tv Salero Al Jazeera February 1, 2019 4:00am-5:01am +03
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commission has given but a short while ago the interior minister announced that their intelligence services had broken up what he calls a sinister terrorist plot involving former members of the armed forces including one colonel who is believed to have been involved in the for the sas the nation attempt against president mughal back in august he said that they had been in colombia they had crossed over here and that they had been arrested near to where we are actually not far away from where we are right now and that they had confessed to having been assigned to assassinate quote select politicians and members of the military in order to increase the people in the country we have no of course independent confirmation as to what has really gone what is really transpired but this is the latest news from the government to complain that they are saying that this is proof that the cia and members of the opposition are trying to topple the government yes and indeed well the opposition to why don't as far back as have been calling for some sort of transitional government that would then
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lead to fresh elections quite who was speaking earlier on did we learn anything more about his plans for the country. he's speaking as though he were already almost the president or about to be he sounds rather like a president elected just waiting to finally take the presidential office take over the presidential office so he's speaking about a cabinet he have they have an economic plan and he says it's going to start by the priority is going to be bringing humanitarian aid food and water into venezuela to help the people i spoke to one of his deputies who is in charge of the economic commission and that helped present that plan and he said that they are going to start to bring this economic aid humanitarian aid to the border and that it will be up to the armed forces to decide if they are going to continue to boycott this aid coming into the country if they're going to continue to side with president a little or whether they will finally decide to side with the venezuelan people so
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that's going to be a very slow and a political event if and when it happens he says in the next few days or weeks thank you very much from that with the latest from the venezuelan capital caracas our latin america editor lucy and human. it out as they are live from london most of that for you on the program normal life grinds to a halt in the u.s. midwest is the big freeze goes on the temperatures falling as low as minus forty and brazil's indigenous communities protest against president also norris policies which they say could spawn genocide. get a welcome back here in the national weather forecast here across europe we are seeing plenty of messy weather a lot of unorganized systems but that's about to change because we're going to start to see one system really does begin to develop here across the western part
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of europe as we go into friday notice as area of circulation that is coming in across parts of france as well as into spain very windy conditions very wet conditions for many people and you are from spain over here towards france into the alps down here towards italy as well we're going to be seeing plenty rain as we end the week up towards the north though really not looking as bad we can be seeing mostly cloudy conditions across most of central europe but then we're going to start to see some snow coming into play as we go into the beginning of the weekend up here paul cross parts of scandinavia as well but down here towards the south it is still going to be quite wet rome it's going to be a rainy day for you with the terms of their of about fourteen degrees as we make our way down here across parts of northern africa that same weather system causing problems across morocco into algeria as well notice the rain across are but that's really going to continue as we go towards the next couple days even algiers is going to be seeing a rainy day at about fourteen degrees there tunas we're going to see some rain as well as some clouds windy conditions view at seventeen and tripoli
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a windy day for you with a temperature of twenty six. whether online. for them to do this or if you join us on sat all of us have been colonized in some form or some fashion this is a dialogue we are talking about illegal friend to me you have seen what it can do to somebody people using multiple drugs including and some people are secular out everyone has a voice from the us your boss your twitter and you could be on the street join the global conversation on mt is iraq.
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welcome back the top stories this hour venezuela's opposition it up on those accuse national security forces loyal to president nicolas maduro of threatening his family germany france and the u.k. of launched a new payment system allowing them to keep trading with iran and bypass u.s. sanctions in order to save the two thousand and fifteen nuclear deal. and hypothermia is thought to be responsible for the deaths of at least twenty nine children and babies over the past two months in a refugee camp in northeastern syria. now at least twelve people have been killed in the united states as temperatures that drop to record lows across the midwest the freezing weather has been caused by a stream of cold the polar vortex it usually spends around the north pole but it's been pushed south causing the bits of cold the deep freeze a snapped rail lines canceled hundreds of flights strained utilities and closed schools freezing weather isn't unusual in the region but with temperatures dropping
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to minus twenty four and even minus forty in minnesota authorities and residents are concerned. the weather is frigid bliss blizzard like the wind is ridiculous doesn't stop you can't see anything i think the word cold is not. a proper way to define it it's just unbelievably cold and the wind chill is just super brutal and it's just kind of they're scared so we just never wake up naturally and then as soon as he woke up we got out of there . there is where the present take heaven car of small details on the phrase now we talk about the polar vortex we first start here across parts of the north pole this is where it is all the time it does have these little lobes that rotate around the system and it's when one of these lobes actually becomes disconnected that's when we start to see a problem take
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a look at what we normally see when we talk about the polar vortex this is where those lobes got to get a little bit more elongated in the area so this is what has happened over the last couple of days one of those lobes actually became disconnected and started to move towards the south here across parts of canada as well as into united states temperatures over the last few days have been very very cold actually records have been broken across many of those areas but today we're still going to be seeing some very cold air across much of canada across the great lakes the midwest and into the northeast so if we were to pick minus twenty six the high here over torture coghlan minus sixteen even new york is going to be a very cold day minus nine so over the next few days the wind chill is still going to be a problem the snow across the great lakes is still going to prom as well overnight we're going to be seeing those temperatures dive down again but friday we're going to start to see a little bit more of a break with those temperatures beginning to come up over here troughs parts of new winnipeg no longer see minus twenty five it's going to be about minus sixteen there and ottawa about minus twelve few but still wind chills are going to be very
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dangerous for many. last year u.s. president donald trump signed an executive order to end a policy that separated migrant children from their parents if they crossed the u.s. border illegally but there are reports of families still being separated. this video of honduran mother cindy flores reuniting with her seventeen month old daughter juliet has been shared more than eighteen thousand times online they were reunited in san francisco on tuesday they've been separated from each other for over a month now the longest government shutdown in u.s. history has left immigration court struggling to cope with more than eight hundred thousand cases still to be processed the fate of many asylum seekers is now more uncertain than ever rob bridles reports from los angeles. early morning downtown l.a. the u.s. immigration court building a long line of people waiting to attend a hearing on their case think your prayers was one of them his hearing was canceled
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because of the government shutdown his case was scaled for generally twenty four hours because of the child down the court didn't happen so now we have to wait that a new day would be scare you know right now we don't know if that would be within the next year or two years three years a father of four progress has already been waiting for three years to see whether he can stay in the u.s. or if he will be deported to mexico this will go it's chaos now i have to wait two three four years more i think it's too much my children are suffering with an overburdened system it's common for cases to drag on for years judge ashley tab adore is president of the national association of immigration judges it's pretty much broken it's been broken for some time but it's become unacceptable at this point and we now have well over eight hundred thousand cases that are pending on our calendars for just about four hundred judges it's not unusual for judges to
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have four thousand or five thousand cases on their docket she says a fundamental problem is that immigration judges are not truly independent or part of the prosecutorial system of the u.s. justice department which is geared toward removing undocumented immigrants i am constantly being pushed to hear more cases faster and that conflict that tension has made it impossible for us to be able to do this job in the effect of an efficient manner to the contrary it has created these delays and created additional backlog and it has made it very very difficult for the judges to really do their job correctly without undue pressure it's ironic that president trump's shut down which he started to for. force congress to allocate money for a border wall has resulted in more undocumented migrants remaining in the u.s. longer immigration judges and attorneys say the only way to fix this broken system
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is by a sweeping overhaul of the immigration courts and by allocating more money to hire hundreds more immigration judges rob reynolds al jazeera los angeles and other developments donald trump says there will be no deal on trade with china until he has a meeting with president xi jinping u.s. and chinese officials have been holding talks in washington to try to end a dispute that seen the wilds to not just economies impose try tariffs on each other now reports of a possible summit between trump and she next month but if he does agree to a ninety day truce in december that if there's no deal the truce will end in march and the u.s. will increase types to an additional two hundred sixty seven billion dollars on chinese goods if it does happen it will be by far the largest trade deal ever made and we essentially did have a trade deal with china we lost five hundred billion dollars with china for many
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years a year and it went from three hundred to five hundred five hundred five billion dollars a year was lost in our dealing with china and i have a very good relationship with president xi and i think we'll sit down at the end at the end of that a negotiation by our representatives and do something with respect to make a deal with china think it has a very good chance of happening. the brazilian authorities are warning that water around the mining down that collapsed on friday is contaminated and a risk to the public at least ninety nine people died in southeastern brazil when the dam holding ion a waste collapsed well than two hundred fifty people is still missing prosecutors in brazil a frozen two hundred nineteen million dollars belonging to the country's largest ion a mining company which is responsible for running the dam. the money will be used to compensate the victims also in brazil hundreds of people of turned out in sao paolo to protest against the policies of far right president also narrow rights
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groups say his attitude to indigenous people promotes bloodshed and could spark genocide well daniel is at the protest in sao paolo and joins us now and of course we know that brazil's indigenous people have been battling for survival for hundreds of years is what are they saying at that protest today. what they're particularly angry frightened mariyam at this is the latest comments by president are also not all of the comments he was making in the campaign for its election basically saying that not one centimeter of land would be demarcated for indigenous communities also the indigenous people made up less than one percent of brazil's population yet had control over twelve percent of the land and that land was often sitting on mineral resources on forestry which could be lucrative which should be exploited and that they were an impediment to that exploitation and if
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they didn't like it basically they should be integrated into mainstream bolivian brazilian society that's got them very frightened they're saying this is some of the some of the worst policies they've heard about in those last five hundred years these are communities that are scattered all over brazil small communities often very isolated they've come to sell power go back as far away as you can get from some of these communities simply because they want to have their voice heard is one of the first major demonstrations we've had since dr also now took office on the first of january they're hoping their voice will be heard across brazil they will also have the support of the non-indigenous community they talked about the possible bloodshed because the job also the author was also talking about giving more guns to brazilian citizens to defend themselves and many campaign is still that will provide the green light to people simply to go in and take land should people that will without any kind of retribution so they are very frightened and are beginning to organize that demonstrations like this one down you know
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a government department has been established to promote and protect indigenous rights but what status does it have the in the whole scenario government. with this in many ways is the big difference this government agency for now i know has been around for some years to promote and protect indigenous rights they've always. we have a very difficult task of the say working in often very remote areas but they have been there working within the constitution working within the law but now what people feel with this tonight department has been incorporated in a bigger department which also includes human rights or women's rights with the head of that department is all of this being investigated at the moment for allegedly having taken a baby from an indigenous community some years ago and bringing it up as her own there's a certain irony in that of course but really that the full ny has almost no money has almost no powers and the few powers they do have under the new changes the job also now is instituting will have to be even more toothless that it was before so
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this is why indigenous people are very frightened at the moment that even the limited protection they had that they had previously under this government with a government there must be said one with a large majority many people support his policies as life is likely to get very much more difficult to the next few months and years from sao paolo thank you very much tanya. he's from sudan where the president tomorrow bashir is announced the reopening of the border with eritrea it was closed a year ago following accusations by hard to that the eritrean government was supporting rebel groups and sit down with countries deploy troops to the eastern border town of over the disputes ahmed al has more from khartoum. president obama seems to be sending two messages one of them is to the region he has been egypt over the last few days and immediately after the visit we see him open the border with it we are one of the countries that have sided with egypt saudi arabia the
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united arab emirates and behind in the blockade against qatar in terms of the we see that this is a very important message for the people of kosovo on the border with eritrea last year in june when the border was closed after reports that the ija to organize in the military exercises their populations on both sides of the border how tremendously suffered because their livelihood depended on the exchange of commerce and also on movement between the two sides between the two countries now more bashir has been touring in term of the regions in sudan after this wave of protests trying to send messages from the government that the government is trying to help people the government is going to ease the economy of the population and this decision today comes in that context as well top executives from japanese and french auto giants nissan and renault have met for the first time since the rest of colace go on the architect of that two decade partnership is accused of financial
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misconduct and has been removed as chairman of both meeting in amsterdam follows accusations by guns lawyer that misandry know were involved in a plot to remove him because they opposed his plans for a full mucha well hundreds of millions of people are on the move in china in preparation for the lunar new year weeklong holiday starts on the first of february travel agents estimate four hundred million people will travel across the country and another seven million are set to go abroad making it the world's biggest annual human migration the new year itself falls on the fifth or there's more in everything we're covering right here the address there at dot com. quick look at top stories this hour now venezuela's opposition opposition has accused national security forces loyal to president nicolas maduro of threatening
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his family he says agents from a special police unit went to his home while he was at an event in the capital caracas outlining his plan for the country the agents reportedly asked to see his wife his twenty month old baby was also inside the apartment. so i say to the gentleman of the five pollies here you are with my wife my daughter in my house are they will hold you responsible for any flipped my baby was only twenty months all it's what they do to this whole country and i say from here leave my home when it comes as the european parliament has voted to recognize interim president it's now urging the european union and its member states to follow suit and join the u.s. canada and brazil informally backing the parliament is calling for presidential elections in venezuela as soon as possible. are the headlines germany france and the u.k. of launched any payment system with iran which bypasses u.s.
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sanctions movies aimed at saving the two thousand and fifteen iran nuclear deal that u.s. president donald trump will douse of last year is expected to be formally endorsed by all twenty eight members despite opposition from the u.s. . hypothermia is thought to be behind the deaths of at least twenty nine children and babies in a refugee camp in northeastern syria around twenty three thousand people mostly women and children of arrived at the whole camp in the past eight weeks off to fleeing fighting many of them on foot. lebanese leaders of managed to reach a deal to establish a new national unity government the equipment between rival politicians will end nine months of political wrangling over how to share cabinet portfolios it will be the third government led by the current prime minister saad hariri and at least twelve people have been killed in the u.s. as temperatures drop to record lows across the midwest freezing weather has been caused by a stream of the polar vortex it's not rare lines canceled hundreds of flights
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strained utilities and close schools temperatures are now dropping to minus twenty four. o. the headlines this hour coming up next the stream examines some of the latest developments on the brakes a crisis. i am for me ok. today by popular demand an update on the u.k. crisis can the united kingdom come up with a plan for untangling itself from the european union so let your questions in your comments on bricks it live on twitter and through our you tube channel.
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thanks once again to our online community for taking part in our twitter poll to help to use today's topic thirty four percent of those who voted chose posting another poll today the results do stream help pick next topic or tell us what other stories you're interested in on the discussion of drugs so joining us to talk all things bright said in bucharest romania al jazeera correspondent lawrence lee in glasgow scotland peter gagan a journalist and investigations it editor with open democracy in oxford u.k. aziz a journalist and counselor for oxford city council and in london rafael bed he is a political columnist a writer for the guardian it's good to see you i feel like we've brought together a support group for journalists let's start the first segment and the first
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question question what will happen if the u.k. leaves the e.u. without a plan in place so the u.k. is set to leave march twenty ninth but here piers and no closer to an agreement on exactly how to handle the trade immigration and border laws the u.k. follows as an e.u. member state on tuesday parliament voted against having a no deal snobbery oh he's british prime minister theresa may. last night the house did vote to reject no deal but that cannot be the end of the story the only way the riser will join said. i think that's i think that's the first time he's actually accepted that you can't just vote to reject no deal you have to vote for a deal. so i'm just looking at you and twitter profile and he says i cover the u.k. and your english county trying to explain bricks it to the world wish me luck.
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options right now. well you see i've said i've long argued the facts it won't happen i call it the circular firing squad argument because there is so much there's a least five or six different interpretations of process all of them just what you want from you know way off the extremes of people who wants a new deal so will the other and the people that will leave it all in as you've seen over the course of the militants in poland they keep shooting each other not in themselves look at each other down and so you know in the end i've always thought that brooks and happen because if they kill each other in that sense and they should supplant then what you're left with is the status quo and i'm in the economists argue that that means no deal i fell yeah i thought you disagree because what we saw the prime minister just say there is absolutely truth that because of laws that have already been passed in the british parliament on the twenty ninth of march the u.k.
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legally stops being a member of the european union that will happen in any way so actually there isn't a default back to the status quo that the situation you fall back on is no deal which means in practice the entire legal basis of all of the u.k. straight and its relationship with its european partners that's built up over thirty years literally falls away at sort of eleven pm that night there isn't their share of that and then when they don't want the deal do they it's kind of economic suicide if it comes to that i've always assumed that they switch and say let's extend and have a second river until something else so lawrence i like that idea of the let's extend it because i think there are members of our community and i think that's probably going to happen as well but they say here is not one of those and he first sees a catastrophe he says we still have no clarity and we're nearing the twenty ninth of march with a real possibility of leaving with no deal which would be catastrophic for future generations shocking how we've left it this of late i want to give this one to you catastrophic when you think what happened in the twenty ninth of march. i think
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what we're looking at right now is no sense. ordinarily aggressive and i think it will help me. but i think you know the cheery cheer is a million the tories are absolutely adamant they want this to happen. though there's been a complete don't actually g.t.e. by the government they've had almost three years to put a plan in place there is no fun you know was devastating about all of this is really feels like the u.k. is in the process of carrying out massive act of self harm to the country and we don't really know you know what new look it is a review because right now you know there's also not only take over the fact that much as i think the e.u. has lost patience with the country and there was no plan so even if there was supposed to be a greggs that if that was what was the end outcome then by now we should have been opposed to our birds that there's nothing there on the table looking at this headline that you wrote the story that you wrote rafael may think she's won but the
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reality of rex it will soon hit her again. what's the reaction i mean the other important thing that happens you showed that the other important thing that happened about same night is that for the first time in a long time the conservative party mode they got together and actually voted with the prime minister and indorsed a sort of deal not a deal that they thought is one that doesn't exist they endorsed sort of her deal but with all the bits they don't like taken out of it which is meant to give her a mandate instructions to go back to brussels and say look i'm nearly there i just got this deal just give me this one more thing but exactly as you just heard from a shift in the e.u. all that goodwill goal now you know what they have. reopened it it's not how you conduct an international negotiation if you want your partners to think you're reliable and trustworthy so that was really the point i was making that she she's chosen a sort of a will in bar that unity with the conservative party over the actual reality of what a liberal in a negotiated breaks it but i must say i made
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a very important point that actually no one in the parliament very few people at all actually want to know your crush out the problem is it is the default setting is it no one comes a better agreement. three hundred. no no deal it's not a couldn't believe it was. you know the kuperman this labor m.p. you said let's make sure there's no new deal. it's unbelievable the number of m.p.'s said effectively we're happy with lawrence you know what else is unbelievable the news moves so fast but i want to rewind just a little bit to when we saw had lines that proclaimed a historic defeat for a sitting government first time in modern history and so take us back of there because we have a couple of tweets about that most of our injuries says is it valid to say that theresa may is fighting a tougher battle at home than she had with the e.u. over leading a successful bracks it another person writes in to us on you tube sonam says why is
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she taking this burden and just let it pass to the next government and of course the just soon after seeing that historic defeat of the government she survived narrowly and no confidence vote but peter i'll bring you in here on this one your take on may in this person's comment that this doesn't have to be her burden. well if you look at how she's approached this whole kind of direction issue since she became the prime minister two years ago she's always said that this is this is what she's going to do sliver breakfast she lost the general election it seems unlikely she cites another one this seems to be the kind of this is her whole her whole kind of political legacy is invested in breakfast well it's very interesting to note that ok she won some sort of battle of unity this week but as rafael mentions earlier she had this huge historic loss the biggest and history and it's this is not this is so unlikely to change down the coming week so really all she's done is office out a couple of weeks of good headlines but in terms of actually some sort of substantive changes no evidence that's going to happen and if she brings the deal back that she
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did with the european union she can't renegotiations it looks like and get the thesis again and i think i would can echo some of those comments of those in the audience marial because while there might be a majority in parliament for either her deal or for no deals there's no evidence that there's a majority in parliament for anything in which case united kingdom just by the fault leaves the europe european union without his ear and as we get closer to that relief i think fifty seven days away from that now it's very hard to see what people are going to coalesce around of it's not going to be teresa mayes deal and the evidence still is that the deal if she brought back from the european union which would be substantially the deal she has been over this process you know the next ten days she comes back from brussels it's not clear how that will ever get to the house of parliament for one is rather spend a bit of time in parliament last few days and i'd do you know be cautious about this but i wouldn't rule out actually there being some kind of incremental grindingly wins towards something like dale so there are a lot of those very hard line conservative m.p.'s who are kind of looking for a lot it's a cloud i'm down with a dignity intact they don't actually want no deal some day but not all do there are
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labor m.p.'s who are kind of looking to get a bit of a not so not in a wink from the labor leader to say go on then you can cross over a just get this over the line and actually you know what she's a tough lady and she just grinds her opponents down and i wouldn't be it's all surprised if we reach that might be a bit of an extension to us we're fifty but we get to half way through this year and. wow actually somehow we seem to have left the european union with a deal that looks an awful lot like the one three rather i hear you there and i want to pas us on that note because there is so much to talk about so i want to move on just a little bit next topic of this same show the movement of goods into the u.k. in the event of a no deal scenario many britons are worried about long delays for products interest in the country supermarkets pharmaceutical companies and other businesses are now stockpiling goods to prepare for the worst so how are others reacting take a look at lawrence lee's report from last week. linda is taking no chances she bought books
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a few weeks ago inside is enough freeze dried food to last a month she isn't rich because of three hundred pounds nearly four hundred dollars but she has no regrets she supports leaving the european union as soon as possible remain supporters would say. you're a bit crazy you know what if you stay in the european union and then you don't see the packers and things like this it is possible you know so i can see what they say and i can understand that while i remain as want to remain. but the long term i want democracy back for my children and grandchildren i don't want to go down the route that we. were being dictated to. because not the only one with concerns pretty hot on twitter red sand in my case i'm worried about the supply of medicine for a chronic health condition this person goes on to say have stockpiled a small amount made an impact as my local doctors have now reduced prescription
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from the usual three months to two months coincidentally just happens to be at the same time as breck said so lawrence take us through what some people are doing in fear is a running out of supplies well you see to turn the thing is i mean you know people who support bricks it since a reference i'm saying it'll make the country richer which is unprovable because it hasn't happened yet to now they're saying well a bit of suffering you know will do us all good i mean there was a guy who wrote a column you know very old right right wing that a column in a right wing magazine last couple days saying when when he was young you know the boats used to go and steal food from from from france and he said you know we're going to the same again that it will be quite exciting it's a sort of you know a glorification of the victim hood almost that computer that you know people are celebrating the fact that life might be difficult you know this what they want to be back in the second world war is something that you know i think it's i think it's beyond any doubt that there will be problems certainly for
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a couple of months and supermarkets can't stock and if you know enough to last more than a week or so so there will be probably depends if you think is what i'm like stocking up on chicken tikka masala. themselves about things i mean you could make this up with the state of you know where we all were direct i mean you know i think it is absolutely shocking that those people who are already med is. because they fear even if they've got diabetes and things like that it really worried that they don't have enough insulin what kind of normal functioning country in modern day what modern country does budget so i mean you know while this complex horatia not must remember that. the u.k. is suffering from you know massive quantities of austerity the homelessness crisis alone is off the scale james we know who has come out in relation to the muscle car in the housing you know people are suffering hugely and the fact that some people
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think you know not people who suffer even more i think is just absolutely outrageous and let's make this very clear is the coolest people who will suffer the most and it's a policy will be misread what else this is a game and it's a disgrace paisa people may not know what may or may not happen with a no deal a deal as the u.k. comes out of bracks said but he certainly know the impact to me economy right now and for the last two and a half years what's been happening well if you look at i think it's fair to say you know hasn't been because we've not left the european union left as yet it's quite unclear exactly what will happen but it will definitely growth has slowed in the i think the last of the areas as opposed by somebody only euro zone nations that we have seen as a slowing of growth and it does seem to be plenty of economic honestly juiced you suggested like well if if if the practical hadn't happened we witnessing quite the same slowing of the economy because actually quite a lot of the problems in the eurozone especially say around the euro actually don't
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really affect britain has been zombie oh it's always there not yet of i think i think it's not really. so i do think it is very important as i'm sure you're right but the fact that actually things haven't been a little of a sudden cliff edge problem for the economy has to fed this understanding among a lot of people who supported leave in the first place that actually the warnings about what a bad idea breaks it would be with this sort of what they call it projects fail with the sort of terrible missed making about how awful everything would be and that the problem is now that we're making this will those of us who think back in the great idea and said no do breaks it would be a terrible idea a warning again and these are now very very credible warnings from very serious people about quite what the appalling thing it would be to still impose its economic blockade on yourself as a country those warnings are falling on deaf ears and a lot of people just think it's another round of projects there and there's that cynic strongly about the complacency i think about what the economic impact of a no deal breaker would be because the economic impact of the referendum result
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itself was actually very muted and i think that's i think that's also said and for the wider kind of idea about watch what could actually happen and what i think is what a lot of usually people like long spoke there have actually kind of politically kind of feel like ok this might be something that's worth suffering and might seem like a really strange or something it is almost like a psychological trauma going on here because there's a kind of narrative of suffering that like this is in the britain might have to do to kind of cleanse the south of the european union. so let me just let me just show you this is going to show i'm just going to show you this on my laptop it's breck said prepping dot com we heard what linda was doing there you can actually then decide what how much shopping you need to do i'm a little concerned i'm pretty worried i'm probably panicking but it is click that box and then you have a list of of projects that you need to buy for the next three months that will get you for breakfast i know that you were hesitating it's calling linda crazy. or
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remain as my saying that you are crazy are you saying any. bricks it voters remorse right now because there's no detail well it i mean i think it depends as you know there's different sorts of bricks. you know across the country certainly accordance with all the polling i've seen the number of people who wants a no deal is it is really a big minority. and i think one of the things to remember as well and this is just a fact not opinion is that when the referendum up and you know all this talk about the customs union and the and the arcane details of all that stuff was hardly mentioned at all john the referendum when it was it was confused with the single market which is something else and it was all about immigration really and i know and taken a loss because of leather and suddenly it's all about the customs you know that's just become a completely new thing that wasn't at the river in the conversation at all and such
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a big issue right now the i wish broader part of the argument for breck's it was to end the open borders but once the u.k. leaves the new what was actually happened to the border between northern ireland in the public eye and were any changes to the current open border upset that hard won peace. satin signed by the ninety watts good friday agreement so i want you to have a listen to the european commission president john caught a young what he said the european parliament on wednesday both sides have said loud and clear that there can be no it turned to the how border on the island of. no slipping back into darker times past some hope that the twenty six other countries will abandon the next and so ireland at the last minute but this is not a game and neither is it a simple ballot issue it goes to the heart of work being
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a member of the european union meets ireland's border is huge bought and in this hour unions by. peter you grew up on the irish mourner and we can't have this conversation without a phrase that i'm seeing in a lot of our tweets take a look at this one here from eighty flores who says the biggest obstacles are the irish back stop and free them movement to explain to our international audience the irish backstop. well it's interesting i think a lot of people might assume the freedom yeah it's a it's not a it's not an easy one to do meaning a sense with the irish box office all about once united kingdom leaves the european union the republic of ireland will stay in ash and up after dark there will be a different regulation system in the united kingdom which includes northern ireland and in the irish republic which means that on the border so you know there will be a need for customs jet the backstop is this arrangement which is which is a group of united kingdom and european union which means that if the camp be another solution found the right or trade either technological solution essentially
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the whole united kingdom would remain in alliance with the european union so it's allowed so to allow for a free movement of goods across across the border and it's become such a contentious thing because if that happens united kingdom can't sign trade deals which the boss is not part of the much of the rhetoric of the referendum brave even referendum which of the trade deals that's now become a big thing that apparently if there's trade deals that's going to be a disaster of the kind of independent trade deals and the irish box open is is that's what's this going to do is follow what's basically been the last twenty five years of of life america forward which is it's friction its trade but also friction as tribal people live and work across our border many people live on one side the border work and the other go to school on one side by side are so and it's designed to not change up to be no physical infrastructure on the border that's i think just me reminds me very much of the fact that i think the not aggressive to think that this to living in the days of the empire when you can get a claim on in a pencil and to hold it is
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a sign and you know which part of the world's the loans to this country i mean you know anyone you don't know her work in the run up to threats that she did not know that this is your thing irish for them is going to come. and again you know one more time you know for those a but you know it's like if we were going to have go for correct as a country by now you should have been on it now and instead of me years of absurd things to go one partner and i think a lot of people have switched off the top when they need to be switched on because when i go weeks now potentially you know one of the worst disasters to punctuate and people of you know joe public i love is a kind of one hour for patients with leaders of the country and indeed a lot of repetition rafael if you want to get in here i want to just i want to direct this to you douglas here is was also worried about contradicting the good friday agreement says hence the difficulties are in now the only way to avoid this hard border is for the u.k. to stay in the e.c.u.
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european customs union which many then don't want profile. yeah and that's the point i think piece of a very well which is that ultimately the way you keep an order invisible is to have total alignment of all the some rules and regulations for goods crossing that border and that will do something that a lot of the sort of very most fanatical breaks it rejects because it changes the in title meant of a government to sign trade deals with other countries but the under the very important things one that done the stand beneath this is that that you have the good friday agreement which brought to an end you know a generation of very brutal violent setting civil war and within. a community the only reason that agreement is able to function so well is because both the republic of ireland and the united kingdom where members of the european union the e.u. is itself quite pretty as a signatory to the good friday agreement together with dublin and london and so it
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was never really explained properly or fully understood in the twenty sixth referendum campaign the enormous danger all taking one country that can once again free that out of that agreement and therefore what that actually meant properly to the place where that agreement was on and their leaders in the brackets is literally denied that that was a problem and that was well it's and. yeah and the thing is just just just to follow that you know people say a hard border would would jeopardize the peace without explaining why i mean wants you to go on the border it was tax driven that was twenty years in jail with the oil and assets when what happens if you put a customs post that says that you can't shut itself off probably from european union he said that hill there they'll shoot at the customs person that you know that's just what it means because it's just it's just a red right it is developing all and all over again so that's just a contradiction with that so you can't leave the european union entirely yeah without putting a border but you can't put a gold up you know because because it because of the side agreement because the
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peace that's what we're not a so chilling when we say that we we were. both in the middle of the u.k. in the middle and many many years ago when i went there to university there was still the memory of the ira bombing and only in the u.k. and the idea that we would even go back to anything like that is very chilling for anybody in the u.k. who remembers that time back in the one nine hundred seventy s. really. it's really chilling is a very chilling thing to say. we brought this show to you because we asked you for a poll and we gave you these options as the poll and this show was brought to you by you because you asked for it andrew simpson slyness says i'm english can we have something other than getting bored now march twenty ninth foundries sorry about that. lately is similar sentiment on you to mark henry so what a mess very simple very you can see i'm enjoying the conversation as well with your
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a safe place to go one on one as far as their perilous journey to an uncertain future. on down to zero. in an ordinary week to even atar a doc that only functioning hospital in bunch town in north east and south sudan and his steam on iran sixty patients the united nations refugee agency nominated him for the prestigious nansen award she won in recognition of his work and the incredibly difficult to constance's. south sudan has been in conflict since twenty fifth teen the war has divided the country along ethnic lines two hundred thousand people most of them refugees from sudan split state even this remote town and looked to be a bad hospital for all their medical needs. destroyed almost the infrastructures which are in. almost one way including beetles of stewart living in the
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present so who do you know. all of the monetary well. into the capacity to death opposed to. the week began with views of a ninety day truce in the tip to tap us china trade all the world's largest supply of liquefied natural gas is leaving the biggest oil cartel we bring you the stories that are shaping the economic world we live in counting the cost on al-jazeera. hello i'm in london the top stories this hour venezuela's opposition leader has accused national security forces loyal to president nicolas maduro of threatening his family he says agents from
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a special police unit went to his home while he was an event in the capital caracas outlining his plan for the country the agents reportedly asked to see his wife his twenty month old baby was also inside the apartment. so i spoke to the gentleman of the pirates pollies here you are with my wife my daughter in my house are they will hold you responsible for any flipped my baby and was only twenty months all it's what they do to this whole country and i say from here leave my home meanwhile the european parliament has voted to recognize quite a as interim president is now urging the european union to follow suit and join the u.s. canada and brazil informally backing the parliament is calling for presidential elections in venezuela as soon as possible e.u. foreign policy chief edem ecomog greeny is also calling on maduro's government to release several french and spanish journalists who've been detained in venezuela meanwhile madieu row is expected to meet with workers from venezuela state an oil
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company paid a vespa the employees have been rallying in caracas to protest against u.s. president donald trump sanctions on the firm has accused trump of plotting to topple him in order to seize them as well as oil in our other headlines germany france and britain have launched any payment system with iran which bypasses u.s. sanctions movies aimed at saving the two thousand and fifteen iran nuclear deal which u.s. president donald trump pulled out solve last year mechanism will allow e.u. companies to trade with iran and is expected to be formally endorsed by all twenty eight members of the has more on this from paris. e.u. leaders are meeting in book arrest and they are expected to give more details of a transaction channel a new payment mechanism that they have set up to bypass the sanctions on iran and try and keep the nuclear deal alive now what european media is reporting so far is that it would be called in stakes it would be
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a transaction channel based in paris run by a german banking manager with a supervisory board based in the united kingdom and it would deal mainly with trade between the e.u. in iran in areas such as food medicine and medical devices but it could be expanded to other things in the future now just to give you a bit of a back story ever since donald trump announced that he was re-imposing sanctions on iran last year the european union has been scrambling for a way to try and bypass those sanctions to keep that european trade alive and it also and this is perhaps more important it's real simple it defies the u.s. on this matter the european union leaders are saying they won't be dictated to over the seraglio by the united states by donald trump's decision and it also sends a signal a message to iran that european leaders are serious about trying to support iran and the deal. hypothermia is thought to be behind the deaths of at least twenty
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nine children and babies over the last two months in a refugee camp in northeastern syria around twenty three thousand people mostly women and children of arrived at the whole camp in the past eight weeks after fleeing fighting the world health organization says many families traveled there on foot in freezing weather. well at least twelve people have been killed in the u.s. as temperatures drop the record lows across the midwest freezing weather has been caused by a stream of air called the polar vortex it usually spins around the north pole but it's been pushed south causing the base of cold deep freeze a snapped rail lines canceled hundreds of flights strained utilities and closed schools and donald trump says there'll be no deal on trade with china and till he meets with president xi jinping u.s. and chinese officials have been holding talks in washington to try to end a dispute that seen the world's two largest economies impose trade tariffs on each other there are reports of a possible summit between trump and g.
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next month it were up to date with all of our top stories this hour there will be more news later on in about twenty five minutes time do stay with al-jazeera i found. it's called terror attack in europe has been followed by an out for ing off. unfortunately these armed attacks have stirred hatred islamophobia is on the rise and fear of far muslim neighbors has grown.
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but in every attack there were also muslim victims. there by law much. bottomless consequence as do. that from the obvious mutiny shown on the legal definition. of a. man less than eighty him up when he should be difficult to deny the downside to . all such constant threats and she will do. us any good. to fall into it and the fact that it.
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on the eleventh of march two thousand and four commuter trains in the cities of madrid. spain were bombed the next day tens of thousands of people took to the streets in solidarity protesting against the violence. i was there shouting no to the senseless killings of the time we didn't know who was behind the bombings the basque separatist group e.t.a. or was it perhaps those who had been responsible for the nine eleven attacks in new york. our response was to march together and to call for peace.
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our role has changed since the two thousand and four madrid bring. in two thousand and seventeen farther attacks were carried out in bark and combatants a number of major european cities have also suffered similar violent attacks for many the source of these attacks it seems clear islamic terrorism but is this term correct. many people in europe and across the globe don't agree with this. they asked do their attackers distinguish between muslims and non muslims the fact is that in almost every attack we find a significant number of muslim victims. this lead me on a journey to uncover the stories of muslims who also lost loved ones in these horror. you know with mom as i have to be. is there
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a lot of they may be muslim that doesn't mean. that i don't i mean the money that should be sustained is met the cost of a lot of the team other than tell. us that have been that it was you know your mother who you know that crazy and i mean the coverlet and. this in the seventy's love. your go to guy in go away because you got within the law says that the only thing to me as i mean. yeah. you put combatants you're going on all one dollar each other. through government is . when i will tell you this is going to go to. the southern dallas. if you don't park in madrid there is someone you meant to remember the more than one hundred and ninety two thousand four attacks i've never been here but mohammed
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insists on bringing. social workers like him who assisted during the aftermath of the attacks experienced extreme emotional distress a few months after the bombings mohammed realized he needed psychological assistance he says he comes here often to rest and to find himself. because of. perceived. value noted but there wasn't a body as part of that until now formally that is the distance between will not tell is. not until the minute he goes pedal as i said i'm in no particular place he buy it out and see him. get it out pretty much what i can with it up and run the thing to them when they tell us. to get on those from those persona. as one of us literally prefers observables with what is coming for you to feel the norm be it to
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mother we must at least ask if he could come in on. should money tell her that he will not this into a sort of asking that we have this little bit out of. everything we would. still be to learn. from him a sort of personality for families that they need hardly say them a little. bit to mother in the scenery and. inside at the station there is another memorial with the names of the victims among those muhammad tried to rescue he finds the names of osama and them grotty and ben salaam and now. we find the third name mohammad they are stories of muslims who were killed have rarely star first in the media because. media there are not say a. very famous. saying i gave. for
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some of. the everything. they said there's a split second fiddle she said with a biased by. the way i think is how he feels he can play a particular story here. giving bedo. c. catholic. hospital said their meeting kanuga is seriously upset of a mother to me i mean to look at his you know he thinks become obese this. month into this with the globules his family be able no more could give me his help and it's because a part of the brotherhood esteem which i must gotta kill somebody else to those who don't. even know that he rather only causes because he'll get into the little thing well the.
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