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tv   Dawkins on Religion  Al Jazeera  February 25, 2019 9:00am-10:01am +03

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the speech pope francis cave after mass this morning. for the strength. and so very resolute so i think this meeting is not a finish up it's a start. we know there are some still active at least but survivors of abuse were angry they wanted to hear the pope say that abusive priests and those who cover up for them will be thrown out of the priesthood. just words words words avoided seven years for change and others have been waiting thirty years for change and because he needs to do something concrete to remove bishops who have covered things up this is a pope for the media critic of. traditions are vital to the longevity and appeal of the catholic church such as the angelus prayer given by the pope each sunday in st peter's square but the traditional secrecy with which the church has covered up decades of sex crimes is
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a threat to its very future while people still flock in their thousands to hear the pope speak in person at the vatican and there are hundreds of millions more roman catholics around the world but pope francis is aware that sexual abuse is a nexus tensional problem for the catholic church it's driven away worshippers and if it's not properly handled more will leave. the vatican never said this unprecedented meeting would solve the problem cardinals have called it a step on the road they must now produce follow up measures for clergy to take back to their countries and put into practice rory chalons how to zero the vatican the weather is next but still ahead on al-jazeera senegal and it's on whether to give macky sall a second as president after his biggest rivals from running. and why the republicans are getting behind the democrats' climate initiative and it isn't
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because they're bream. hello welcome to another look at the international forecast that we should see some dry weather just coming into the southeast of china over the next couple days been a little unsettled her recently disappointing so we say for hong kong there we go twenty one celsius or monday attempt just starting to edge their way up still a fair bit of cloud over towards the western side of the country could produce a few spots of rain for choose day but that into the southeast is fire destroyed temperatures about twenty two celsius for hong kong at this stage quite keen northeasterly wind driving through should be largely settled across in the china settle to into the philippines the usual showers there into malaysia northern parts of indonesia heat of the day showers the seasonal showers continue unabated as they
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should to come choose to a little change perhaps a little more cloud just pushing up towards the gulf of thailand so you might just catch one or two showers creeping into southern thailand for tuesday afternoon meanwhile you want to two showers just creeping over towards flying cats wards the southern parts of india but essentially the thick of cloud is further north we have had some disturbed weather here recently we will see that making its way a little further east which as you go through monday said kolkata could see a few showers into bangladesh more of the same as we go through tuesday. sponsored town. between two thousand and two thousand and seven there were nine racist murders in different parts of germany but the police were painfully slow to track down the killer. al jazeera world reveals the truth about the deaths linked by a single weapon the involvement of the far right and the serious political fallout
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that ensued the cheska murders case solved on al-jazeera. hello again i'm. with a reminder of the news this hour more people have been killed in violent confrontations along venezuela's border with brazil than previously thought at least twenty five people died in the town of santa ana when venezuelan forces tried to stop opposition supporters from bringing aid into the country. u.s. president says he's extending a deadline to increase tariffs on chinese imports after what he's calling
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a substantial progress in the latest round of trade talks with beijing on more than two hundred billion dollars of chinese products would usually be imposed from much the from. the head of the roman catholic church has called for an all out battle against the abuse of minors pope francis made the pledge on the fourth and final day of an unprecedented conference on the sex abuse within the church. polls have closed in cuba where millions of people have been voting on whether to approve a new constitution it recognizes the free market but still embraces communism as the official political ideology a final draft was adopted by parliament in december the new constitution also includes changes to the judicial system and limits the president to serving two consecutive five year terms ariana sanchez has more from cuba. the government says that it's been a large turnout a couple of hours before the polls close to seventy six percent of cubans according
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to the government numbers have come out to vote now very few people at the polling stations despite these high turnout there are very many polling stations around the country so there were no lines to be seen however many people were out there although we also saw volunteers helping the government officials to knock on doors they went door to door to tell people to come out and vote now some analysts believe to this new constitution it will have a majority of a yes vote because it brings in new ideas into. the cuban life it recognizes among other things a limited to private property it opens a cuban economy to international markets and it also. brings in a novelty which is. a presidential term limits which again is
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a novelty in cuba now some analysts believe that twenty nearly twenty percent of cubans could vote no because this constitution is against their principles or because many believe that the one party system the communist party still remains and try and and above cording to any above the constitution. people in japan's okinawa prefecture have voted against plans to relocate to a controversial us military base seventy two percent voted against the move with nineteen percent in favor according to the local government the referendum had a fifty two percent turnout the vote has non-binding raising questions about what effect it will have on a government policy campaigners say landfill work it had no kobe where the base would be relocated threatens coral reefs they also say the presence of troops brings crime to the area vote counting is underway in senegal as presidential
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election macky sall is seeking a second term and faces four main rivals since coming to office president saleh has developed infrastructure projects and the economy is said to be booming but opposition candidates say ordinary people are suffering with poverty and unemployment rampant pushing many to leave the country nicholas had proposed it's from one of the polling stations in dhaka it's going on across three dollars in polling stations and we're in one of the polling rooms we've just seen earlier these officers taking you know of a loop call you know the name of the candidates. this is in front of of observers from the political parties and from the election commission the election commission here says it wants to make the process as transparent as possible i mean this is democracy in action and they go and so they go as one of the most stable democracies on the continent in much of it is to do with this electoral process
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it's gone through eleven elections and all have been a peaceful transition in power now in this polling room specifically multi-cell came on top that doesn't mean that the rest of the country will follow but it surely is an indication of the mood because we've seen for the last two weeks solid campaigning aggressively across the country like you said. showing his accomplishment during his time in his mandate in power security forces in sudan's capital have fired tear gas and hundreds of protesters calling on president omar al bashir to stand down the violence in khartoum follows bashir declaring a state of emergency across the country on friday he says he was dissolving his government but just hours later appointed six new ministers and eighteen state governors from the military he's trying to quell weeks of unrest which began over the increasing price of goods. the red carpet is being rolled out for the academy
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awards and what could be a night of history making fests for the film industry. so i can say is the fastest fifty here anything ever nominated for best picture mexican film roma is also up for the top awards if that's when it will be the fast time the award has gone to a movie made by the streaming service netflix the freddie mercury by a fake bohemian rhapsody is up to seven of all its but one of its directors has been dogged by controversy over a section abuse allegations when it's go to los angeles where rob reynolds is on the red carpet for us rob tell us about why the run up to this year's oscar ceremony has been so full of controversy. well you mentioned a couple of those controversies with us here but basically what has happened is the t. karim with the format of the program itself has caused
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a lot of controversy so first the academy of motion picture arts and sciences that's the people who hand out the oscars they decided they want to have they wanted to have a new category for best popular film but there was a backlash against that some people thought it was just entering the start it was condescending to the audience so they dropped that idea then in order to streamline the broadcast which often goes overly long and is considered the boring by some they decided they wanted to cut out several categories from being awarded live on t.v. they had award the oscars given the statuettes during the commercial breaks those included the very important routes of editing and cinematography so there was an outcry over that too and the academy had to backtrack and say that old twenty four awards would be given out why during the broadcast then finally there's a question of the host what host well there isn't one because kevin hart the
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original host was discovered to have tweeted out some druther blatantly homophobic comments and made several jokes so he. dropped out and the stasi apparently nobody else really wanted the job. from them not so long ago there was also an outcry of a lack of divested in the film acting on the nation's how's that changed. that's been there's been a big change and you see of course a very boisterous crowd behind me up people yelling and cheering for their i told a brit stars and trying to get them to come over but we have fields here like black klansmen by director spike lee which is on the themes of the racial. justice in america we have a film. if beale street could talk that has garnered some best supporting actor nominations we've of course we've got black panther the first
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. program the first film to be included in the best picture nominee category that is a. superhero movie and this is a a film that has a course also an all black cast virtually and we have roma which was made in mexico all latino and indigenous cast members there are several a leading character such as. freddie mercury played by ronnie moloch or gang in these films so it is a diverse and. significant. group of films that was going to win we don't know but here's a preview. the red carpet has been rolled out on hollywood boulevard and the on globes with the names of the winners are ready to open this year's academy awards feature a diverse slate of best picture nominees including the exploits of a half
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a consumer hero in black and. the life of an indigenous mex. and housekeeper in the one nine hundred seventy s. in roma. working for black. south blue problems a story of overcoming bigotry and creating interracial friendships in green book and was a brilliant but troubled gay rock star in bohemian rhapsody. films and performances selected you know the she is nominated this year for the ska certainly reflects that hollywood has a greater understanding and it's putting forth a greater commitment towards diversity and inclusion i think that's a good thing but the four other best picture nominees are vice a bio pic of former vice president dick cheney a star is born a remake of
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a venerable tale of fame fortune in fate with a helping of popular songs black klansmen director spike lee's comedy drama about a black policeman infiltrating the k.k.k. and the favorite a lavish dive into the intrigues b. trails and lesbian love affairs in the eighteenth century british royal court the best female actor nominees include yes you know in roma lady gaga in a star is born and melissa mccarthy can you ever forgive me but there's a clear favorite i mean glenn close it's like finally i mean glen has been the bride for. i think everybody is like. the best male actor award contest looks like a dead heat between christian bale startling in person a sheen of cheney and vice and romney malek's passionate portrayal of the talented and freddie mercury in bohemian rhapsody the television ratings for the oscars
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broadcast have been trooping for years and twenty teen was the worst. your yes by including a broadly diverse slate of dummies this year he filmed industry hopes to bring those numbers back up and give the academy awards more relevance robert oulds al-jazeera hollywood. democrats in the u.s. congress are pushing forward with plans to try to save the environment they've launched an initiative a green new deal to tackle climate change and boost renewable energy sources republicans already want the plan to go to a voters in congress but as she had to tend the reports their motives are being called into question. as speaker pelosi and i have have spoken out the green new deal has been a priority for progressive left wing democrats elected last november it's based on the principle that the system that's produced unprecedented inequality is also
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hastening global environmental catastrophe i don't think that we selected by addressing climate change and what i see in some portions of the country is that people grow frustrated because they don't feel like this is. the key goals of the green new deal to meet all of the u.s. is power to moms through renewable zero emission energy during a ten year national mobilization while ensuring communities and workers don't suffer during the transition the need for action has been echoed by a republican leadership that usually expresses little appetite for debate on the environment or economic inequality i've noted with great interest the green new deal. and we're going to be voting on that in the senate to give everybody an op generated go on record. the republicans see an opportunity in the deals emphasis on reducing greenhouse gases while creating an equitable society but no patootie to fracture the democratic party and not to save the planet the era of big government
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is over bill clinton shifted the democrats from left to right away from the social safety net to the primacy of market forces and big business now almost thirty years later the left is fighting back and the democratic leadership is the republicans will present them as socialist extremists even as opinion polls show broad support for higher taxes on the rich to fund government spending on education health and averting climate change house majority leader nancy pelosi is dismissive comments when asked what she thought about the green new deal where revealing the green dream or whatever they call it she replied nobody knows what it is but they're all for it right it's the grassroots calling for action on climate change and economic equality the sunrise movement is a nationwide group of. young people that's hope placed the green new deal on the political agenda it says the leadership of both parties have a lot to lose if they underestimate support for the green new deal and the electorate frustration for how things are this is a crucial juncture for leadership for
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a long time we've seen the democrats say that they believe the science but fail to take decisive action what mitch mcconnell doesn't seem to understand is that he doesn't even have the support of his own voting base sixty four percent of republicans support what's laid out in the resolution. at the prospect of presenting the democrats is to divide even to challenge popular president may be well founded if the democratic leadership continues to resist policies that may lead to the change voters say they actually want. washington. with the headlines on al jazeera more people may have been killed in violent confrontations along venezuela's border with brazil than previously thought dozens of people died in the town of santa ana as venezuelan forces try to stop opposition supporters from bringing foreign aid into the country. at the moment we
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estimate there are twenty five people dead and eighty four injured we don't control the hospital the military controls it the people they killed they put them in an vehicle and took them to a military base that's why we're not sure of the exact number of did u.s. president donald trump says he's extending a deadline to increase tariffs on chinese imports to what he is calling substantial progress in the latest round of trade talks with beijing higher levees on more than two hundred billion dollars of chinese products which used to be imposed from march to fast. the head of the roman catholic church has called for an all out battle against the abuse of minors pope francis made the pledge on the fourth and final day of an unprecedented conference on sex abuse within the church polls have closed in cuba where people have been very controversial political body print for the country and recognizes the free market but still embraces communism
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and the curtain is about to go off on hollywood's biggest night stars gather for the academy awards it could be a night of fasts for the film industry with comic felt book film black panther and netflix production for some of the biggest prizes those are the headlines next up inside. days in syria appear numbered days long extended the bulk of the body has lost in all its territory and its fighters are on the bottom where will they go and will the what from iceland be all over this is inside story.
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hello and welcome to the program i'm elizabeth parata and i saw once controlled an area stretching from west and syria to east an iraq that is nearly the size of the u.k. it proclaimed a caliphate in two thousand and fourteen and imposed its harsh rule on millions of people bought it was flushed out of iraq and eventually lost most of its ground in syria what's left of the group now is confined to a tiny part of the syrian village of bogle's without a battle to the death the u.s. backed syrian democratic forces made up of mainly kurdish fighters has launched an offensive to retake the village bosh it's not easy thousands of civilians have already been rescued from more than two thousand remain trapped. well i said again seizing control of territory in syria and twenty fourteen when it captured the case
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that he of iraq or and declared it the capital of itself proclaimed caliphate a year later the group's control expanded to include most of bit as all parts of aleppo homs and the province of idlib also areas south of the capital damascus a vast stretch of desert and oil fields but in twenty seventeen u.s. backed mainly kurdish fighters read talk the city of raka and the syrian army with help from russian instructs regained full control of their dogs or the fall of these two key strongholds weakened eisel and they began to lose more and more ground more than four years after the group's rise in syria has left is a tiny patch in burgos near the iraqi border. but let's introduce our panel now joining us from morocco is muhammad basta is director of the moroccan institute for policy analysis and ankara via skype is use of a freelance security analyst at set at the foundation for political economic and social
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research and in london is mesa gifted a human rights activist and anti eisel campaign a very warm welcome to all of you mr mass start with you and robot are we seeing the end of the group of eisel in syria. i think it's from a military perspective with ink i think it's it's it's a successful and a complaint to limit the abilities of the. caliphate and we have seen that many of the its fighters has been killed and that its territory has been trying. so it's from that perspective i think it's it's been successful but if we look for a long term i think this is far away from from being defeated because the a period of the of its ideology are the it's organization i think is
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transitioning from the states are from the caliphate into underground are a good. way of fighting so it's very difficult to say that we are any time soon of the and off this list out about the does the end of the group do you think mean the end of the ideology the group seems to be all but defeated in syria but has the ideology from my point of perspective i agree with. the ideology still keeps on the is because all the while and which is being created in syria and iraq the historical background starting from i thought regime and starting from saddam hussein. vagal or the field is there a profile you know order to create such kind of terrorist groups because of the let me take
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a look at the back to do it historical background of the eiffel but can i say that a garrulous type war player you know to conduct especially in syria and iraq is also impossible because in order to conduct a good rule of warfare you need to control an area which completely belongs to you for all kinds of logistical and training camps can say that from now on the eiffel can conduct terrorist attacks. just very different from the general of warfare the terrorist attacks inside syria and inside iraq so i agree that i still militarily has lost the game in syria on iraq but i can say that it is not the end of any kind of terror groups inside syria and iraq all the middle east terrain is very for files as i said in order to create such kind of terror groups in this area.
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said do you think the group could resurface given that there is not a credible peace plan as well as hand many of the conditions that led to the violence remain an absence of political legitimacy we have a failure of governance still. yes i actually agree with my fellow guests although we've defeated isis militarily we've taken back their so-called caliphates the sick twisted ideology that underpins everything they do lives on and while that lives on while syria and iraq are still in ruins and while people are still not represented in governments where they feel they don't have a future i think you'll always find the rich fertile ground for which isis will try to exploits. and that's the next challenge for the coalition the coalition is done great work in destroying isis however they have destroyed a lot of syrian infrastructure for instance so we really need to rebuild we need to restore what was there and we also need to come up with
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a plan for the future that will actually hill the rift within syrian society and before you do that i mean how do you manage the very present problem right now of the remaining fighters mr massey what are their options you know if this syrian will they stay in syria and try to reintegrate society or will they leave and keep on fighting. i mean that's a big issue because a mini country is there is no agreement actually among countries how to deal with the foreign fighters in europe there is a heated debate how to deal with the foreign fighters are there returnees and as you followed all recently president obama trump asked the european countries to receive the foreign fighters but actually did is a daily how to deal with this return is most of the european countries actually are not what come in order not to want to stick to or to receive them and the
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actually aren't they way they are the most off countries in europe under and swear that are dealing with the return is is mainly through oppressive measures which is the prosecution and put them in prison but the problem is not that it's not the prosecution it's after the post-prison because those people have experience in the buckle field it's a challenge after they return to society later and this alibi that there are of course many who don't want to return to normal society they want to keep fighting what are the options for these fighters where are they looking to go i mean we've heard from iraqi intelligence officials from a u.s. military official that hundred slightly more than a thousand of isis fighters have crossed the open border the desert border into iraq. regrouping in iraq. as i said iraq and syria is
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a very personal grounds as i said in order to build up again a capacity in spite rock so it should be very careful not only in split but also in iraq but in order to tame this terrorist organization both inside the new rug and syria we have three options i can say one of them is to let them turn back to their all regional countries and to make a judicial process queue to judicial trial in their own country is the second option that to judge them in all regional countries like the crime has been committed but that me take a look at back to the shooting grant for example there is no compassed of the syrian government in order to judge because the sudanese government only could rolls counter-top with this country two thirds of a discount under the occupation of syrian democratical force and other forces so this is also not a very good option in order to acquire
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a terrorist organization the third option which is very logical from my point of perspective to build an international court and to judge them inside where they have committed crimes but that court should be definitely an international court because we cannot try we cannot trust to the judicial process of the syrian regime so the third option might be a little bit more logical but what can i say that the european countries as explained in a couple of days that they cannot take back the responsible but the of accepting their citizens to their countries the cannot quite against terrorism if we do not take the responsibility of our citizens they should take some responsibility in order to fight against terrorism otherwise preaching to the countries such as turkey syria iraq and other countries from their comfortable bloom's is not enough
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to fight the terrorists and again what happens to foreign financing want to can hunt is a real issue but that's something that. is addressed once we actually get to a judicial process with the fighters again there are so many who don't want to who don't want to return and who want to keep fighting so missed a man's bout how concerned or prepared a country's in the region you know including north african countries about the fighters who are losing ground in syria trying to make it to other countries in the region to join groups there. actually there are three different kind of countries in north africa that are dealing with this issue there are i would say strong countries with strong cup abilities of the military and security level which i'm talking here about morocco geria and to some
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extent tunisia out so in this country i think they are more efficient in dealing with their attorneys and also manage in the the carlos but the issue here is with the which is where there is a lot of. lawless areas and there was a lot of people traveling from to truly be for infarct or so here is the issue of how to deal with this this people coming from live in syria and iraq and locate an interesting area but to what extent and how many people travel it actually to really be out and other countries it's very difficult to judge for the moment i think it's more the case of the for a job and weak states rather the stronger states like morocco argyria interview and of course all of these countries are worried about the u.s. troop withdrawal from syria because of what it means for the situation fighting i
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feel for feiss leaving and we've had as we mentioned president donald trump's announcement in december that he was pulling out two thousand u.s. soldiers out and so we have raised concern among allies alarmed the s.t.'s turkey considers could his fight is to be part of a terrorist group and would attack them once u.s. forces withdraw the white house now says it's keeping two hundred u.s. troops in syria as peacekeepers but trump denies it's a huge and his decision came after a phone call with turkish president friendships i've added the one to if you want to set up a safe zone and northeastern syria which is cleared off the u.s. . asked kurdish fighters mr gifford i'll come to you because you've actually fought with the kurdish y p g in syria against eisel what are your thoughts on the u.s. troop withdrawal keeping these two hundred so-called peacekeepers in the country
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what are they going to do well i think put themselves really between the turkish army and the kurdish y.p. gee. i was very disturbed to hear don't trump's initial suggestion that all troops are going to be removed i think donald trump is very much a short term politician he was he was only there to fight isis he wanted to pull all the troops out but after some advice from his own generals and realizing that if he were to do that then it would actually start another round of violence in syria has actually taken the sensible option of keeping some troops on the grounds because the real battle now is how do we keep the peace after we've defeated isis and we've already heard that isis could actually come by they have got arms supplies arms dumps they've got a real insurgency plan they've formed for quite some time now but also how could we stop assad attacking how can we stop turkey attacking how do we actually keep people around the table and how can we get everyone around the table in geneva so i
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think those are the questions that we have to ask ourselves and that's the question i hope they will try is considering now and of course another question that is frequently asked about the u.s. troop withdrawal mr mass put it to you is how much of that kiran is that going to leave i mean is it going to contribute to a region or to international power struggle which in turn could make it easier for eisel to come back. yeah i've been the question here is that mike mcqueary before said it's the this policy is short sighted it looks through the short terms but not on the root causes that led in the beginning to the americans and increase in influence of isis which is the above governance and also corruption off local idiots so after the withdrawal of the american troops what is the next next plan and what is the next steps i think there is a if there is no address of the root goes us which is actually the
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governance and also crops how to manage the daily life of people and i think it's going to make it easier for a resurgent of. maybe not isis but another group of. inside syria and iraq because this is i think the main reason that to the to the it's a resurgence in the first place so here again we. be enough vicious circle which is a bug but governance is corruption and appealed and we have to know actually that's many people in during the caliphates the three years of the caliphate were actually not ideologically affiliated with isis but they were happy because they are please provide the security and the kind of order and little flaw in their way i mean the caliphate even if we don't like the way i mean the be
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heeding successor about it successfully managed to put the order there so the question here is if the next step is to is to money the situation and to put things in order if this is not addressed i thing. it's like pouring water in the sand and mr al about the how do you address that i mean i guess that is the million dollar question and how do you stop the vicious circle even now when you know mr masters talking about other groups and you've spoken a lot about iraq and syria what about the concern the threat of sleeper cells and civilian populations. from my point of perspective from time to time saurian democratic forces are blackmailing the european union if they really is all the captives of the i saw the i saw bill go to europe and again make the terrorist attack the european union but but i will explain that if turkey moves to you stop
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the european euphrates river i do not exist is syrian democratical course of explanation that isis a game with gain power in this area because turkey is the only country who falls with isis not by very often air force but childer the shoulders and killed more than one thousand isolate members only in general bruce and others and to thousands about this is it is temper sense of all this is fighting kept us. after the ukraine shield operations the know that the turkey created an order created cools created hospitals so address to the root causes of the isis problem especially in many different cities of the turia so what i believe
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that fighting with isom with the y.p. jim militia is not a long term solution to the problems of the story and problem the long term solution can only be with possibly can only be possible with the creation of all order in this area the pope ical solution will be the end of the eiffel problem in this turiya and there is not other solution other than that so but i think the problem is that everyone agrees that there has to be a political order that everyone has different ideas of what that what it should look like mr guess and i can see that you disagreed with some of what time you had there. yeah well i. ended the day is obviously very anti considers it very close with the k. and if they were to attack then it would cause a huge amount of violence which isis and other jihadi groups will thrive in so.
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i don't for one second think turkey has been a positive influence in this conflict far from it they have been funding the hardest groups within f.s.a. areas in other places from the very beginning so they hold much of the responsibility for the condition that syria is in right now and if we are to look to the future the toxic regional influences that have fueled the violence need to be pushed aside and we need to take a very pragmatic approach who is holding the territory and who's holding it successfully who's fighting isis it's groups like the s.d.f. it's the groups like the y p g and with american backing with european backing we'll actually come up with a decent solution to this crisis there is hope but only if we focus on what's working now and not start talking about renewed offensive by turkey into kurdish areas and it would just cause terrible terrible violence and you know most people will admit that i feel has been being defeated with a lot of help and tegel crucial help from the syrian democratic forces what role mr
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giffen do you see for them now in we are close to a post i still fear. well the s.t.'s the greatest assets or the greatest where the most effective is actually holding the territory although isis had there is some limited insurgency the vast majority of the areas around sort of rocker and in the north of the country the thirty percent of syria that's controlled by the s.d.f. is actually very peaceful so peaceful in fact there are often go to dinner out go out for meet friends go out for tea without carrying a weapon this is a very. it's a quite a wonderful experience to be in a syria that's truly decentralized shows what the future of syria could actually be which is a syria syria the secular democratic where all the different peoples whether they're kurds edis and arabs will all live together in one place so we just need to realize what's what's effective now we need to realize what the local people in the
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ground want which is peace now and they are working very effectively under the banner so long it continues as far as i'm concerned mr master do you agree that a decentralized syria is the key to a peaceful syria and what needs to happen now to make sure that you know the military defeat of the group will not be in vain. yeah i think a more decentralized. way of governance is very important for syria for the moment given the divisions inside the country for almost six or in perspective but i think the first thing is to put this kind of ability in the region to make some successful stories to tell to and to emulate on all the regions and i think this is the challenge for the moment is to make a minimum of stability in some areas now with with as the f. we will wait and see if it's going to be
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a successful story and then we can see if it's can be more successful in other parts of the country and miss out about the i think we don't have very long left in the program so i'll give you the last word how do we capitalize on the gains the real gains made against i feel. what can i say that i simply disagree with my counterpart which is addressing from london turkey has lost connection with the jihadi groups which is very clear that turkey s corner jim with the opposition which they claim as just this but they are part of the general a peace process so while we are talking we should be very clear about what is going walk in the torah there are certain democratic forces are controlling the group at but experiments i was in the telegraph border just two weeks ago all the other big inhabitants of the palau the knob is living inside. thirty years also think more than three hundred thousand kurdish people who use living area rug as he's gone
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through i think they have escaped to the thirty just because of the prosecution of the white b.g. group in this area so all you do not address the root causes of the problem the evil never be able to solve the problem just in the case of the explanations of my comp repast was addressing from the lumber our general on the say that the top grading general order reach depends to do just that which depends to the group like what the people are dressing for their needs from the fitness centers such a burden such a party from part of a buck not even one citizen who is coming right from the sodium order not solve the problem missed out of as a thank you very much for that and i'd like to thank all of our guests that is mohamed master in rabat uses and about. and may suggest and in london and thank you too for watching you can see the program again any time fine visiting our website that al jazeera dot com and to set
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a discussion to go to our facebook page that facebook dot com forward slash a.j. inside story you can also join the conversation on twitter and in this at a.j. and side story for me as of astronomy and a whole team can i find out. only you and they fixed for all practical purposes yes i support science and truth one of the figurehead for the new atheist movement if you believe something without evidence then that justifies anything to do except that religion has done good
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things despite all of our modern police and americans who believe that science holds all the nonsense in the world to be a better place if religion disappeared tomorrow yes many as nine guys head to head with richard dawkins on al-jazeera. donald trump says he has a special bond with him john the north korean leader in the u.s. president are about to meet again in vietnam a letter they were signing is very comprehensive and i think both sides are going to be very impressed with a moment soft of a historic summit in singapore come a strike a deal on nuclear weapons and to finally end the korean war special coverage of fabric the twenty seven. everything we do is being and it's being weighed measure i'm going to call this month. and it's not just i phones that's almost like i mean most not fans of these days we are in
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a state of the universe that. did something that was. i would rather take the risk of. digital dissidents are now dizzy or. i mean this was different. whether someone is doing this for. me to think it's how you approach and that's it is a certain way of doing it just. a story out. hello i'm the star detained over with the top stories on al-jazeera more people may have been killed in a violent confrontation along venezuela's border with brazil than previously
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thought dozens of people are believed to have died in the town of santa ana as venezuelan forces try to stop opposition supporters from bringing foreign aid into the country mama jan dream has the latest from packer in brazil on the border with venezuela. potentially twenty five people killed and at least eighty four injured that is information that is coming to us courtesy of the emilio gonzalez he is the mayor of the good on a region that is inside of it as well a close to the border with brazil we're talking specifically about the town of sound in that this is a town we've been speaking a lot about the past few days where there are indigenous groups that have been supporting the venezuelan opposition and they have been getting into clashes with venezuela's military off until today we had heard only that it was confirmed that two people had been killed and that seventeen had been injured those seventeen we
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were told were being treated in brazil at a hospital called hot i'm a general hospital in the capital of this part of brazil both of these which is about two hundred kilometers south of us if this pans out if this is true this would raise the death toll dramatically would be a serious escalation compared to what we've heard before now the mayor spoke to an assembled group of journalists he said that it is difficult getting precise information because he says that all the people that were killed were taken to essentially an area that venezuela's military is using where they are keeping the bodies there and because of that they don't have precise numbers nonetheless this is the most precise information we are getting from from venezuelans from people from inside in israel who have crossed over into brazil officials from that region who are now saying that they believe that at least twenty five people have been killed us president on all trump says he's extending a deadline to increase tariffs on chinese imports have to what he's calling
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substantial progress in the latest round of trade talks with beijing high levies on more than two hundred billion dollars of chinese products to be imposed from march the fast track says negotiators are addressing key issues such as intellectual property protection and technology transfer but as under has more from washington d.c. . on sunday we'd been getting some information out that the discussions on sunday were not so much focused on these individual issues but they were focused more on how to enforce a potential agreement so that was a good sign coming out of the meetings on sunday. when people are talking about how to enforce and greet agreement that usually means they're pretty close to one but the good news here for both beijing and washington at least is it looks like they're very close to a deal voting is ended in senegal's presidential elections president macky sall of faces four main rivals as he seeks a second term since coming to office president saleh has developed infrastructure
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projects and the economy is said to be booming but opposition candidates say ordinary people are suffering with poverty and unemployment rampant pushing many to leave the country security forces in sudan's capital have fired tear gas at hundreds of protesters calling on president omar al bashir to stand down the violence in khartoum follows bashir declaring a state of emergency across the country on friday he says he was dissolving his government but just hours later appointed six new ministers and more than a dozen state governors from the military he's trying to quell weeks of unrest which began over the increasing price of goods. polls have closed in cuba where people have been voting on whether to approve a new constitution and recognizes the free market but still embraces communism as the country's official ideology cubans are expected to vote in favor of the changes and the curtain is going up on hollywood's biggest night as stars gather in los
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angeles for the academy awards it could be a night of firsts for the film industry with comic book review black panther and netflix production roma for some of the biggest prizes those are the headlines join me for more news here after al-jazeera wild do stay with us.
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about what they've become the son told me and this is egypt this yacht and i managed to sneak. a lot more in time can i start over again. no matter what it was like after the flight they believe the first one the learned about it you know i mentioned to get good about it and if not. in may two thousand and thirteen crowds and media gathered outside the munich high regional calls and various south in germany. the trial they were following was one of the highest profile criminal cases in europe in recent history and it was about to begin. it would involve fines defendants six hundred witnesses over fifty lawyers four hundred eighty eight pages of criminal charges
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and two hundred eighty thousand pages of interrogation record holds that. this was a milestone case for germany which are the already caused a great deal of social and political fallout. it's not a shuttle to album out on an empty glumes and all shows i'll let you know i understand all. that it. is simply yeah well yeah same test this kid is my dad and it needs to be easy is. the call would hear the cases of those accused of involvement in the murder of eight ethnic turks one grief in a policewoman two bomb attacks and fifteen bank robberies in different parts of the country because. in two thousand and two thousand and seven a little booklet with u.v. . light to defeat. it.
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the ninth of september two thousand. come saturday in nuremberg in the german state of the variance. and version check of flower wholesaler was on his way to deliver an order to league news history. while parked at the side of the road she was shot with a bullet from two different guns used in silence us. alive but seriously wounded she was taken to hospital but he died two times. he was thirty eight years old and the father of two children.
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nine months later in june two thousand and one two other ethnic turkish shopkeepers were also killed on the thirteenth of june also in nuremberg a tailor abdur-rahim dollar was shot dead while sewing clothes then on the twenty seventh of june in hamburg a greengrocer silly man touched called through was shot three times and killed. nine months after the first murder german police came up with a clue. they'd identified that all the victims had been shot with the same type of gun an unusual check manufactured cheska eighty three a seven point six five millimeter caliber pistol and the cheshire murders. but the police investigation went down the road of organized crime they went into
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the personal lives. of the victims their supposed business connections and social backgrounds but they were singularly on able to establish anything in common between the individual cases than their ethnic origin and the murder weapon. on the twenty ninth of august two thousand and one two months after the murder of suliman touch called through another ethnic turkish greengrocer was found dead in shop in munich. hobby college had been working in a wholesale market for thirteen years he doped in his own shop with his wife seventeen months before. the family was understandably too traumatized to talk at the time but their friend in key with this and their bare hands spoke on their behalf. charlie said ben isn't a guy that them if they are all on the get to the member at them to have iran with
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the chalice was to get a cure though i've evolved is not at them and then i'm an obvious lung cancer no way so let them that highly politically to mitigate it. because although nigel again is getting in is so with them that they no doubt going to charge. to get them over london all them to be whole and not actually makes or inviting tricky for that island and they have not been asked by near. the biggest if you name your book more than hydrogen their. ideal took even reassign chauffeurs sarkin meter velocity i listen to children or several earths of us are thirty plus the idea really shaky that i'm only a kid it would be a good if it is not he she developed actual market are actually shrunk you can situated on you guys took me to mars if i live overseas. in september two thousand and one the bavarian murder investigation was brought under
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a special commission called tellingly present. but it continued to focus on the victims businesses and their alleged drug related connections this line was reflected in the media coverage of the case. maybe i took a two dollar on the chalk i do most of the around there is a leak down there get it to rethink of my kitchen just the sort of you make your chin how you must be brushed it got a side you could just. tell her you know that encourage i get a reading along. on the film say i told you that i live near term old our t.v. i did the book only now dang gay didn't even give me the sheetrock hopefully. this is chaotic a village in a lot as a province in eastern turkey. it's where the fifth victim in the church a serial killings man with two good grew up.

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