states and their closest allies are doing with regards to finish is of course very worrying crudely violating all norms of international law essentially taking a direct course at the legal authority in this latin american nations. over more
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than a week demonstrators have been taking to the streets protesting the dire economic situation in demanding president steps down. be being met with force and the threat of imprisonment so in total i think we have some just over forty people believed to have been killed in different manners so far this includes at least twenty six people reported to have died after allegedly being shot by security forces or members of pro-government armed groups this by the violence the opposition is calling for another massive demonstration wednesday and another one on saturday as been in power struggle continues with no end in sight both inside and outside of the country i listen to em. so don't security chief has ordered the release of people detained during weeks of protests that it's failed to calm down the i guess its president very well but. approaches to
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continuing in several cities demanding an end to pressures thirty year rule demonstrations started to fuel subsidies in december dozens of died in clashes with the police for. more now from the capital khartoum. this announcement it came as a news line on social media sent by the ministry of information and it followed a visit to one of the prisons in khartoum today by the head of intelligence after that he was quoted as saying that all those detained during the current wave of protests that has been going on for six weeks now will be released however we don't know exactly how many are detained by the government the government. two weeks ago gave a figure of eight hundred plus but social media sources protesters sources and geos talk about between one thousand and two thousand detained also some fears have been expressed by protesters that this could actually be a propaganda by the government to try to break the momentum of the protests or
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create divisions among the testers and also the expressed fear that. probably some of those detained as political activists or as journalists or just protesters might be prosecuted on accusation by the up there actually criminals because they have destroyed public property or committed other crimes during those protests so i mean it's not like an immediate breakthrough according to protesters and the government still has to come out with more details. the u.n. special envoy for yemen is trying to preserve the ceasefire deal in the key port city of her data martin griffiths met with the saudi led coalition delegations in the city and urged both sides to withdraw a new outbreak of fighting between the two sides is threatening to unravel the deal struck in sweden last month i somehow as this report the ceasefire intraday there appears to be on the verge of falling apart fighting has intensified on the
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outskirts of yemen's main port city further north government troops backed by the saudi and emirate he led military coalition are on the move took up certain areas near the who think controlled capital sana'a u.n. envoy martin griffiths met who think him and to plead with them to maintain the whole day the cease fire which began six weeks ago the hands of the rebels political council told the u.n. envoy that saudi arabia is undermining the truce no economic our our focus is to consolidate the front lines our success will depend on what we will achieve militarily. this is the retired dutch general who was given the job of ensuring the delicate ceasefire doesn't fall apart patrick comer met leaders of the yemeni government in exile in the city of aden. and he's due in her day it may
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be his last official mission his being replaced by a danish general who led a peacekeeping mission in mali. the day the cease fire agreed during talks in sweden in december calls for her theory to withdraw from the city and port it's the main gateway for much needed aid and food into the country the fighting around it has burned millions are threatened with famine. the truth is say they will pull out but won't hand over the area to the enemies and they say saudia marital led forces must stop attacking her data who i prefer able cabinet that we need to fight against aggression and ten fighters to the battlefields that should be our answer to those who want to escalate yemen's government and president of the hardy reject the who are saying they must withdraw immediately and
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a lot of the yemeni army to take over. if the day the ceasefire collapses completely millions of suffering yemenis will be waiting even longer for the four year old war and i smile but i'll just. head of u.s. intelligence says north career is unlikely to give up all its nuclear weapons as part of a new report presented to the senate on global threats the assessment is that odds with president donald trump is planning a second summit with north korean leader kim jong il and mike hanna reports now from washington. president trump or traces negotiations with north korea's leader as one of the major successes of his presidency he claims to have made the world a safer place and recently announced that a second summit will be held next month jim john byrne is looking very forward to it so much. made a lot of progress that has not been reported by the media but we have made a lot of progress not so say intelligence chiefs their conclusion that north korea
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remains a major threat we currently assess that north korea will seek to retain its w m d capabilities in is unlikely to completely give up its nuclear weapons and production capabilities because its leaders ultimately view the nuclear weapons as critical to regime survival and the intelligence report says the president's decision to tear up a nuclear deal with iran is also based on false premises the cia director saying iran was in compliance with the deal but that may not change so at the moment technically they're in compliance but we do see them debating amongst themselves as they failed to realize the economic benefits they hoped for from the deal president trumps claim to have defeated eisele was used as justification to withdraw u.s. troops from syria but this is also contested in the report the intelligence chiefs
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insisting that eisel is intent on researching and will continue to pursue attacks against regional and western at bursaries. and unlike the president the intelligence community is adamant that russia interfered in the twenty sixteen u.s. elections and importantly says it's. a strong expectation that it will do so again in twenty twenty. potentially most galling to the president there is no mention whatsoever of any crisis on the u.s. southern border with mexico thank you ultimately the intelligence report represents a stunning repudiation of president trump's repeated claims concerning threats to the united states mike hanna al-jazeera washington. still ahead air around is there an abrupt end to an international observer mission in the israeli city of hebron. and why kenyans displaced by the hunt for house about fight is it too afraid to return home.
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we've got all recalled breaking cold weather across central parts of kind of that that into the northern plains of the u.s. sat across the upper midwest all tucked him behind this cold front and that it's a leak out of the i suppose pretty tautly packed so a real wind chill but take a look at the wrong numbers on that run minus twenty four the top temperature in chicago on wednesday should be about phrases around twenty five degrees below the average we go on into thursday warms up to around minus eighty eight if you can call that warming up co-direct coming into the oh by this day's atop temps of that of around minus celsius by this stage it should be lousy dry central as kids say some wintry flowery some place and folks at the possibility and notice some welcome rainfall down towards the southwest california could see some other heavy rain from
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time to time help me out seriously will cause a few mudslides but it will bring some useful rain in with say some very heavy rain some bloody still mst tornadoes calls moving on this weather system across northern parts of cuba that's sinking down towards the south it will drift a little further east which as we go through day twenty five celsius the temperatures there for have that are still getting up into the high twenty's in kingston glorious sunshine here and it's set that east. short films of hope. and inspiration. a series of short stories that highlight the human triumph against the odds.
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al-jazeera selects. and again you watch al-jazeera a reminder of our top stories this hour the british parliament has authorized prime minister trees made to go back to brussels to try and change or break that deal but m.p.'s also voted to block a new deal breaks it something may was unwilling to rule out. venezuela's supremes court has by self declared interim president joining from leaving the country has frozen his assets and follows a request from the attorney general of washington gave guided control of venezuelan state assets in the united states. the u.n.
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special envoy for yemen is in today trying to preserve a fragile cease fire deal that marching gryphus met with the inside he led coalition delegations and urged both sides to withdraw from the strategic city. at least two people have been killed and four others injured in an attack on a mosque in the southern philippines mindanao region the area is home to a substantial muslim population in the majority catholic country the incident happened going to a city it comes just days after some muslims in mindanao got more control over their affairs in a landmark deal with the government. well that follows a bombing at a cathedral on the southern philippine island of holo president roderigo detergent has ordered an all out war against those responsible but despite the violence muslim and christian leaders say they remain united from jamil and the. roadside bombings abductions and people displaced from their homes it's all part of
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daily life in hello it is one of the poorest provinces in the philippines and has long been held back by fighting between government forces and the various armed groups bravery is says growing up in this whole town always meant living in fear but as a christian you know where the majority of the population is muslim he always kept his feet until now his spare is from me and leo were killed when two bombs exploded at the cathedral where they had gone to pray. a place of worship now was seen and destruction we strongly believe that. whatever religion you're living in a lot of people living in knows what kind of bond and friendship we have between christians muslims. people we don't discriminate regardless their religion
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this claim of responsibility the government says the group was behind the bombings. that's really said to me they keep inserting that met at the. number since we have never been to by the christians and muslims it is shocking what they saw. we've ever seen. the philippine military says the attacks are designed to cause deep splits between the different religions in one thousand nine hundred seventy eight. right here in front of the. buy back then communities promised never to let this happen again well what happened last sunday is proof that communities failed. and that the vicious cycle of violence continues here after the cleanup and the few duels from bombings like this
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there is an expectation that life can slowly return to normal but. the most militarized place in the philippines it's a case of a short period of relative calm. a respite from the violence. until the next conflicts. until the next attack. dog and. the philippines. the palestinian prime minister romeo and his unity government have resigned. to a growing. social security checks. west bank based the fatah group's reconciliation efforts with the mass rivals based in gaza. international observers in the city of hebron in the occupied west bank are going home israel's prime minister refused to extend the mandates of the monitoring mission calling it an international force acting against israel as harry force reports yahoo's critics say he's just trying
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to win votes. to enter the israeli military controlled zone of hebron is to enter into a parallel world of division and displacement this is you had a street home to palestinian activist. he says he was expecting the end of the international observer mission here but it's no less worrying for being predictable they were doing and i mean the communication here which can be used by the palestinians to make israel accountable in the international criminal court the temporary international presence in hebron tiff has been in place here since one thousand nine hundred seven its term renewed every six months on a palestinian market street protected by canopies from settlers buildings above traders say the tip reports have done nothing to prevent the study worsening of the situation. kicking out is the first step towards even more space for hebron because netanyahu is planning to expand the settlements here. but if mission was set up in the aftermath of the one nine hundred ninety four massacre of twenty nine muslim
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worshippers it had runs ibrahimi mosque by an american israeli settler the city was formally divided in one thousand nine hundred eighty percent under palestinian authority control twenty percent including the old city and the site of the mosque and jewish temple under the control of the israeli military those years have also seen an expansion of the presence of jewish settlers here around eight hundred registered as living in the israeli controlled area alongside forty thousand palestinians. they represent some of the most ideologically radical settlers in the occupied west bank drawn here by the city's religious significance as well as the idea of a return to a place deserted by jews after sixty seven were killed in a massacre in one thousand twenty nine. if you are willing to talk on camera until we meet mordecai professors himself only too happy to see the back of the tiff observers their time is up and time for them to get a real job and once the time is up what do you foresee happening i don't i don't see any real change on the ground except for that the i.d.f.
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will be able to do their job a bit better in stopping terror attacks in various forms one question is why the israeli governors waited until now twenty years on to end it if presence here well there are two places to look one is into the most recent to freeport in december which according to an israeli media leak was an extremely critical summation of twenty years worth of israeli violations of palestinian rights the other place to look is in israeli domestic politics israel's prime minister indicated in november that he was considering ending the presence since then he's called elections for the ninth of april there's plenty of political motivation for him to call the votes on the israeli right above the deserted shahada street behind a cage protecting her from rock throwing attacks only iran has only curses for netanyahu and fears for increased violence wants to fix gone hadrons bitter division has set fire to outlast the international mission whose job it has been to monitor it harry force at al-jazeera hebron. five people have been arrested in connection with friday's dam collapse in southeast personal at least eighty four
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people are confirmed dead after a torrent of iron ore waste swept away villages there are three hundred people still missing three of those detained for the mining companies and is the other two are engineers who worked on the downs safety the u.s. has begun implementing a controversial policy to return asylum seekers to mexico a man from honduras was the first to be sent back on choose day under president donald trump so-called remain in mexico policy to require as some asylum seekers to return to mexico instead of waiting in the united states while their cases play out in court. security has been stepped up across kenya since al-shabaab gunmen attacked in nairobi hotel complex this month killing twenty one people the crackdown is disrupting life for people living near one of the on groups hideouts close to the border with somalia as mohammed now reports. setting off
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or not tying johnny trouble in kenya coastal region say these passages is becoming more hectic by the day these buses heading to the city of mumbai. island and processed through bony forest a hideout for al shabab fighters the military and police checkpoints top the road and due to the frequent stops and such as what was a four hour journey takes a grueling and i was doesn't want to go when i when i got it was the criminals the security forces are looking for are in their hideouts and not in the buses wire passages being forced to get off the buses with their luggage seven to eight times in a trip people are suffering. straddling the indian ocean and kenya's border with somalia boni is effectively a military zone. kenya's defense forces what deployed four years ago to clear the gunman's forest hideout we
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will stop several times at military checkpoints. for years up to the military operation began gunmen continue to terrorize kenyans in and around boni forest thousands have been displaced from the villages most live in comes for the displaced like this one. for. children was killed in an attack on believe village a few months ago. work on work i seen. my children were slaughtered like chicken at night those who attacked us also burnt the houses in the village the security forces brought us here in the morning these people have no access to some of the most basic of services no running water no access to. the government's case the pottle want a forest where their villages has been cleared. and it's time for them to the time home very few here are willing to obey john kerry says says the attacks in his
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village remain vivid in his mind but no theater that is numbered you can be attacking an allele caused widespread fear anyone who witnessed the brutal killings will not think of returning there. these growing frustration about what some say is that ability of the military and police to stop the heavily armed gunman roaming the expansive forest but the security forces say the forest is vast and difficult to navigate they say to attack them time to completely clear it of al shabaab fighters how would i do well just burn a forest. against all odds cuts have reached the final of the asian cup for the first time they beat hosts united arab emirates four nil in the ten semifinal u.a.e. and three other countries have blockaded gaza since june two thousand and seventeen a council will now face a four times champions of japan on friday so mark this report. it was dubbed the
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blockade dobbin qatar taking on asian cup hosts the u.a.e. which one of the four arab nations imposing a blockade on them since two thousand and seventeen but despite the political tension there was plenty of goodwill on show before kickoff to the fact that he. wants the action started though it didn't take long for things to heat up. that will do it a little so we were told to qatar despite playing in the stadium with little support it would be the ones to go ahead. while in kuki gave them the lead just twenty two minutes in but it got better for the qataris before the break. to their standout player of the tournament early making it to nil with his eighth goal of the campaign series seven the home crowd however didn't take what they were seeing very well and bottles and shoes were among the things targeting the tare team from the stands had a spin to do so after the break the referee's patience is really tested as on field
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tensions continue to grow kurdish. pm iraqis tried their best to get back into the game but had little success. eighteen minutes they were finally put out of their misery hasa now deuce making it the renal that. was. the scoreline going out of the tournament and the disappointment of their founds all seem to be getting too much for the u.a.e. players if my lad meant taking out his frustration with an elbow in injury time it was scored by v.a.r. . and meant he had to be sent off to qatar we're not finished though. ha made a smile making it for nearly to see arguably the biggest win in the history of qatari football this year. they now move on to friday final against japan when folk will see them stage the first world cup in the middle east in twenty twenty two as asian champions so helmet al-jazeera. well those are i was
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watching that much from a fan's own. well the feeling here is of jubilation and proud moments for the locals and all the ex-pats that have been watching this game it was a very exciting game for them to watch they said that they felt very proud of the outcome of today's game was actually more important for the fans here and then the final coming up on friday qatar went on to beat the u.a.e. for nothing it was one of the most important games they will ever play now many people i spoke to here said that it's just so much. about all of this for them given that. the region that qatar finds itself in many fans here said they can't wait to see how their team does on friday but regardless of that outcome it is a very proud day for qatari fans. so this is a zero these are the top stories the british parliament has authorized prime
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minister treason made to go back to brussels to try to secure a better deal but m.p.'s also voted to block a new deal something may was unwilling to rule out fred as well as supremes court has barred self declared interim president drunk from leaving the country and has frozen his assets the u.s. imposed sanctions on the state oil giant to drive president has been dearth. maybe . the coercive and economic block he measures announced by foreign countries harm not only the economy of the nation but also harm the laws of pain as well as of foreigners living in his pen as well a nation because of that there's a citizen that is particularly lead and organize all this action that is causing venezuela's detriment it's citizen one quite like the u.n. special envoy for yemenis in her day there trying to preserve a fragile cease fire deal mohsen griffis bret's with ruthie inside he led coalition delegations and urged both sides to withdraw from the strategic port city the head
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of u.s. intelligence says north korea is unlikely to give up all its nuclear weapons dan coats told the u.s. senate the regime sees the arsenal as crucial to its survival this has been his adults with president donald trump who's planning a second summit with north korean leader kim jong un sudan's security chief has ordered the release of people detained during weeks of anti-government demonstrations but that's failed to dampen protests calling for an end to the thirty year rule of president taylor al bashir dozens of died in clashes with the police so far five people have been arrested in connection with friday's dam collapse at a mine in southeast brazil eighty four people are confirmed dead nearly three hundred still missing three of those detained work for the mining company all right up to date with headlines here and answer coming up next it's. from sunrise
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